Buyer guide
The best vehicle buying decisions usually come from structured comparison rather than rushed excitement. Use this guide to shortlist smarter, evaluate cars more clearly, and reach out to sellers with better context.
Search listingsBegin with the category or search page and reduce the market with meaningful filters. Price, make, year, body type, location, and transmission usually remove more noise than a generic text search alone.
Open several similar cars in separate tabs and compare the basics: year, mileage, condition, asking price, and photo quality. If one car is much cheaper than similar stock, take extra time to understand why.
The listing detail page is where you should slow down. Review the gallery, pricing, specifications, features, seller profile, and related cars. The goal is to understand whether the vehicle still makes sense after the first impression.
When you contact a seller, ask specific questions that are not already answered in the listing. Direct questions about service history, registration status, recent repairs, and inspection availability tend to produce better conversations than a vague 'Is this still available?' opener.