Home » Have You Ever Bought A Car From An Online Car Dealership?

Have You Ever Bought A Car From An Online Car Dealership?

Carvanaa Ts

The technology of the modern day has transformed how we live our lives. If you’re so inclined, you can get your groceries, prescriptions, tools, and pretty much most other things by making a few taps on your phone screen and waiting for a delivery. The digital era is even transforming car sales. Instead of going to a dealership, you can buy and finance a car entirely online without ever talking to a human. Have you ever bought a car from an online car dealership? How did it go?

In years past, shopping for a used car might have taken multiple days. You’d drive around to different dealerships, look at some cars, get the runaround from a salesman, and then do it all over again. Eventually, often right near the point where you’re exhausted, you pick a car, sign on the dotted line, and drive home.

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In my experience, few people seem to actually enjoy the process of buying a car through the traditional method of visiting a dealership. You might have to negotiate with someone who spends each and every day negotiating. You then have to fend off dealer add-ons, market adjustments, and extended warranties. Of course, some used car dealers might not be as honest as they should be, too.

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Saturn of Syracuse

Part of what made Saturn great was that it got rid of some of the major pain points of buying from a dealership. The price you saw was the price you paid, and Saturn dealers at least tried to treat you like a person and not a walking bag of money. General Motors even strongly discouraged Saturn dealers from marking up popular models. It’s no surprise that Saturn dealers consistently rated high in dealership satisfaction surveys.

CarMax would adopt the Saturn model for its own business model, and it works. The Internet has supercharged this business model. What if there wasn’t a physical dealership at all? Companies like Carvana, CarBravo, and Vroom allow you to search for and purchase cars at home. You can even sign the paperwork in your underwear and then have your vehicle delivered right to your door. No haggling, no TruCoat, and not even human interaction, if you don’t want it.

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Mercedes Streeter

Now, these companies are far from perfect. Carvana has been sued by several states for allegedly not following the law when selling cars. The car that you get from Carvana might also have some bizarre issues that should have been caught by the inspection that Carvana proudly advertises. Carvana also makes it shockingly easy to lock yourself into a loan with horrifyingly bad terms. At its worst, Carvana was allegedly selling stolen cars to people, and even cars that were kosher couldn’t be legally driven because Carvana allegedly didn’t send the vehicle owners their documentation.

Yet, for how terrible Carvana has been, I’m actually a two-time Carvana customer. My wife bought a 2010 Toyota Prius from Carvana in 2021, and I got my 2016 Mazda MX-5 Miata from Carvana this year. In both cases, the cars came largely as described, and Carvana’s process was painless from start to finish. Maybe we lucked out, or maybe Carvana has started to clean up its act. I plan on writing about my Carvana experience a bit later, but the short version was that buying from Carvana was one of the easiest car-buying experiences I’ve ever had.

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Mercedes Streeter

This is not to say that Carvana is perfect today. In my experience, Carvana’s extended warranty is only slightly better than worthless, and Carvana still misses some issues concerning a vehicle’s condition. However, that’s not any worse than buying at a normal used car dealership.

Of course, buying a car online also tends to mean that you sign on the dotted line before you even see the car in person, which might raise some hairs on your body. Yet, people keep doing it. So, that makes me wonder, Autopians. How many of you have purchased from an online car dealership? How did it go?

Topshot image graphic: Mercedes Streeter

 

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BHP
BHP
25 days ago

After 27 months in my *paid off* ’24 Accord Hybrid Touring, I traded it in to Carvana on an Acura Integra A-Spec Tech 6MT back in February. There wasn’t anything at all wrong with the Accord aside from it being horrifically boring, but at the end of the day I missed the stick shift and should have bought the Integra new to begin with when I was shopping the 2 cars against each other.

The Integra had fewer miles than my Accord, and their offer on the Accord was only $500 less than the listed price of the Integra. Done and done, wrote the check for the difference and had the Acura delivered 2 days later. Could not have been easier. During the 7-day return window, I found one cosmetic issue that had not been disclosed (cracked exterior mirror housing), and it was replaced with an new OEM mirror at no cost to me in short order.

I have zero complaints.

Reece's Pieces
Reece's Pieces
25 days ago

My parents bought their previous car from Carvana and it was really smooth. My dad had a couple of concerns about a few small items that didn’t come through on the website, and they fixed them quickly and for free.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
25 days ago

I almost bought a diesel Golf from Carvana but chickened out. I ended up with my FR-S (used from a local Honda dealer) anyway, but I think it was the pressure I felt after asking for the quote…and that I think I found a different FR-S that I ended up not buying. I’m not someone who likes feeling like I’m under pressure or being sold on things.

Last edited 25 days ago by James McHenry
Christocyclist
Christocyclist
25 days ago

When I’ve bought a used car, I’ve almost always had it inspected by my mechanic first. Isn’t that something that you give up with Carvana? I don’t get it…

JJ
JJ
25 days ago

Found my factory new 2002 VW Lupo 3L online, in the other end of the country. Never met the car dealer in person, they just specced it to my liking and delivered it to my door.

Easy and would do that again anytime.

Except buy a brand new car. Did it to see how it felt. But I would rather someone else took the massive price drop. And then use the spared doe for beer. Mmm, beer..

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
26 days ago

I’ve bought a few cars from CarMax. The best part is not suffering a business manager trying to sell add ons. They’ll ask you one time if you want a warranty. If you say no they say OK and move on. Once I had a car transferred in that had obviously been wrecked, though it had a clean CarFax. I pointed out the issues and they refunded my transfer fee.

DaChicken
Member
DaChicken
26 days ago

Sort of an online dealer… Tesla. Everything was done through the app and I didn’t see the (used) car until pickup day – not even pictures. It was an extremely easy process – just a few taps on a screen and some uploaded pictures of ID and whatnot. The pickup location was a bit far away and I’m too cheap for delivery so that’s my fault. Car was well detailed and charged up. The advisor was exceptional, answered all my questions, and even slipped me a mobile charger on the DL (usually only included on new cars).

It was nice not dealing with sales people, managers, F&I, and whatever other nonsense a traditional dealer throws in the way. Find car, buy car, drive car.

IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
Member
IRegretNothing, Esq, DVM, BBQ
26 days ago

I bought my 2017 Mazda3 from a dealership several states away. It was during the year of our ‘Rona 2020 and traveling was not an option, but the price was good enough that I still saved money even with shipping costs. I had the car inspected since I wasn’t going to see it in person. It worked out great for me, but you always assume some risk with a used car.

It was a Mitsubishi dealership, but they clearly made the bulk of their sales selling used cars from other brands. The only snag I ran into was with getting the title due to the pandemic delays effecting the Secretary of State/DMV. The temporary paper plate got a much longer tour of duty than it was valid for between the wait for the pit of state title and then the wait for an appointment in my own state to get the registration and regular plate.

Torque
Torque
25 days ago

Some states have laws in place to ensure titles are sent in a timely fashion.
I found this out buying a car out of state from Illinois. Illinois state law requires the delivery of the title of the vehicle purchased in 3 weeks from the date you signed the purchase documents.
Sadly I had to get the dealer GM involved and if that wouldn’t have worked it would have ment pursuing legal action.

Space
Space
26 days ago

I’ve bought from a newspaper classified ad, bought and sold from Craigslist, bought and sold through a dealer and bought from an online auction through an agent.
Craigslist was the easiest. 15min tops.

Westboundbiker
Member
Westboundbiker
25 days ago
Reply to  Space

I miss craigslists’ glory days. That window before the scams and annoying level of business postings, where there was just enough of a barrier to entry (not much, mind you, but more that FB marketplace). You could score some smoking deals just by hitting refresh on the page every half hour or so and seeing what cool new stuff popped up. No BS algorithm which makes it impossible to see the latest posts or find what you had looked at before, no canned “is this still available” messages, far fewer tire kickers…

I hear that in some areas that it is starting to come back, and that can’t come soon enough.

Space
Space
25 days ago
Reply to  Westboundbiker

If anyone is near Utah/Wyoming/Idaho KSL is like old Craigslist, lots of selection and even better filters.

I recently browsed Craigslist and marketplace looking for something specific. While Craigslist didn’t have what I wanted it was quick and easy to search. Marketplace just didn’t work, a useless waste of time. Seriously how does FB mess up a simple search function.

NoLongerTooBusy
NoLongerTooBusy
26 days ago

I’ve bought and sold from Carvana. Overall the experiences were fantastic. Quick and easy online transaction and I didn’t have to deal with a salesperson or finance manager that tried to keep me there forever to upsell me on everything they offer. The only issue I had was they brought me and Acura RDX and I didn’t notice until after they left that the rear tailgate plastic was all sorts of scratched up. It was advertised as excellent condition. I called them back and arranged for another car to be delivered and that one taken back. I didnt like the second car so had them come back and pick it up. No hassle, no issues – the 7 day return policy is the real deal and much better than the 15 minutes you get at a dealership. I sold them a Silverado and got an excellent price. I bought and kept an Odyssey through them.

Last edited 26 days ago by NoLongerTooBusy
M. Park Hunter
Member
M. Park Hunter
26 days ago

In 2022, I needed a car ASAP. The dealer lots were thinly populated as we crawled out of the COVID disruptions, and markups were YUGE. So I hit Carvana. Browsing was easy, and I eventually bought a low miles 2019 Kia Niro, aka The Emperor. I did the whole deal -purchase and financing – sitting in Sonny’s Pizza in Sturgeon Bay, WI.

A week later the car was delivered…
https://itisgood.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Niro-Carvana-delivery.jpg

The driver waited until I was satisfied before taking off. The only hiccup was the plastic in the hatch area was badly banged up. Carvana fixed that for me. The terms of the loan weren’t particularly bad or good. I got many great miles out of that car!

TLDR: Carvana worked fine for me. I’d do it again, versus sitting for four hours in a car salesman’s office waiting for the manager to get back to us about “that lifetime paint warranty.”

JurassicComanche25
Member
JurassicComanche25
26 days ago

A friend of mine bought a TDI 2014 passat from carvana in 2020. The car was ad described and was nice, but they kept delaying and delaying the title. He had a temp Georgia tag (in NY), and it expired after 2 months? Then they sent a new one, which expired, and then said well just keep driving it. It took nearly a year to get the title so he could register it in NY.

Ana Osato
Ana Osato
26 days ago

Yes.
Bought a sight unseen JZS155 and had it shipped halfway around the world.
Let’s just say that it seems photos don’t capture paint flaws easily, at all.
Mechanically, apart from worn out suspension bits, it’s solid.

TDI in PNW
TDI in PNW
26 days ago

Kind of. My last car I bought at a local CarMax lot (rather than using their online system). It was a fantastic experience. I may never go to a “regular” car lot again.

Dave Clearman
Dave Clearman
26 days ago

I’ve purchased three trucks from Carvana and sent all three back as they were garbage.

2014 Jeep Wrangler – Leaked like it was topless and had a strong odor of mildew.
2016 Nissan Frontier SL – Advertised as “accident-free”, but still had an accessory welding stick hanging from a very poorly-welded frame horn. Also, the almost entire non-OEM replacement front end was a dead giveaway.
2019 Nissan Frontier Pro 4X – More rusty than the Titanic

I will never buy another vehicle from Carvana again, but they gave me top $$$ for my 2022 Tesla Model 3 two months ago.

Dave from STL
Member
Dave from STL
26 days ago

Three time Carvana customer. All three have been seamless experiences – one home delivery, two picked up at the local Carvana lot (we’re not cool enough for the embarassing vending machine here in the Lou).

Also had a good experience trading in a real piece of crap on our first purchase from them. Their algorithm definitely did not ask the right questions on that one, but they honored the online quote without batting an eye.

The seven day no questions asked return policy alleviates any concerns I have about not getting to test drive it first.

Cransberry
Cransberry
26 days ago

I’ve bought two from Carvana this last year and five from traditional dealers. Carvana was such a better experience, it will take a lot to convince me to buy from a regular dealer again. Thankfully, both my current cars are quite new, so it’ll be a long while before I have to go through the hell of car shopping.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
26 days ago

May I point out the most time consuming process of buying a car at a dealership is test driving to make sure you get a chance at a decent car. Buying a car from the internet is like buying pants on the internet that advertised one size fits all.

M. Park Hunter
Member
M. Park Hunter
26 days ago

Carvana lets you return the car within seven days if not satisfied. Way better than a 15 minute test drive with Stan the Saleman of the Month yammering at you.

3WiperB
Member
3WiperB
26 days ago

Closest I’ve gotten is negotiating lease deals via email. I did use a good offer from Carvana to negotiate a better trade-in offer when I bought a car at a traditional dealer.

M SV
M SV
26 days ago

Sold a car to givemethevin they had a better offer then everyone else, went fine. I bought and payed for a $1k gmt800 suburban via marketplace and local guy delivered it to my farm while I wasn’t there.

Space
Space
26 days ago
Reply to  M SV

If it ran you got a great deal.

M SV
M SV
26 days ago
Reply to  Space

Yeah, 280k mi. The coolant overflow had a leak . I spent maybe $80 and an hour or two replacing it flushing it with new hoses and dexcool. He just wanted rid of it .

FloridaMatt
Member
FloridaMatt
26 days ago

Yeah, Vroom. Absolutely terrible decision. Over 3 months to get my registration. Nightmare replacing a dead washer pump. While dealing with a air dam issue (I caused), found inside the bumper cover a strip of masking tape with VROOM written on it, so it had obviously been replaced.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
26 days ago
Reply to  FloridaMatt

No repaired.

Detroit Lightning
Member
Detroit Lightning
26 days ago

I sold a truck to Carvana last year. They offered quite a bit more than everyone else online, and it worked out pretty great. Like, they offered more than comparable vehicles were being sold online…so maybe the algorithm screwed that one up.

Plus, the driver couldn’t drive stick so I got to drive it up the ramp onto the truck, which was kinda fun.

Harvey Firebirdman
Member
Harvey Firebirdman
26 days ago

Few cars we bought sight unseen and had shipped. My dad got his 57 Bel Air (I think from ebay around the turn on the century). I also used ebay to get a 91 K5 Jimmy had it shipped from Washington state to Illinois was in pretty good shape with no bad rust holes but shot paint. Also got a 73 Javelin from a dealer in Florida and had that shipped up to my current location in Indiana. The K5 and Javelin have been sold at this point as used the funds for other car and home projects.

Have not gotten any “modern” vehicles yet online almost got a Polestar 2 brand new but had job/life changes so glad I did not since I got one used for waaaayyy cheaper last year haha.

B P
B P
26 days ago

We bought our 2020 Odyssey from CarMax, and it was a good experience. We were able to reserve the car and have it delivered to the closest location, and go try it out. The only confusing part was the paperwork. You could do it on their website or just go in and do it. I figured it would be the same process, so we did it in store. It wasn’t as bad as a regular dealer, but it still took a few hours. Next time I’d do it online.

Their service center was great, and fixed several items on the car with no issue.

I’d definitely use them again.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
26 days ago
Reply to  B P

The paperwork time is the government rules not the dealer

YeahMoto!
Member
YeahMoto!
26 days ago

I bought, then sold back an F-Type. It was a surprisingly great experience. I drove the car for about a year, then sold it back for abou $2200 less than I bought it for. Both parts of the process were painless. Their website is on-point as well – I’m currently shopping for a 2019-2020 E450 Wagon with a very specific option set and it’s one of the only places I can actually find what I’m looking for and save it as a saved search. I think they make most of thier money from the financing side of the business – I paid cash, so I can’t speak to that part, but the rates seem high and they seem to cater to folks who have trouble with traditional financing …

Last edited 26 days ago by YeahMoto!
1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
26 days ago
Reply to  YeahMoto!

Not bad rented at $170 a month. I’d kill for a deal like that

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