AR AuctionRecordHelp
United States · auction-record site

How to Remove Your Car from Crashed-vin.com

A Crashed-vin.com listing can undo a sale before it starts. This page covers how the site obtained your car's record, what it means for your resale value, and the quickest route to deleting it — typically up to 36 hours.

Delete your Crashed-vin.com listing

From $70 · most jobs done in 12–72h · 24/7

Remove my car from Crashed-vin.com →

Why this matters for your sale

Public auction records have an outsized effect on resale value because they are the first thing a cautious buyer finds. The photographs and sale price frame the car as a damaged bargain, even when its current condition tells a very different story. Taking the listing down allows the vehicle to speak for itself.

What Crashed-vin.com is

Crashed-vin.com is a US-based auction-history website that mirrors vehicle lots from the Copart and IAAI salvage auctions. The instant a car is catalogued as a lot, Crashed-vin.com rebuilds a public page around its VIN — the full photo set, the damage code, the odometer and the final bid — and Google indexes that page within days.

Why your car is on it

Crashed-vin.com builds its catalogue automatically from the Copart/IAAI feed, so owner involvement is zero. That is precisely why so many sellers discover the page only when a buyer raises it mid-negotiation.

The manual route — and why it usually fails

Crashed-vin.com is built to be sticky. There is no self-service deletion, emails disappear into the void, and the listing simply repopulates from the auction feed — so owners who try alone usually give up.

The fast route: done-for-you removal

Rather than chasing the Google cache, we delete the underlying Crashed-vin.com record itself, which is what makes the removal permanent. The listing and its photos come down and the result leaves search, usually up to 36 hours.

What you get: the Crashed-vin.com record gone (photos and purchase price), and the result cleared from Google so a VIN search comes back clean.

How the removal works

  1. 1You enter your VIN at checkout — nothing else is required.
  2. 2We locate your Crashed-vin.com listing and submit the removal at the source.
  3. 3The listing, photo gallery and sale price are deleted from Crashed-vin.com.
  4. 4The result is cleared from Google so a VIN search returns clean.
  5. 5You receive confirmation, typically up to 36 hours.

Important: your official records are not affected

We remove only the third-party Crashed-vin.com listing. We do not access, alter or influence official vehicle-history records — including Carfax, AutoCheck, the federal NMVTIS database, state DMV titles or insurance records. Those remain exactly as they are; only the scraped auction page is removed from the web.

Start your Crashed-vin.com removal

From $70 · most jobs done in 12–72h · 24/7

Remove my car from Crashed-vin.com →

Frequently asked questions

How long does Crashed-vin.com removal take? +

Most Crashed-vin.com removals are completed up to 36 hours, and we confirm by email as soon as the listing is gone. Timing can vary slightly with request volume, but the large majority finish within the stated window.

Will the Crashed-vin.com listing come back? +

No. Because we remove the record at its source rather than simply clearing the Google cache, the page does not regenerate or re-index.

Do you change my Carfax, AutoCheck or NMVTIS history? +

No. We remove only third-party auction listings such as Crashed-vin.com. We do not access, alter or influence official vehicle records — including Carfax, AutoCheck, the NMVTIS database, state DMV titles or insurance records — which remain exactly as they are.

What do you need from me? +

Only your VIN, entered at checkout. No documents, accounts or personal paperwork are required.

Is it legal to remove an auction record? +

Yes. You are requesting the removal of a public, third-party listing of your own vehicle. Nothing about the official title, odometer, DMV or insurance record is changed — only the marketing page a commercial site built from the auction feed.

Often listed on these too

Cars on Crashed-vin.com usually appear on related sites. Remove them together:

AuctionRecordHelp is an independent guide. Crashed-vin.com is a third-party site and the trademark of its owner; the name is used here descriptively. Removals are carried out by our partner CleanVinUSA.