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VIN Guide

How to Find the VIN?

Every vehicle has several VIN locations, both on the vehicle itself and in official documents. This guide shows where to find the VIN on cars, motorcycles, RVs, ATVs, and trucks, how to check if the numbers match, and what mismatches can tell you.
What Can You Tell From a VIN?
“On a car, the first place to check is the lower corner of the dashboard on the driver’s side. You can usually see the VIN through the windshield without opening the car. For motorcycles, check the steering head. For ATVs, check the front frame area. For RVs and trucks, check the dashboard, driver-side door jamb, or certification label. Always compare the VIN in more than one place. If the numbers do not match, or if the VIN plate looks damaged, loose, or replaced, treat it as a serious warning sign.”
Martynas Baniulis

Chief Editor

Real VIN Example

1HGBH41JXMN109186
A VIN is 17 characters long and divided into sections: the first three characters identify the manufacturer (WMI), characters 4–9 describe the vehicle (model, body style, engine, check digit), character 10 is the model year, character 11 is the assembly plant, and the final six digits are the unique serial number for that vehicle.

All VIN locations on a car

Manufacturers are required to put the VIN in at least one visible location. Most put it in several. Here are all the standard locations grouped by type.

Primary

Dashboard - driver's side

The most commonly checked location. Look through the windshield from outside the vehicle at the lower corner of the dashboard on the driver’s side. The VIN is on a metal plate or sticker visible from outside.
This is the location all NHTSA, Carfax, and carVertical systems reference. Always start here.

Primary

Driver's side door jamb

Open the driver’s door and look at the area where the door latches – the door jamb. A sticker here shows the VIN along with tire pressure, load capacity, and production information.
This sticker also shows the manufacturing date. Useful for verifying the model year matches what is advertised.

Secondary

Engine block or firewall

The VIN is often stamped directly into the engine block or on a plate attached to the firewall (the wall between the engine and passenger compartment). Location varies by manufacturer.
If the engine block VIN differs from the dashboard VIN, the engine may have been replaced - which matters for insurance, emissions, and value.

Secondary

Front of the frame

On trucks, SUVs, and older vehicles, a VIN plate is often stamped or welded to the front frame rail near the radiator support. Use a flashlight to check this area.
Frame VINs are harder to tamper with and are used by mechanics and insurance adjusters to verify identity after major repairs.

Secondary

Spare tire area (trucks and SUVs)

In some truck models, a VIN plate or stamp is located in the spare tire well or under the bed liner. Check your specific model’s documentation if you cannot find it elsewhere.

Document

Title and registration

The VIN appears on the vehicle title, registration certificate, and any bill of sale. The title VIN is the official legal identifier for ownership transfers.
Always match the title VIN to the physical dashboard VIN before completing any purchase. A mismatch is a serious warning sign.

Document

Insurance card and policy

Your insurance card and the full policy document both list the VIN. This is useful when you need the VIN but cannot access the vehicle – for example when checking a potential purchase remotely.

Document

Dealer or manufacturer sticker

On newer vehicles, the Monroney sticker (window sticker) shows the VIN. Dealers also include it on all purchase paperwork. For used vehicles, the previous owner’s service records may have it.

Motorcycle

Where to Find the VIN on a Motorcycle

Motorcycles follow a different convention than cars. The VIN is rarely on a dashboard – instead it is stamped directly into the frame or engine. Here is where to look, in order of likelihood.

Primary

Steering head (front fork neck)

The most common location. The steering head is the tube at the top of the front forks where they connect to the frame. The VIN is stamped or pressed into the metal here – look at the front of the frame where the handlebars attach. You may need to turn the handlebars to one side to see it clearly.
This is the location all databases reference for motorcycles. If the VIN here is scratched, restamped, or unreadable, treat this as a serious red flag.

Secondary

Engine case stamping

Many manufacturers also stamp a VIN or engine number on the engine case itself, typically on the lower left or right side of the engine block. The engine number is not always identical to the frame VIN – some manufacturers use a separate engine serial number – but it should be consistent with the documentation.
If an engine has been replaced, the engine number will not match the frame VIN. This is not automatically a problem, but it should be disclosed and documented.

Secondary

Frame downtubes and swingarm

On some models, additional VIN stamps appear on the main frame downtubes – the tubes running from the steering head down toward the engine mounts. The swingarm (the rear suspension arm) may also carry a partial serial number on higher-end models. These are rarely the primary identification point but can be useful for cross-checking.

Document

Title, registration, and insurance policy

The VIN appears on all official documents: title, registration certificate, and your insurance card. These must match the frame-stamped VIN exactly. Even a single character difference between physical stamping and the title is a disqualifying inconsistency that must be resolved before purchase.

What to look for when buying a used motorcycle

Found the VIN? Check it now.

Enter the 17-character VIN to get public data, recall information, and everything the community has shared about that vehicle.

RV / Motorhome

Where to Find the VIN on an RV or Motorhome

RVs and motorhomes are more complex than passenger vehicles. A Class A, B, or C motorhome is built on a chassis manufactured by one company (Ford, Freightliner, Spartan) and bodied by another (Winnebago, Thor, Coachmen). This means the vehicle may carry two separate VINs – one for the chassis and one for the coach body.

Two VINs: chassis vs. coach body

Most motorhomes have a chassis VIN (assigned by Ford, GM, Mercedes, Freightliner, etc.) and a house or body VIN (assigned by the RV manufacturer). Insurance, registration, and history lookups typically use the chassis VIN. Always confirm which VIN your insurer and DMV are tracking - they are not always the same.

Primary

Dashboard - driver's side (Class A, B, C motorhomes)

On Class C and most Class B motorhomes (which are built on van and truck chassis), the VIN is in the same location as the base vehicle – on the driver’s side dashboard, visible through the windshield. On Class A motorhomes, look at the windshield pillar or the lower dashboard area. The exact placement depends on the chassis manufacturer.On Class C and most Class B motorhomes (which are built on van and truck chassis), the VIN is in the same location as the base vehicle – on the driver’s side dashboard, visible through the windshield. On Class A motorhomes, look at the windshield pillar or the lower dashboard area. The exact placement depends on the chassis manufacturer.
On Ford E-Series and Transit-based Class C motorhomes, the VIN plate is in the classic windshield-visible position. On Freightliner and Spartan Class A chassis, it may be on the A-pillar or a door jamb plate.

Primary

Driver's entry door jamb

The driver’s door jamb sticker on an RV carries the chassis VIN, GVWR (Gross Vehicle Weight Rating), axle ratings, and tire specifications. This is often the easiest location to read. On Class B vans, this is the same as any passenger vehicle door jamb sticker.

Secondary

Front chassis frame rail

The chassis VIN is stamped on the front frame rail – typically visible from under the hood or from underneath the front of the vehicle. On diesel pushers (Class A), look behind the front cap near the chassis crossmember. On gas Class A models, it is near the front axle.

Secondary

Coach body VIN plate (exterior)

The RV manufacturer’s body VIN plate is usually located on the exterior – often near the entry door, on the front cap, or behind the entry door when open. It is a separate identifier from the chassis VIN and reflects the RV builder’s production record. Some states require both VINs on the title.
Towable RVs (travel trailers, fifth wheels, pop-up campers) have only one VIN on the A-frame tongue or the front wall of the trailer. They do not have a separate chassis VIN.

Document

Title - confirm which VIN is registered

RV titles vary by state. Some states title the RV on the chassis VIN. Others use the body/coach VIN. A few states issue two separate titles. Always check the title and confirm which VIN it lists – then verify that number against the corresponding physical location on the vehicle.

RV VIN checklist for buyers

ATV / UTV / Off-Road

Where to Find the VIN on an ATV or UTV

All-terrain vehicles (ATVs) and utility terrain vehicles (UTVs) manufactured after 1981 use the standard 17-character VIN format. Older or imported machines may use shorter or non-standard numbers – check your documentation in those cases. Here is where to find it on modern ATVs and UTVs.

Primary

Left front frame tube or down tube

The most common location on ATVs is the left (driver’s side) front frame tube – the structural metal that runs near the front left wheel area. The VIN is stamped directly into the frame metal. Look near the left front of the frame, roughly where the front left A-arm or suspension mounts to the chassis.
Polaris ATVs typically put the VIN on the left side of the frame near the front suspension. Honda and Yamaha ATVs commonly stamp it on the left front frame rail. Can-Am (BRP) uses the left front frame near the footwell.

Primary

Frame near the steering column or neck

Many ATV manufacturers place the VIN near the base of the steering column where it connects to the front frame – similar to the steering head location on motorcycles. This is especially common on sport-utility ATVs from Kawasaki, Suzuki, and Honda.

Secondary

Under the seat or near the battery tray

Some manufacturers affix a VIN plate or sticker under the seat or near the battery compartment. This secondary location is especially common on Can-Am Outlander and some older Honda FourTrax models. The seat latch release is usually a lever behind the seat or under the rear fenders.
Stickers under the seat are secondary identifiers and easier to tamper with. Always cross-reference with the frame-stamped VIN.

Secondary

UTV: door jamb or side frame (side-by-sides)

Side-by-side UTVs (Polaris RZR, Can-Am Maverick, Yamaha YXZ, Honda Talon) often have a VIN plate in the door jamb area of the driver’s door – similar to a passenger car. Some models also stamp the VIN on the ROPS (roll-over protection structure) or on the dash panel. Check the driver’s side entry area first.

Document

Registration certificate and title

ATVs and UTVs are titled in most US states, Canadian provinces, and many countries. The VIN on the title and registration must match the stamped frame VIN exactly. Some states use a separate Off-Highway Vehicle (OHV) registration system – the VIN format and lookup process may differ from road vehicles.

ATV/UTV buying tips

Truck / Pickup / Commercial

Where to Find the VIN on a Truck

Pickup trucks (F-150, RAM 1500, Silverado, Tundra) share most VIN locations with passenger cars, but their body-on-frame construction adds a few additional stamping points. Heavy-duty and commercial trucks (F-250, F-350, RAM 2500/3500, commercial vans) follow the same rules but may have additional plates required by federal commercial vehicle regulations.

Primary

Dashboard - driver's side (standard location)

Same as passenger cars. Look through the driver’s side windshield at the lower corner of the dashboard. All domestic and import pickup trucks use this location. The VIN plate is visible from outside the truck without opening any door.
This is the primary VIN location referenced by NHTSA, Carfax, and all insurance systems. Always start here and cross-reference with at least one other location.

Primary

Driver's door jamb sticker

Open the driver’s door and check the door jamb – the vertical surface where the door latches. The certification sticker here shows the VIN, GVWR, GAWR (Gross Axle Weight Rating), tire and rim specifications, and the manufacturing date. On trucks, this sticker also lists payload capacity. It is one of the most information-dense labels on the vehicle.

Secondary

Front frame rail (body-on-frame trucks)

Body-on-frame trucks have a separate ladder frame underneath. The VIN is stamped or welded onto the front frame rail – typically near the radiator support, on the driver’s side. Use a flashlight and look up from under the front bumper area. Ford F-Series stamps this on the top of the driver’s side frame rail, near the front axle. RAM and GM trucks follow a similar placement.
Frame VINs are harder to tamper with than dashboard plates. Insurance adjusters and salvage yard operators always check the frame VIN after major accidents. If the frame has been replaced, the frame VIN will not match the dashboard.

Secondary

Under the bed / spare tire area

Some truck models stamp the VIN under the bed or in the spare tire carrier area. This is especially common on older Ford and GM trucks. On newer models, check the bed rail area near the cab – some manufacturers affix a VIN sticker there as well. Lift the bed liner (if removable) to check the bed floor area.

Secondary

Engine firewall plate

Under the hood, look at the firewall – the flat metal wall at the rear of the engine compartment, between the engine and the cab. Many trucks have a VIN plate riveted or bolted here. On Ford Super Duty trucks, this is often on the passenger side of the firewall. On GM heavy-duty trucks, check both sides.

Commercial Only

Federal DOT certification plate (commercial trucks)

Heavy commercial trucks (Class 6, 7, 8) are required by federal law to carry a Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS) certification label that includes the VIN, GVWR, GAWR, and date of manufacture. This plate is usually inside the cab on the driver’s door jamb or B-pillar and is separate from the standard certification sticker on lighter vehicles.

Truck-specific VIN tips

Warning signs

VIN red flags to watch for

When buying a used vehicle, the VIN locations tell you more than just the number. Inconsistencies and tampering signs are serious warnings.

VINs on different parts do not match

Parts may have been swapped from another vehicle - a sign of serious accident damage or identity fraud.

Dashboard plate shows signs of removal or reattachment

The plate may have been taken from another vehicle. Check secondary VIN locations carefully.

VIN on the vehicle does not match title or registration

Do not complete the purchase until this is explained and verified. It may indicate the title is for a different vehicle.

VIN is obscured, scratched, or partially removed

Intentional VIN tampering is illegal and a major red flag. Walk away.

Seller claims they cannot find the VIN

Every road vehicle has at least three VIN locations. An inability to find it is suspicious.

FOUND A RED FLAG?

Run a full vehicle history report

A paid history report can surface accident records, title issues, odometer rollbacks, and salvage history that the VIN alone cannot reveal. See which services are worth using.

VIN verification checklist for buyers

Before finalizing any used vehicle purchase, work through these steps in order.

Locate the primary VIN (dashboard for cars/trucks, steering head for motorcycles, frame rail for ATVs)

Check the door jamb sticker and confirm the VIN matches (cars, trucks, UTVs)

Compare the vehicle VIN to the title document character by character

Verify the VIN is exactly 17 characters with no spaces (post-1981 vehicles)

Confirm the VIN contains no 0 (zero), I, or Q characters

Check the VIN plate or stamping for signs of tampering, grinding, or reattachment

Cross-check a secondary location (frame, engine, firewall) against the primary VIN

Run a free VIN lookup to check specs, recalls, and community posts

For RVs: confirm whether the title uses chassis or body VIN - and verify both physically

Ready to run the check?

Once you have the VIN, enter it below to see public data, recall records, and what the community has shared about that exact vehicle.