What Is a Pre-Purchase Car Inspection (PPI)?
A pre-purchase car inspection is a thorough mechanical and safety evaluation of a vehicle performed by a qualified, independent mechanic before you commit to buying it. A trained technician puts the car on a lift, runs a full diagnostic scan, and examines every major system (engine, transmission, brakes, suspension, body, and electronics) then delivers a detailed written report on the vehicle's current condition. The process typically takes one to two hours and leaves you with a clear, objective picture of exactly what you'd be purchasing.
The buyer arranges and pays for the inspection, not the seller. That separation is precisely what gives a PPI its value. An independent mechanic has no financial stake in whether the sale goes through, which means you receive an honest assessment, not a sales pitch. PPIs can be conducted by independent repair shops, ASE-certified mechanics, or mobile inspection services that come directly to wherever the vehicle is located. Carfax itself recommends getting a PPI as a complementary step to a vehicle history report, a meaningful endorsement from the industry's most recognized vehicle data provider.
Think of them as two complementary forms of due diligence: the history report tells you the story, and the inspection confirms whether that story is still accurate today.
