What to Look for in a Used Car: The Complete 20-Point Checklist

9 min read Updated March 2026 Inspections

Buying a used car can save you thousands compared to buying new — but only if you don't inherit someone else's problems. The difference between a great used car deal and an expensive mistake often comes down to 30 minutes of careful inspection before you sign anything. This checklist covers exactly what to look for, including red flags specific to South Florida's heat, humidity, and hurricane season.

Before You Arrive: Do Your Homework

The inspection starts before you ever see the car in person. Spending 15 minutes online can save you a wasted trip — or protect you from a car with a hidden past.

Pro Tip: If the seller won't give you the VIN before you visit, walk away. Every legitimate seller — private or dealer — will share the VIN upfront. Refusing is one of the strongest signs of a problem vehicle.

Exterior Checklist (8 Points)

Always inspect the exterior in daylight, on a dry day if possible. Rain and artificial lighting hide paint problems, dents, and rust. Walk around the car slowly, then get down low and look along the body panels at an angle — this makes dents and waves in the paint much more visible.

1 Paint Condition

Look for color mismatches between panels, which indicate repainted or replaced panels after an accident. Check for orange peel texture differences, overspray on trim pieces or rubber seals, and tape lines where masking wasn't perfect. Run your fingers along panel edges — repainted panels often have a slightly different texture. In South Florida, also look for clear coat peeling and paint oxidation from UV exposure, especially on horizontal surfaces like the hood and roof.

2 Panel Gaps

Stand at each corner of the car and look down the sides. The gaps between the hood, fenders, doors, and trunk should be even and consistent. Uneven gaps — especially on one side versus the other — indicate frame damage or poorly repaired collision damage. Compare left to right: if the gap between the front fender and the door is 4mm on the left and 8mm on the right, something has been bent or replaced.

3 Rust and Corrosion

Check wheel wells, rocker panels (below the doors), the bottom edges of all doors, and around the windshield frame. Surface rust is cosmetic. Bubbling paint means rust is growing underneath and will spread. Florida cars rust less from road salt, but ocean salt air in coastal areas (Miami Beach, Fort Lauderdale Beach, Palm Beach) accelerates corrosion, especially on brake components and undercarriage hardware.

4 Tire Condition

Tires tell you a lot about how the car was maintained and driven. Check the tread depth (insert a penny upside down — if you can see all of Lincoln's head, the tread is too worn). More importantly, check for uneven wear: wear on the inside or outside edges indicates alignment problems, which can signal suspension damage or worn components. All four tires should be the same brand and size. Mismatched tires suggest the owner went cheap on replacements.

5 Glass

Check all windows and the windshield for chips, cracks, and scratches. A small chip can be repaired for $50, but a crack that's longer than a dollar bill usually means full replacement ($200-$600+). Check that all windows roll up and down smoothly.

6 Lights

Turn on every light: headlights (low and high beam), taillights, brake lights, turn signals, fog lights, reverse lights, and hazards. Check for moisture inside the lens housings, which indicates a broken seal. A foggy headlight housing costs $150-$400 per side to replace on many modern cars.

7 Undercarriage

If you can safely look underneath the car (or if it's on a lift at a dealer), check for fresh fluid leaks, excessive rust on structural components, damaged exhaust components, and anything hanging loose. A clean undercarriage on a 5-year-old car in South Florida is a good sign. An undercarriage caked in mud or suspiciously freshly undercoated may be hiding something.

8 Frame and Structural Integrity

Open the hood and check the bolt heads on the fenders and hood hinges. Factory bolts have paint over them that matches the body. If the bolt heads are scratched, show bare metal, or have a different color paint, the panel has been removed — usually for collision repair. Check the front radiator support and the inner fenders for any signs of crumpling, welding, or straightening.

Walk Away If: You see evidence of frame straightening, fresh welds on structural components, or significantly mismatched panel gaps. A car with frame damage is never the same, may fail structurally in a future collision, and will always have diminished resale value — no matter how cheap the price.

Interior Checklist (6 Points)

9 Seats

Check for rips, tears, stains, and excessive wear on the driver's seat bolster (the side you slide across getting in and out). Leather seats in Florida take a beating from the sun — look for cracking, fading, and hardened leather on surfaces exposed to direct sunlight. Check that power seats adjust in all directions and that heated/cooled seat functions work.

10 Dashboard and Controls

Press every button. Turn every knob. Test the infotainment system, Bluetooth pairing, navigation, backup camera, and all USB/charging ports. On Florida cars, check the dashboard for warping or cracking from prolonged sun exposure — dashboard replacement can cost $800-$2,000+. Make sure the gauge cluster displays correctly with no warning lights staying on after startup.

11 Electronics and Screens

Modern cars are full of electronic systems. Test the touchscreen responsiveness, check that Apple CarPlay or Android Auto connects, verify all speakers work (play music and balance it left/right, front/rear), and test power windows, locks, and mirrors from both the driver and passenger controls. Electronic repairs on modern cars are expensive — a failed infotainment screen can cost $500-$1,500.

12 AC System

Turn the AC to maximum cold on the lowest fan setting. Within 2-3 minutes, the air from the vents should be cold enough to be uncomfortable on your hand — around 40-45 degrees Fahrenheit at the vent. In South Florida, a weak AC system is not a minor issue. Repairs range from $200 for a recharge to $1,500-$3,000 for a compressor and condenser replacement. Test the heat as well — a heater that doesn't work can indicate a clogged heater core or low coolant from a leak.

Pro Tip: If possible, arrive early and ask the seller not to start the car before you get there. You want to see a cold start and test the AC when the system is fully at ambient temperature — not after it's been pre-cooled for your visit.

13 Smells

Sit in the car with the windows up and the AC off for a minute. A musty or mildew smell can indicate water intrusion or flood damage. A sweet smell may indicate a coolant leak (heater core). A burning oil smell points to engine problems. Heavy air freshener use — especially multiple air fresheners — is sometimes used to mask underlying odors. Be suspicious.

14 Trunk and Cargo Area

Lift the trunk carpet and check the spare tire well for rust, moisture, or water staining. This is one of the first places that shows flood damage because water pools here and is often overlooked during cleanup. Check that the spare tire is present and properly inflated, and that the jack and lug wrench are included.

Mechanical Checklist (6 Points)

15 Engine Bay

With the engine off and cool, open the hood and check:

16 Transmission

On automatic transmission vehicles with a dipstick (many modern cars have sealed transmissions), check the fluid. It should be pink or light red and smell clean. Dark brown fluid with a burnt smell indicates worn clutch material inside — a transmission that may be nearing failure. A transmission rebuild or replacement costs $2,500-$5,000+.

17 Brakes

Look through the wheel spokes at the brake rotors. They should be relatively smooth — deep grooves, scoring, or a lip on the outer edge mean the rotors need resurfacing or replacement. If you can see the brake pads, check that they have at least 4mm of material remaining. A full brake job (pads and rotors, all four wheels) runs $600-$1,200 on most vehicles.

18 Suspension

Push down firmly on each corner of the car and release. The car should bounce once and settle. If it bounces multiple times or feels loose, the shocks or struts are worn. Look at the car from the front and rear — it should sit level. One corner sitting lower than the other indicates a broken spring or other suspension problem. Check the tire edges for cupping (scalloped wear pattern), which is a telltale sign of worn suspension components.

19 Exhaust

Start the engine and look at the exhaust. A brief puff of white smoke on a cold start is normal (condensation). Continuous white smoke indicates a coolant leak into the combustion chamber (head gasket). Blue smoke means the engine is burning oil (worn rings or valve seals). Black smoke indicates a rich fuel mixture (sensor or fuel system issue). Any persistent colored smoke is a reason to walk away or demand a significant price reduction.

20 Battery

Check the battery terminals for corrosion (white or green crusty buildup). Look at the date sticker on the battery — most car batteries last 3-5 years in Florida's heat (shorter than in cooler climates). A battery with heavy corrosion or one that's 4+ years old will likely need replacement soon ($150-$300).

Test Drive Checklist

The test drive is where you confirm everything you've seen so far — and catch things you can't see standing still. Plan a route that includes residential streets, a highway on-ramp, and some stops and starts.

Pro Tip: Drive over a speed bump or pothole deliberately (at reasonable speed). This loads the suspension in ways normal driving doesn't and can reveal clunks, rattles, and worn components that only show up under stress.

Florida-Specific Red Flags

South Florida's climate creates a unique set of risks for used car buyers. Hurricane season, daily afternoon rain, extreme heat, and salt air all take their toll. Here's what to watch for beyond the standard checklist.

Flood Damage Signs

After every hurricane season, flood-damaged vehicles enter the used car market — sometimes with washed titles from other states. A car that sat in even 12 inches of water can have corrosion eating its wiring, electronics, and structural components for years to come. Look for:

Warning: Florida is a "title washing" destination. A car totaled by flooding in another state can be retitled in Florida as "clean" through various schemes. Always run a vehicle history report, and if a car's history shows it was registered in a hurricane-affected area during a major storm, inspect it with extra scrutiny — or skip it entirely.

Sun Damage

The Florida sun is brutal on vehicles. Beyond the obvious cosmetic issues, UV damage affects safety and function:

AC Performance

In South Florida, the air conditioning system is not a luxury — it's essential equipment that runs 10-12 months per year. A system that barely keeps up with July heat will make the car miserable to drive. Test the AC on the hottest part of the day if possible. Vent temperature should reach 40-45 degrees Fahrenheit within 3 minutes. If it takes longer or never gets truly cold, budget $500-$3,000 for repairs depending on the issue. Compressor, condenser, and evaporator replacements are common on Florida cars due to the nearly year-round demand on the system.

When to Get a Professional Pre-Purchase Inspection (PPI)

A PPI is a comprehensive inspection performed by an independent mechanic (not the seller's mechanic) who puts the car on a lift and checks everything: compression, leak-down, electronics, suspension, and more. It costs $100-$200 and takes about an hour.

Always get a PPI for:

A $150 PPI that reveals a $2,000 problem isn't a wasted expense — it either saves you $2,000 in negotiation or prevents you from buying a car with hidden issues. Most sellers who refuse to allow a PPI are hiding something.

Pro Tip: In South Florida, shops like Eurospec (Doral), German Auto Center (Hollywood), and Miami Auto Diagnostics all offer pre-purchase inspections. Call ahead and schedule — most can do same-day or next-day appointments. Ask the shop to send you the report in writing, including photos of any issues found.

Title and Lien Verification in Florida

Before you hand over any money, verify the title status. In Florida, you can check a vehicle's title status through the Florida DHSMV website.

Warning: Never buy a used car with only a bill of sale and no title in hand. In Florida, registering a vehicle without a proper title is extremely difficult and time-consuming. If the seller says "the title is on the way" or "I lost it," wait until they have it. A replacement Florida title costs $77.25 and takes 7-10 business days — if they want to sell the car, they can wait.

Using Inspection Findings as Negotiation Leverage

Every issue you find during inspection is a data point you can use to negotiate a better price. The key is to be factual, not confrontational. Document everything with photos.

Even if you still want the car, presenting a written list of issues with estimated repair costs shows the seller you're informed and serious. Most sellers would rather adjust the price than risk losing the sale.

The Bottom Line: A thorough inspection takes 30-45 minutes and can save you thousands of dollars in unexpected repairs. Bring this checklist with you, take photos of everything you find, and don't let excitement override your judgment. The right used car at the right price is out there — and a careful inspection is how you find it.

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