Dealer Fraud

Dealer Fraud After You Bought the Car: A Plain-English Guide to Your Next Steps

The quick takeaway

If you suspect the dealer misled you (about the car’s condition, price, financing, add-ons, or history), your best move is to slow down, document everything, and stop relying on phone calls. Many “dealer fraud” cases turn on paper trails.

Common dealer fraud scenarios consumers report

  • Payment packing: You agreed to a price, but the monthly payment includes extras you didn’t approve.
  • Add-ons you didn’t request: Service contracts, GAP, “appearance packages,” etching, alarm systems.
  • Spot delivery / yo-yo financing: You took the car home, then the dealer says financing “fell through” and pressures you into worse terms.
  • Misrepresentation of vehicle history: Prior accidents, salvage/flood history, odometer issues.
  • Condition misrepresentation: “Certified” or “like new” claims that don’t match reality.
  • Trade-in problems: Dealer changes the trade value after you sign or claims you “owe” more.

Step-by-step: what to do in the first 72 hours

1) Gather every document you were given

Create a folder (paper + digital) and collect:

  • Buyer’s order / purchase agreement
  • Retail installment sales contract (RISC)
  • Truth-in-Lending disclosures
  • Odometer disclosure statement
  • We-Owe/You-Owe form
  • Add-on contracts (warranty, GAP, service plan)
  • Any “due bill,” delivery checklist, or inspection sheet
  • Financing approval/denial notices (if any)

2) Write down a timeline while it’s fresh

In a single note, list:

  • Who you spoke with (names/titles)
  • What was promised (exact words if you remember)
  • When you were shown documents (before/after signing)
  • Any pressure tactics (“sign now,” “this is standard,” “everyone gets this”)

3) Preserve proof of what you saw online

If the listing influenced you, save:

  • Screenshots of the online ad
  • The VIN page, “certified” claims, and mileage
  • Any “no accidents” or “clean title” statements

4) Stop negotiating by phone

If you must communicate, use email or text so you have a record. If you do talk by phone, follow up with a short email:

  • “Confirming our call today: you stated X, Y, Z.”

5) Avoid signing “new paperwork” without review

A common pattern is being asked to “re-sign” documents. Don’t sign anything new until you:

  • Receive copies in advance
  • Compare numbers line-by-line
  • Understand whether the new deal is worse

What to document (this is where cases are won)

Use this checklist:

  • Photos of the odometer and dashboard warning lights
  • Photos/videos of the car’s condition (inside/outside)
  • Copies of all paperwork (scan or photograph)
  • Bank/credit card records for down payment
  • Any proof of insurance you were required to obtain
  • Messages from the dealer (texts, emails)
  • Any repair estimates if the car has issues

Red flags that deserve a closer look

  • You never received a copy of what you signed
  • Numbers changed between the “worksheet” and the final contract
  • You were rushed or discouraged from reading
  • Add-ons appear on the contract that you didn’t request
  • The dealer won’t give you the lender’s contact info
  • You’re told you must return immediately or “you’ll be arrested” (pressure/false threats)

Practical “contract check” (what to compare)

Set aside 20 minutes and compare:

  • Cash price vs. what you thought you agreed to
  • Down payment amount and whether it’s correctly credited
  • Trade-in value and payoff (if you had a loan)
  • Itemization of add-ons
  • APR and total of payments
  • Fees (doc fee, registration, taxes)

If anything looks unfamiliar, highlight it and write a question next to it.

What not to do

  • Don’t rely on “they said they’ll fix it” without a written commitment.
  • Don’t post accusations with personal details online while you’re still gathering facts.
  • Don’t miss payment deadlines while a dispute is ongoing (late payments can create additional problems).

When to talk to a consumer attorney

Consider a legal review if:

  • You believe you were misled about financing or add-ons
  • The dealer is refusing to provide copies
  • You’re being pressured into a worse deal after spot delivery
  • The vehicle history appears different than represented

If you’re dealing with a confusing car purchase situation, Ginsburg Law Group, PC can review your documents, help you understand your options, and advise on next steps. You can contact us for a case evaluation.

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