Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

CARFAX Canada — Vehicle History Reports Explained

CARFAX Canada is the most widely used vehicle history report service in Canada. Before buying any used vehicle, running a CARFAX Canada report is one of the most important steps you can take to protect yourself. This guide explains what's in a CARFAX Canada report, what it can and can't tell you, how much it costs, and why the Canadian version is very different from the US CARFAX.

CARFAX Canada vs. US CARFAX — They Are Not the Same

This is the most important thing to understand: CARFAX Canada and CARFAX USA are entirely separate databases. A US CARFAX report will not show Canadian accident history, Canadian registrations, or Canadian odometer readings. If you're buying a vehicle in Canada, you need a CARFAX Canada report — period. US reports miss all Canadian data and can give you a false sense of security on a vehicle with a significant Canadian history.

CARFAX Canada collects data from Canadian provincial governments, insurance bureaus, police databases, service centres, and auction records across all provinces and territories.

What CARFAX Canada Shows

What CARFAX Canada Does NOT Show

A clean CARFAX Canada report does not guarantee a clean vehicle. CARFAX only knows what has been reported to its data sources. It will not show:

This is why a CARFAX Canada report complements — but does not replace — a professional pre-purchase inspection.

Clean Report ≠ Clean Car: Studies suggest that a significant percentage of vehicles with hidden accident damage have clean CARFAX reports because the damage was never reported to insurance. Always combine a CARFAX report with an independent mechanical inspection.

How Much Does CARFAX Canada Cost?

CARFAX Canada reports are available directly through carfax.ca. Pricing as of 2025:

Many dealerships provide CARFAX Canada reports free of charge with their used vehicle listings. AutoTRADER.ca also integrates CARFAX Canada data into some listings. If a private seller or dealer refuses to provide or pay for a CARFAX report, that itself is a red flag.

How to Read a CARFAX Canada Report

The report is organized chronologically, showing key events in the vehicle's life. Key things to review:

  1. Vehicle summary at the top: Check for any title brands (rebuilt, salvage, lemon law buyback, etc.)
  2. Number of owners: More owners in a short time span warrants questions
  3. Registration history: Multiple provinces quickly could indicate an attempt to hide history (province-hopping)
  4. Accident section: Look for severity descriptions — minor damage vs. structural or airbag deployment
  5. Odometer readings over time: Verify they increase consistently and match current reading
  6. Lien section: Any listed lien must be resolved before purchase

AutoCheck: The Alternative to CARFAX Canada

AutoCheck (by Experian) is an alternative vehicle history report service available in Canada. It draws from some different data sources and is used heavily at auction. Running both CARFAX Canada and AutoCheck on a vehicle you're seriously considering provides the most complete picture available.

Provincial PPSA Lien Searches

CARFAX Canada provides some lien information, but for maximum protection, run a separate PPSA (Personal Property Security Act) search through your province's official registry. In Ontario, you can search through ServiceOntario's PPSA registry. In BC, through the BC Personal Property Registry. This confirms there are no financial claims against the vehicle beyond what CARFAX shows.

Free VIN Check Resources for Canadians

Before paying for a full report, some free checks are worth doing:

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