Car cloning is one of the most sophisticated scams in the UK used car market. A stolen car is given the identity of a legitimate vehicle — same make, model, colour, and registration number. To an unsuspecting buyer, it looks perfectly normal. Here are seven red flags that can save you from buying a clone.

1. Understand What Car Cloning Is

Cloning starts with criminals stealing a car. They then find a legitimate car of the same make, model, colour, and approximate age. They obtain (or forge) number plates matching the legitimate car, and may swap or forge VIN plates. Some even obtain a fraudulent V5C from the DVLA.

The result is a stolen car that, on the surface, appears to be a completely different, legitimate vehicle. The real owner of the cloned identity may not even know their car's details are being used.

2. Check the VIN in Multiple Locations

The Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) is a 17-character code unique to every car. It appears in several locations:

  • Windscreen — etched or printed on a small plate, visible from outside at the base of the windscreen
  • Door pillar — on a sticker or plate visible when the driver's door is open
  • Engine bay — stamped directly into the metal
  • V5C logbook — printed on the document

All four must match exactly. If any VIN is different, missing, or shows signs of tampering (scratches, different fonts, uneven stamping), walk away immediately.

Pro Tip: Take a photo of every VIN location and compare them side by side. Cloners sometimes miss one location, especially the engine bay stamp, which is hardest to forge.

3. Match V5C Details to the Actual Car

The V5C logbook contains details that must match the car in front of you:

  • Colour — does the V5C colour match exactly? (Beware recently resprayed cars)
  • Engine size — does it match the V5C?
  • Date of first registration — does it match the car's age?
  • Number of previous keepers — does this seem reasonable?

4. Run a Vehicle History Check

A SortedCheck or HPI check queries national databases for stolen markers, outstanding finance, write-off history, and mileage discrepancies. If a car has a stolen marker, the check will flag it immediately.

This is the single most effective protection against buying a cloned car. The cost of a check is negligible compared to the risk of losing thousands of pounds.

5. Check the Number Plates Match the V5C

This sounds obvious, but check that the registration number on the plates matches the V5C exactly. Also look at the plates themselves:

  • Are they in the correct legal format (BS AU 145e standard)?
  • Do they look new on an old car? (Cloners often fit fresh plates)
  • Is there any sign of different plates underneath?

6. Meet at the Seller's Home Address

Legitimate private sellers will typically meet you at their home — the address on the V5C. If the seller wants to meet in a car park, motorway services, or "neutral location," be suspicious. Cloned cars are almost always sold from locations that cannot be traced back to the seller.

Verify that the address on the V5C matches where you are meeting. If the seller says they have moved recently, that is a common excuse used by fraudsters.

Check any car before you buy

SortedCheck reveals stolen markers, finance, write-offs, and mileage history.

7. Price Too Good to Be True

Cloned cars are typically priced 15–30% below market value to attract quick sales. The seller wants the car gone fast before anyone checks too closely. If a car seems like a bargain, ask yourself why.

⚠️ What to Do If You Suspect a Clone
  • Do NOT buy the car
  • Do not confront the seller — they may be dangerous
  • Note the registration number, location, and any seller details
  • Report to the police on 101 (non-emergency)
  • Report to Action Fraud: actionfraud.police.uk

Final Thoughts

Car cloning is a serious crime that leaves innocent buyers out of pocket. The combination of checking VINs in multiple locations, running a vehicle history check, and meeting at the seller's home address will catch the vast majority of clones. Never skip these steps, no matter how good the deal looks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Car cloning is when criminals take the identity of a legitimate car (its registration number, VIN plates, and V5C details) and apply them to a stolen car of the same make, model, and colour. The stolen car then appears to be legal, making it very difficult to detect without thorough checks.
Check the VIN in multiple locations: the windscreen plate, the door pillar sticker, the engine bay stamp, and the V5C document. All must match exactly. Run a vehicle history check for stolen markers. Compare the V5C details (colour, engine size, registration date) against the actual car. Check the MOT history for any anomalies.
The police will seize the car and return it to the rightful owner. You will lose both the car and the money you paid. Your only recourse is to pursue the seller through the courts or claim on insurance if you have legal expenses cover. This is why running a vehicle history check before purchase is essential.
The VIN (Vehicle Identification Number) is a 17-character code found in several locations: etched into the windscreen (bottom corner, visible from outside), on a metal plate on the door pillar (visible when the driver's door is open), stamped into the engine bay, and printed on the V5C logbook.
Yes, unfortunately. The MOT test checks the car's roadworthiness, not its identity. A well-maintained cloned car can pass an MOT without any issues. The MOT tester records the registration number and mileage but does not verify the VIN against a national database during the test.

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