The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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candid-kestrel-003

Dealer lied about vehicle history, now threatening to block my registration — what can I do?

I'm honestly still in shock that this is my life right now. I bought a used SUV from a local dealership about two months ago. The salesperson looked me dead in the eye and told me it was a one-owner personal vehicle, barely driven, owned by 'a retired couple who barely used it.' My sister was sitting right next to me and heard the whole pitch.

Fast forward to last week — I pull the full vehicle history and the previous registered owner was a regional logistics company. High-rotation commercial use. That's about as far from a retired couple's weekend car as you can get. The wear patterns on the interior suddenly make a lot more sense.

That alone would be bad enough, but here's where it gets wild: I've been waiting on my permanent plates since the sale. I called the dealership to follow up and they're now claiming I owe them extra money for registration fees — fees that were never mentioned in my contract and that the salesperson explicitly said were covered in the purchase price. My sister heard that too.

When I pushed back and said I was going to file a complaint with the state DMV, the salesperson got aggressive and basically implied they could 'put a hold' on my registration. Can they actually do that? Is that even legal?

I've already sent a written complaint to my state's consumer protection office. I'm documenting everything — saving every text and email. But I'm genuinely scared about driving around without proper plates while this drags out.

Has anyone dealt with a dealer retaliating like this after you pushed back? What actually helped you?

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12 replies

  • 12
    quick-newt-174

    The 'retired couple' line is such a classic dealer move — I got told something almost identical when I bought my truck. Turned out it had been a rental fleet vehicle. I felt so stupid but honestly the fault is entirely on them for lying. Document EVERYTHING. Screenshot your vehicle history report right now if you haven't already and save a copy somewhere the dealer can't access.

    • 14
      curious-vole-424

      I worked in the industry for years and I'll tell you: the move where they add fees AFTER the sale and then threaten to block your registration is not uncommon at shady shops. They're betting you don't know your rights. What you want to do is get the original signed contract and highlight every fee line. If that registration charge isn't in there with a dollar amount, that's a paper trail problem for them, not you.

    • 2
      weary-passenger778

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 10
    keen-bison-671

    That registration 'hold' threat is almost certainly a pressure tactic to get you to pay before you think too hard about your options. Dealers know that most buyers will just cave to avoid the hassle. Don't pay anything extra until you've talked to someone who knows the law in your state — paying could actually hurt your position later.

  • 14
    hearty-swan-510

    A few things worth knowing — most states have consumer protection statutes that cover exactly this kind of misrepresentation at the point of sale. Verbal representations made during a sales pitch (like the 'one private owner' claim) can sometimes be treated as part of the agreement even if they're not in the written contract, especially if you have a corroborating witness. The fee issue is separate but potentially equally actionable if the contract is silent on it. I'd suggest sending any further communication to the dealer in writing only — no more phone calls without notes.

  • 9
    plain-dove-855

    Not legal advice, but this fact pattern — misrepresentation of vehicle history, undisclosed fees, and apparent post-complaint retaliation — is the kind of thing a consumer protection or auto fraud attorney would want to hear about. Many take these cases on contingency, meaning no upfront cost to you. The witness who was present for the sales pitch is a genuinely useful piece of evidence. Worth at least a free consultation before you do anything else.

    • 0
      quiet-optimist754

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 7
    mellow-kestrel-645

    I know this isn't a medical question but please take care of yourself through this. Situations like this — where you feel deceived and then threatened — can cause real stress and anxiety that people underestimate. Make sure you're sleeping and not letting this consume every waking moment. You're doing the right things by documenting and filing complaints. Take it one step at a time.

  • 20
    plain-elk-857

    One thing I'd want to know more about: did the written contract specifically say registration and plates were included, or was that only said verbally? Because if it's only verbal and your contract has a standard 'this is the entire agreement' clause, that could complicate things. Still worth fighting, just want to make sure you go in with realistic expectations.

  • 8
    gentle-hare-718

    Three things, in order: (1) stop talking to them on the phone, email only from here on. (2) File a complaint with your state attorney general's consumer protection division TODAY — dealers hate that. (3) Talk to a consumer protection lawyer before you pay them a single cent. You have a witness. That's more than most people have. Use it.

  • 6
    clever-fox-737

    I know it feels like everything is falling apart right now but honestly — you caught this early, you have a witness, and you have written documentation. A lot of people in worse situations have come out okay. The fact that the dealer is getting aggressive probably means they know they messed up. Hang in there.

    • 10
      honest-driver665

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.