How to Spot a Written Off Car Before You Buy It Used

Crashed Car
Crashed Car (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Crashed Car
Crashed Car (image courtesy Deposit Photos)

A used car can look immaculate on a forecourt and still hide a serious secret. With good second hand cars in short supply and repair costs at record highs, a growing number of vehicles that insurers once declared a total loss are being patched up and quietly sold on. Buy one without knowing and you can end up with a car that is worth far less than you paid, harder to insure, awkward to sell, and in the worst cases unsafe. The good news is that a written off car leaves a paper trail, and a few cheap checks will flush it out before you hand over a penny. Here is how the system works and how to protect yourself.

What the write off categories actually mean

When an insurer decides a damaged car is not economic or not safe to repair, it records the vehicle under one of four salvage categories. These were overhauled by the Association of British Insurers in October 2017 to focus on structural safety rather than simply the cost of repair, which is why you may still see older Category C and Category D cars advertised. The four current grades are worth committing to memory.

  • Category A is scrap only. The car is so badly damaged it must be crushed, and even salvageable parts have to be destroyed. It should never reappear on the road in any form.
  • Category B means the body shell must be destroyed, but some parts can be reclaimed and sold for use in other vehicles. The car itself must never return to the road.
  • Category S stands for structural. The vehicle has suffered damage to a structural part such as the chassis or a crumple zone. It can legally be repaired and put back on the road, but only after professional repair, and it must be re registered with the DVLA.
  • Category N means non structural. The damage may be cosmetic or electrical and was simply not economic for the insurer to fix. Do not assume that makes it trivial, because non structural faults can still involve brakes, steering, airbags or other safety related parts.

Crucially, a Category S or Category N car is perfectly legal to buy and drive once properly repaired. The problem is not legality, it is disclosure, value and the quality of the repair.

Why more written off cars are reaching the used market

Two forces are pushing repaired write offs back into circulation. The first is the cost of repair. As cars have filled up with cameras, sensors and bonded panels, the bill to fix even moderate damage has soared, and garage labour rates have climbed to as much as £180 an hour in parts of the country, as we reported in our look at rising labour charges. When a repair estimate creeps towards the value of the car, the insurer writes it off, even though the damage may be entirely fixable.

The second force is demand. Good used cars are getting harder to find and more expensive, a squeeze we examined in our piece on the used car crunch. Tight supply makes a cheap, smartly repaired Category N car an attractive proposition for a trader, and a tempting bargain for a buyer who does not look closely. That is exactly the environment in which an undisclosed write off can slip through.

How to check a car’s history before you buy

The single most important step costs around £20 and takes two minutes. A full vehicle history check, sometimes still called an HPI check and offered by several providers, will reveal whether a car has been recorded as a write off, along with outstanding finance, a mileage discrepancy, a plate change or a theft marker. Any write off is logged against the vehicle, so a proper check will flag a Category S or N car even when the seller stays silent.

Layer that with the free checks the government provides. At gov.uk you can view a car’s full MOT history, including advisories and past failures, and confirm its tax status. A gap in the MOT record around the time of an accident, or a sudden run of corrosion and structural advisories, can be telling. Cross check the registration, make, model and colour against the V5C logbook, and be suspicious if anything fails to line up.

  • Run a paid history check before you view, not after you have fallen for the car.
  • Ask the seller directly whether the car has ever been an insurance write off, and get the answer in writing or by message. A private seller who misrepresents the car may be liable, and a dealer is bound by consumer law to describe it accurately.
  • Inspect the V5C logbook for any salvage marker and make sure the seller’s name and address match.
  • For anything other than a cheap runabout, pay for an independent inspection from a body such as the AA or RAC. An inspector will spot signs of structural repair that an untrained eye misses.

Should you ever buy a Category S or N car?

Sometimes, yes, but only with your eyes open. A well repaired Category N car with cosmetic damage history can be a sensible way to save money, and a Category S car repaired by a reputable specialist can be sound. The trade offs are real, though. A repaired write off typically sells for a good deal less than an equivalent clean car, which is fine when you are buying but painful when you come to sell, a problem compounded if you are already exposed to falling values, as many owners are in our report on drivers in negative equity.

Insurance is the other catch. You must declare a Category S or N marker when you take out cover, and some insurers will either refuse the risk or charge more for it. Financing a write off can be harder too, as lenders are wary of vehicles whose value is uncertain. If the discount is large and the repair is verified, a write off can still be a smart buy. If the discount is small, the saving rarely justifies the hassle.

Red flags to watch for at the viewing

Even without tools, your eyes can catch a lot. Look along the body in good light for panels whose paint shade or texture does not quite match, for uneven gaps between doors, bonnet and boot, and for overspray on rubber seals or trim. Open and close every door, the bonnet and the boot to check they sit flush and latch cleanly. Inside, watch the dashboard as you start the car: a warning light for the airbags that stays on can point to a previous deployment and a repair that was done on the cheap.

Fresh underseal on an older car, mismatched bolts on suspension or subframe components, and weld marks where there should be none are all worth questioning. A price that looks too good for the year and mileage is the biggest red flag of all. Treat a bargain with the same suspicion you would a stranger’s hard sell, because the gap between the advertised price and the going rate is often the exact value of a secret the seller would rather you did not find. The cost of higher repair bills if a botched fix fails later, set out in our coverage of soaring MOT failure bills, can dwarf whatever you saved at the point of sale. Spend the £20 on a history check and an hour on a careful inspection, and you remove almost all of the risk.

What to do if you discover a write off after buying

If a check after purchase reveals a write off marker the seller never mentioned, your rights depend on who sold it. Buy from a dealer and you are protected by the Consumer Rights Act, which says a car must match its description, so an undisclosed write off can give you grounds to reject the car and reclaim your money, ideally within the first 30 days. Buy privately and the law is thinner, but a seller who actively lied about the car’s history may still be liable for misrepresentation. Either way, gather your evidence first: keep the advert, any messages, the history check and a written record of what you were told. Raise it in writing, set a clear deadline for a response, and if the seller will not engage, escalate to your card provider if you paid by card, or take the matter to the small claims route. Acting quickly and keeping a paper trail gives you by far the strongest hand.


Sources:

  • https://www.whatcar.com/advice/buying/what-is-a-cat-a-cat-b-cat-s-or-cat-n-write-off/n1103
  • https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/advice/know-how/what-is-an-insurance-write-off/
  • https://www.gov.uk/check-mot-history

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the founder of Motoring Chronicle and an FIA accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following motorsport and the global automotive industry. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered Formula 1 races and automotive events at venues around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every race report, car review, and industry analysis he writes. His work spans the full breadth of motoring — from the latest EV launches and road car reviews to the cutting edge of motorsport competition.

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