Most used-car paperwork is genuine, but altered titles and cloned registrations do circulate, and they're one of the easiest ways for a buyer to end up with a car they don't legally own or can't register in their own name. The good news is that document fraud usually leaves small, spottable clues if you know where to look. Here's how to check registration and title paperwork carefully before you commit to a purchase.

Start With the VIN, Not the Paper

The vehicle identification number (VIN) is your anchor. Before you even glance at the title, find the VIN on the car itself — typically on the dashboard (visible through the windshield), the driver's door jamb sticker, and often stamped somewhere in the engine bay. Then compare every digit to what's printed on the registration and title.

Examine the Physical Document Itself

Genuine registration and title documents usually have consistent fonts, alignment, and security features such as watermarks, holograms, or specific paper stock, depending on where they were issued. You don't need to be a forensic expert to notice when something is off.

Cross-Check the Ownership Chain

A title should tell a clear, logical story of who has owned the car and when. Gaps or inconsistencies are worth investigating.

Watch for Signs of a Rebuilt or Salvage History

Some sellers try to hide a salvage, rebuilt, or flood-damaged past by presenting a "clean" title from a different state or region where that history isn't flagged, a practice sometimes called title washing.

Red Flags That Should Make You Pause

Steps to Protect Yourself

  1. Always verify the VIN in person against all paperwork before negotiating a price.
  2. Confirm title validity and ownership directly with the official vehicle registry rather than relying solely on the document shown to you.
  3. Get an independent pre-purchase inspection, which can also flag repair work inconsistent with a "clean" title.
  4. Insist on meeting the registered owner, or get documented proof of why someone else is selling on their behalf.
  5. Complete the transfer through official channels so the sale is properly recorded, rather than handling it informally.

Taking twenty extra minutes to check a title carefully costs nothing compared to the time, money, and legal trouble of discovering later that the car you bought was never legitimately the seller's to sell.