When a car is damaged badly enough, an insurer may declare it a total loss and pay out rather than repair it. These cars can legally be repaired and sold again in many places, but they should carry a clear salvage or rebuilt history. The problem is that some sellers scrub or hide that history, presenting a patched-up wreck as an ordinary clean used car. Spotting one takes patience, but the signs are usually there if you know where to look.

Why This Happens

A car that's been through a serious collision, flood, or fire is worth far less once its history is known — sometimes only a fraction of a clean car's price. That gap creates a strong incentive for dishonest sellers to disguise the damage, repaint over patched panels, and present incomplete or altered paperwork. The car may drive fine for a while, but hidden structural damage, corrosion, or electrical faults can surface later, and safety systems designed around the vehicle's original structure may no longer work as intended.

Start With the Paperwork

Inspect the Body for Signs of Major Repair

Check the Structure and Underside

A pre-purchase inspection on a lift is one of the most valuable steps you can take, especially for a car you suspect has been in a serious accident. Ask the inspector to look specifically at:

Test Drive With Purpose

Drive the car on a straight, empty road and notice whether it pulls to one side or the steering wheel isn't centred — both can indicate frame damage. Listen for clunks over bumps, and check whether all warning lights, especially the airbag light, behave normally. An airbag light that stays on, flickers, or was clearly disconnected is a serious warning sign.

Trust the Price and the Seller's Behaviour

A price that's noticeably below similar listings is not always a bargain — it can reflect a hidden problem the seller hopes you won't find. Be cautious of sellers who rush the sale, discourage an independent inspection, insist on meeting somewhere other than their home or a dealership, or can't produce consistent documents. Genuine sellers with nothing to hide are usually happy to let you take your time.

Checklist Before You Buy

A rebuilt wreck sold as clean can look convincing at a glance, but it rarely holds up to careful checking. Taking the time to verify the paperwork, inspect the structure, and get a professional opinion protects you from buying a car that looks fine today but hides real risk underneath.