Not every "private seller" you meet is actually a private individual. Some are unlicensed dealers who buy up damaged, high-mileage, or otherwise problematic cars, clean them up just enough to look presentable, and then sell them one by one while pretending to be an ordinary owner. This practice is known as curbstoning, and it exists specifically to dodge the consumer protections, disclosures, and accountability that come with buying from a registered dealer. Recognising it early can save you from an expensive and stressful mistake.

Why Curbstoning Happens

Licensed dealers are usually required to disclose known defects, honour certain warranties, and stand behind the vehicles they sell. Curbstoners avoid all of that by pretending the car belongs to "a friend" or "my mother," or by using a private individual as a front to sign paperwork. Once the sale is done and the cash changes hands, there is often no business name, no address, and no one to call when problems appear a week later.

The cars involved are frequently ones with a story the seller would rather you not hear in detail: prior flood or accident damage, a rolled-back odometer, a salvage or rebuilt title, or mechanical issues patched up just enough to pass a quick look and a short test drive.

Common Warning Signs

Checks You Can Do Before Meeting

A few checks before you even view the car can filter out a lot of curbstoning attempts.

What to Do When You Meet the Seller

Protecting Yourself on Payment and Paperwork

Even if everything looks fine in person, protect yourself at the final stage.

If You Suspect Curbstoning

If something feels off — mismatched paperwork, a seller who avoids questions, or a pattern of similar listings — it's reasonable to walk away. There is rarely a shortage of other cars for sale, but there is no shortcut to recovering money paid to someone who has already disappeared. If you do suspect you've encountered a curbstoner, report the listing to the platform where you found it and consider notifying your local consumer protection office, since these sellers often move on to the next unsuspecting buyer if left unchecked.

Buying a used car privately can still be a smart, affordable way to find a good vehicle. The key is making sure the person on the other side of the deal is exactly who they claim to be — a genuine owner selling their own car, not a business hiding behind a stranger's name.