Georgia Makes Odometer Fraud a Felony as Rollbacks Hit 2.45 Million US Cars
Georgia lawmakers made odometer tampering a felony effective July 1, 2026, closing a loophole that let sellers roll back mileage on a used car and face nothing worse than a misdemeanor. The change followed an Atlanta News First investigation into first-time buyer Shadaja Johnson, who purchased a 2013 Honda Ridgeline listed on Facebook Marketplace at 153,000 miles. Carfax records later showed the same vehicle had logged as many as 285,000 miles.
Under the new law, offenders face fines between $1,500 and $10,000 per violation, plus possible jail time. State Rep. John Corbett, R-Lake Park, who chairs the House Committee on Motor Vehicles, said the issue was not on lawmakers’ radar until the investigation surfaced it. The bill passed unanimously.
A Federal Felony That States Treated as a Misdemeanor
Odometer fraud has been a federal felony under the Truth in Mileage Act dating to 1986, punishable by fines up to $10,000 per violation and up to three years in prison. Georgia’s gap was that state law treated the same conduct as a misdemeanor, giving local prosecutors a weaker charge to bring and giving sellers less reason to fear consequences. Federal prosecutors rarely pursue individual odometer cases involving a single vehicle, which leaves state law as the practical deterrent most buyers actually rely on.
Georgia is not an outlier. State odometer fraud statutes vary widely in severity, and buyers in states with lighter penalties face the practical risk Georgia just moved to close. A second Georgia case raised in the legislative debate involved buyer John Groneman, who discovered a 77,500-mile discrepancy on a Lexus after purchase, well beyond the threshold most buyers would catch without a vehicle history report.
The Case That Pushed Lawmakers to Act
Shadaja Johnson bought her Honda Ridgeline expecting a reliable first vehicle at a fair price. The listing on Facebook Marketplace showed 153,000 miles, a figure that shaped both what she agreed to pay and how much wear she expected under the hood. A Carfax pull after the sale told a different story: the vehicle had logged as many as 285,000 miles, nearly double the number advertised, which meant Johnson had unknowingly bought a truck already well past the point where major components like the transmission and suspension typically need replacement.
Rep. Corbett said the committee had not treated odometer tampering as a priority until reporters brought Johnson’s case, and Groneman’s separate 77,500-mile Lexus discrepancy, directly to lawmakers. “This wasn’t on our radar,” Corbett told Atlanta News First, a comment that reflects how easily a crime with a clear federal penalty on paper can go unenforced at the state level when nobody flags it as a gap. The bill that followed moved through the Georgia House and Senate without a single dissenting vote, a rare display of unanimity that shows how uncontroversial closing the loophole turned out to be once lawmakers understood the scale of the problem.
The Problem Is Getting Worse, Not Better
An estimated 2.45 million vehicles are currently on US roads with a rolled-back odometer, according to industry data, a 14% increase from the prior year. Buyers who unknowingly purchase one of these vehicles lose an average of $3,300 in value compared to what they paid, on top of inheriting maintenance schedules, timing belt changes, and safety recalls tied to the true, higher mileage rather than the fraudulent reading on the dashboard.
Digital odometers have made tampering easier, not harder, a reversal of what most buyers assume. Rolling back a mechanical odometer required physically disassembling the instrument cluster. A digital odometer can sometimes be altered with a device plugged into the vehicle’s diagnostic port in minutes, and sellers increasingly move private-party sales to platforms like Facebook Marketplace and Craigslist, where there is no dealer license, no paper trail, and no requirement to disclose known mileage discrepancies before a sale closes.
How to Spot a Rolled-Back Odometer Before You Buy
A vehicle history report from Carfax or AutoCheck remains the first and most important check. Both services flag mileage inconsistencies reported by past inspections, oil changes, and title transfers. Buyers should compare the odometer reading against the number listed on the vehicle’s most recent title, registration renewal, or state inspection sticker, which are harder for a seller to alter than the odometer itself.
Wear patterns tell their own story. A steering wheel, brake and gas pedals, and driver’s seat bolster that look heavily worn on a car advertised with low mileage is a red flag worth walking away from. The same applies to a maintenance sticker in the windshield corner showing an oil change mileage figure higher than what the odometer currently displays. A pre-purchase inspection by an independent mechanic, ideally one with no relationship to the seller, will often catch inconsistencies between a vehicle’s true condition and its claimed mileage that a visual check alone would miss.
Buyers who suspect a rolled-back odometer after a purchase can file a complaint with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s Office of Odometer Fraud Investigation, and in Georgia, with the state Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division. Federal law allows defrauded buyers to sue for triple damages or $10,000, whichever is greater, plus attorney’s fees.
What to Do
Request the vehicle’s full title history before agreeing to a sale, not just a Carfax summary, and confirm the seller’s name matches the title. A printed sheet from the seller can be fabricated, so ask to see maintenance records directly from a dealership or repair shop instead. Photograph the odometer reading and VIN in person and cross-check both against the listing before any money changes hands. If a private-party seller resists a pre-purchase inspection or vehicle history report, treat that resistance itself as a warning sign.
The Hidden Costs Buyers Do Not See at Signing
A rolled-back odometer does more damage than the sale price alone suggests. Lenders calculate loan amounts and interest rates partly on a vehicle’s reported mileage, meaning a buyer financing a fraudulently low-mileage car is often approved for a larger loan than the vehicle’s real condition would justify, and left owing more than the truck is actually worth the moment the fraud comes to light. Insurance underwriting works the same way: a policy priced against 153,000 miles covers a fundamentally different risk profile than one written for a vehicle with 285,000 miles of wear on its brakes, tires, and safety systems.
Maintenance schedules compound the financial damage. Timing belts, transmission fluid, and major service intervals are tied to actual mileage, not the number displayed on a tampered dashboard. A buyer who believes a vehicle is due for its 150,000-mile service in another 20,000 miles could in fact be driving a vehicle that passed that threshold years earlier, running components well beyond their intended service life without realizing the risk. Safety recalls tied to mileage-based service intervals can lapse the same way, leaving a buyer unaware their vehicle needs an inspection its true mileage would have already triggered.
Why This Story Reaches Beyond Georgia
Georgia’s new felony statute puts pressure on other states with equally weak penalties to follow. Consumer protection agencies in several states have flagged odometer fraud as a growing enforcement priority as digital tampering tools become cheaper and easier to find, and as private-party used car sales, which lack the paperwork protections built into licensed dealer transactions, continue to grow as a share of the used car market.
For buyers anywhere in the country, the practical lesson from Georgia’s case is the same regardless of which state’s penalty code applies. A vehicle history report costs a fraction of what a rolled-back odometer will eventually cost in unexpected repairs and lost resale value, and it remains the single most effective tool available before signing anything.
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