Why Britain’s Record Used Car Boom Is Creating a Facebook Marketplace VIN Fraud Crisis

Aerial view of car storage or parking lot with new and used vehicles for export to USA and Internationally. Vehicle transportation facility, waiting to pass customs, duties licenses and permits.
Aerial view of car storage or parking lot with new and used vehicles for export to USA (image courtesy Deposit Photos)
Aerial view of car storage or parking lot with new and used vehicles for export to USA and Internationally. Vehicle transportation facility, waiting to pass customs, duties licenses and permits.
Aerial view of car storage or parking lot with new and used vehicles for export to USA (image courtesy Deposit Photos)

British drivers bought and sold a record 7,807,872 used cars in 2025, the highest number ever recorded by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders. That boom in second-hand car transactions has created an enormous and growing hunting ground for fraudsters, and the fastest-growing attack vector is Facebook Marketplace. Experts are now warning that a surge in Vehicle Identification Number cloning and tampering is catching buyers completely off guard, with vehicles that appear entirely legitimate on paper turning out to be stolen or fraudulently altered.

Online searches for “Facebook Marketplace cars for sale near me” have risen 52 per cent compared to the previous year, a shift that reflects both the convenience of the platform and a broader trend toward private sales bypassing traditional dealerships. Fraudsters have followed the traffic, listing cloned, stolen and tampered vehicles in growing numbers. A used car expert recently described the volume of fraudulent vehicles entering the private sales market as “something we haven’t seen before.” The same expert warned that deceptive vehicles can appear entirely legitimate at first glance, with clean histories and proper-looking paperwork, because the most sophisticated fraudsters have learned to prepare their vehicles thoroughly before listing them.

What VIN Cloning Is and Why It Is So Difficult to Spot

Every car manufactured in Britain and the European Union is assigned a unique Vehicle Identification Number, a 17-character alphanumeric code stamped into the bodywork and recorded on the registration document, the V5C logbook, and the vehicle’s insurance and MOT history. The VIN contains the manufacturer code, country of origin, vehicle specifications and a unique serial number. It is, in theory, unfakeable because it is tied to a specific physical vehicle and its entire recorded history.

In practice, sophisticated criminals have developed methods to clone VINs. The process typically begins with a stolen vehicle and a legally registered vehicle of an identical or near-identical make, model, colour and specification. The fraudster copies the VIN from the legal vehicle and applies it to the stolen one, either by replacing the VIN plate in the engine bay or, in more sophisticated operations, by altering the VIN etched into the windscreen, chassis rail and door pillars. The stolen car then appears to have a clean ownership history because its fraudulent VIN matches a legitimate registered vehicle.

Research across the used car sector suggests that one in seven used cars could be linked to some form of tampering, whether VIN alteration, mileage adjustment, or finance concealment. The DVSA has reported a sharp increase in vehicles arriving at MOT stations with inconsistencies between the VIN on the vehicle and the VIN on file, one of the indicators that can suggest cloning or tampering has taken place.

How Fraudsters Are Exploiting Facebook Marketplace Specifically

Facebook Marketplace lacks the structured vehicle history checks and consumer protections that come with buying from a registered dealership or established online platform. There is no requirement for a seller to provide an HPI certificate, no statutory right to a full refund if the vehicle turns out to be stolen, and no standardised process for verifying the seller’s identity. A private seller can list a cloned vehicle in minutes using nothing more than a smartphone and a Facebook account.

The listings that fraudsters produce are often high quality. Multiple photographs, a plausible backstory, a stated reason for selling, and a price that is attractive but not obviously absurd. The classic “too good to be true” pricing that used to make fraud easier to spot has become less reliable as a warning sign, because experienced fraudsters now price vehicles competitively rather than implausibly cheaply. Instead, the red flags have shifted to how the transaction is conducted rather than what the car costs.

Common warning signs include a seller who is unwilling to allow an independent inspection before purchase, a seller who insists on cash only and wants to complete the transaction quickly, a V5C that looks correct but has been recently replaced, and a mismatch between the seller’s location in their profile and the location of the vehicle. Fraudsters will often resist meeting at their home address, preferring a car park or neutral location that allows them to disappear quickly after the sale.

The mileage tampering variant of used car fraud is also growing, driven partly by the record used car market and partly by advances in digital odometer technology that have made clocking more difficult to detect without specialist equipment. A vehicle that has been mileage-tampered may show no outward signs of wear beyond what is expected for the false mileage, yet have a drivetrain, clutch, brake discs and suspension components that are far more worn than they appear.

The Checks Every Buyer Should Complete Before Handing Over Money

The single most effective protection against used car fraud is to run a full vehicle history check before agreeing to buy. The DVLA’s free vehicle enquiry service at gov.uk/get-vehicle-information-from-dvla shows the registered keeper information, MOT history, tax status and whether the vehicle has been reported as scrapped or written off. It costs nothing and takes under a minute. It should be the first thing any buyer does when a vehicle catches their interest, not the last.

A paid HPI check, available from HPI, the AA, the RAC and several other providers for between £9.99 and £19.99, goes considerably further. It reveals whether the vehicle has outstanding finance secured against it, whether it has ever been declared a total loss by an insurer, whether it has been reported stolen to the Police National Computer, and whether the VIN matches the vehicle description on record. Buying a car with outstanding finance does not extinguish that finance. The finance company retains a legal interest in the vehicle regardless of how many times it changes hands, and can repossess it from a buyer who had no knowledge of its existence.

Always check the VIN in at least three locations on the vehicle and ensure they match each other and the V5C. The VIN should be stamped into the chassis rail in the engine bay, etched into the bottom corner of the windscreen, and printed on the V5C registration document. Discrepancies between any of these are a serious red flag. Also check the V5C itself. Since September 2024, new V5Cs have featured updated security features. If the document looks worn, laminated or has any signs of alteration, treat it as suspect.

The MOT history, available free through the DVSA check at gov.uk/check-mot-history, is another useful indicator. A vehicle with a clean ownership chain should show a consistent pattern of annual MOTs from the same or nearby test stations, with mileage readings that increase logically from year to year. A gap in the MOT history, a sudden drop in recorded mileage, or MOTs conducted in locations far from the registered keeper’s address can each warrant further investigation.

What to Do If You Think You Have Bought a Fraudulent Vehicle

If you discover after purchase that a vehicle is stolen or fraudulently VIN-cloned, the legal position is deeply uncomfortable. A stolen vehicle remains the property of its original owner regardless of how many times it has been sold, and can be reclaimed by the police or the original owner. A buyer who purchased in good faith has no right to keep the vehicle, though they may have a civil claim against the seller for fraud and may be able to recover money if the seller can be identified and has assets. In practice, fraudsters who sell cloned vehicles are rarely traceable.

Report any suspected vehicle fraud immediately to Action Fraud, the national fraud and cybercrime reporting service, on 0300 123 2040 or at actionfraud.police.uk. Also contact your local police force if you believe a criminal is actively selling vehicles in your area. The RAC Foundation and Which? both recommend notifying the DVLA if you believe a V5C has been fraudulently altered, as the DVLA maintains the central vehicle register and can flag vehicles under investigation.

The consumer protection gap on private sales platforms is a genuine policy issue that trading standards bodies and consumer groups have raised repeatedly. Private sales carry fewer statutory protections than dealer sales under the Consumer Rights Act 2015. Legislation requiring platforms like Facebook Marketplace to implement mandatory vehicle history checks at the point of listing has been discussed in parliamentary committees but had not been enacted as of May 2026. For now, the burden of protection falls entirely on buyers, and the most reliable protection remains thorough pre-purchase checking.


Sources:

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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