Vehicles

Before You Buy a Used Truck

Used truck prices have inflated 40 to 60% since 2020. Dealers know buyers are emotionally attached to trucks. Here is how to evaluate one without getting overcharged or buying someone else's problem.

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Quick Verdict

Used trucks are a good value if you buy from a private party with a verifiable service history, run a pre-purchase inspection, and stay under 100k miles. Dealer certified trucks carry a markup that often does not justify the added cost.

What to Check Before You Test Drive

Run a VIN check (Carfax or AutoCheck) before you spend time on a truck. Look for: prior accidents, title brands (salvage, rebuilt, flood, lemon law buyback), number of previous owners, and odometer rollback flags.

Check the listing photos for rust under the wheel wells, around the frame, and in the bed. These are expensive repairs often missed in casual inspections.

Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist

Always pay for an independent mechanic inspection ($100 to $200) before buying any used truck from a private party or dealer. Ask the mechanic to check:

  • Frame rust and structural integrity
  • Transmission condition (slippage, hesitation, fluid color)
  • Differential and transfer case condition
  • Oil and coolant condition and signs of mixing
  • Tires for uneven wear (alignment and suspension issues)
  • All four-wheel-drive modes if applicable
  • Brake condition and rotor thickness
  • Undercarriage for signs of off-road abuse or flood damage