A vehicle history report is one of the most important steps in buying any used car in Canada. For $40–$70, you get a detailed record of a vehicle's past — accidents, ownership history, odometer readings, liens, and title status. Skipping this step on a $20,000 purchase is false economy.
Carfax Canada vs CARPROOF
In Canada, the two dominant vehicle history report providers are Carfax Canada and CARPROOF. In 2015, Carfax acquired CARPROOF and integrated data sources, so both products now draw from largely the same Canadian database. You'll see both brand names used — they're effectively the same report in 2026.
| Feature | Carfax Canada / CARPROOF |
|---|---|
| Price (single report) | ~$40–$65 CAD |
| Canadian accident data | Yes — all provinces |
| US accident data | Yes — cross-border history included |
| Odometer records | Yes — from service visits, inspections |
| Lien/encumbrance check | Partial — full PPSA search recommended separately |
| Stolen vehicle status | Yes — RCMP and provincial police databases |
| Total loss / salvage | Yes — declared write-offs across Canada and US |
| Rebuild/branded title | Yes |
| Number of owners | Yes |
| Service records | Partial — from participating shops and dealers |
What a Clean Vehicle History Report Includes
A "clean" report should show:
- No reported accidents or damage claims
- Odometer readings that progress consistently over time (no sudden drops)
- Title that is "clean" — not salvage, rebuilt, flood-damaged, or lemon law buyback
- Registered and insured in Canada or a US state consistently
- No record of being reported stolen
- Ownership history that makes sense (number of owners, time each owner held it)
Red Flags in a Canadian Vehicle History Report
- Salvage/rebuilt title: Vehicle was declared a total loss by an insurer and subsequently repaired. These cars can be unsafe and are difficult to insure and resell.
- Odometer rollback: A recorded reading higher than a later reading — clear evidence of tampering. This is a criminal offence in Canada.
- Flood damage: Electrical systems in flood-damaged vehicles can fail months or years later in unpredictable ways.
- US lemon law buyback: Manufacturer repurchased vehicle due to repeated defects.
- Structural damage declared: Frame damage significantly affects safety and resale value.
- Minor reported accident with no structural damage — common and often well-repaired
- Multiple owners in a short period — ask why; could be fleet vehicle or lease returns
- Gaps in service records — not reported doesn't mean not serviced
- Cross-border history (US registered) — check for flood/hurricane areas
Where to Get a Vehicle History Report in Canada
- Carfax Canada (carfax.ca): Single report ~$49.99 CAD; bundle packages available
- CARPROOF (carproof.com): Now integrated with Carfax; same data
- AutoTrader listings: Many dealer listings include a free Carfax Canada report
- Dealer purchase: Dealers in Ontario are legally required to provide a Used Vehicle Information Package (UVIP) which includes accident history
- Kijiji Autos: Some private sellers include a history report in the listing
PPSA Lien Search — Separate from Vehicle History
Vehicle history reports provide partial lien information, but a full PPSA (Personal Property Security Act) search through your provincial registry is the definitive lien check. Cost: typically $10–$25. This confirms whether a financial institution holds a security interest against the vehicle — meaning the previous owner borrowed money using the vehicle as collateral and hasn't paid it back.
If you buy a vehicle with an undisclosed lien, the lender can potentially repossess the vehicle from you, even though you're an innocent buyer. Always check.
How to Read an Odometer Section
The odometer section of a Carfax/CARPROOF report lists recorded readings chronologically from service visits, inspections, and registrations. Look for:
- Consistent upward progression of readings over time
- Average annual mileage that makes sense (Canadian average is ~18,000 km/year)
- No reading that is lower than a previous reading (rollback flag)
- Last recorded reading close to what the seller claims current mileage is
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A clean report does NOT guarantee a clean vehicle. Reports only contain incidents that were reported to insurance, police, or registered in a provincial/state database. Private cash repairs, unreported accidents, and mechanical problems never appear. This is why an independent pre-purchase mechanical inspection is essential in addition to a history report — not instead of it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Carfax Canada the same as US Carfax?
No — they're separate databases. Canadian vehicles' history is primarily in Carfax Canada / CARPROOF. A US Carfax report won't show Canadian accidents and vice versa. If you're buying a vehicle with US history, you may want both reports.
Can a dealer refuse to show a vehicle history report in Canada?
In Ontario, dealers must provide a UVIP. In other provinces, dealers aren't legally required to provide a Carfax, but most reputable dealers will. A refusal is a red flag.
Does a vehicle history report show all accidents?
No — only reported accidents. Many minor accidents are repaired without an insurance claim, especially in the used car market. A history report is a floor, not a ceiling, on what you know about a vehicle's past.
See also: Private Sale Guide | Car Buying Checklist | Used Car Financing