Toronto Star

BUYING A CAR PRIVATELY? GET INFORMED AND STAY PROTECTED

What you need to know before you buy a pre-owned car from a private seller

- This content was funded and approved by the advertiser.

Many Ontarians purchase cars from private owners, but “buyer beware”. Avoiding dealership­s can sometimes lead to headaches, unexpected repair bills, unusable vehicles or worse. Private sales can present opportunit­ies for sellers to take advantage of consumers, often by selling vehicles and misreprese­nting their car’s history and condition. The Ontario Motor Vehicle Industry Council (OMVIC) can help you get the informatio­n you need before you buy privately to protect yourself.

As the province’s motor vehicle sales regulator, OMVIC spends almost

60 per cent of its investigat­ive resources fighting fraudulent, unlicensed car vendors known as curbsiders. Not all private sellers are curbsiders, but it’s important to stay vigilant when buying privately.

Curbsiders are illegal dealers pretending to be private sellers. They typically acquire rebuilt wrecks, vehicles with rolled-back odometers or registered liens and sell them at prices well below market value. Buying from curbsiders comes with significan­t risk. Once they sell their vehicles, they often disappear, leaving you with a potentiall­y unsafe car, headaches and repair bills.

In 2017, an Ottawa curbsider purchased vehicles written off by insurance companies and sold them illegally to consumers. At least seven vehicles had already-deployed airbags. He did not replace them before selling the vehicles, opening consumers up to extreme risk if they crashed. In 2019, a curbsiding duo from Mississaug­a purchased vehicles with high mileage, rolled back their odometers by as much as 300,000 kilometres and sold them to unsuspecti­ng buyers who did not know the vehicles’ poor state.

Depending on the severity, curbsiders can be fined up to $50,000 or spend two years less one day in jail. In 2020, OMVIC charged 353 curbsiders.

Car-buyers should beware of curbsiders. The law only protects consumers when they buy from an OMVICregis­tered dealer. If something goes wrong when buying privately, consumers have no protection­s. The only option is to sue the curbsider in civil court if the consumer can find them after the sale.

With Fraud Prevention Month in March, learning to stay vigilant is timely. Informed purchases start with you. Stay educated: go online and read OMVIC’s free guides to car-buying. OMVIC also offers webinars to help consumers learn their rights when making a purchase — privately or from a dealer.

Sign up for a webinar today by contacting education@omvic. on.ca or by calling 1-800-9436002.

OMVIC is here to protect consumers against fraud. If you think you may be dealing with a curbsider, walk away and report them to OMVIC at nocurbs@omvic.on.ca or call 1-888-NO-CURBS (662-8727). We are here to help.

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