You enter a chassis number, and the result comes back empty β no auction sheet found. Before you panic or trust the seller's explanation, it is important to understand why records go missing and what your options are.
Why Is My Auction Record Not Found Online?
There are several legitimate reasons why a Japanese car's auction record may not appear in the standard online database:
- Smaller regional auction house β not all of Japan's 500+ auction houses upload records to the main digital database. Smaller regional houses often keep records offline.
- Older vehicle β records from before the mid-1990s are not always digitised. Paper records still exist at the auction house but have not been entered into the database.
- Private import β some vehicles were not sold through a standard public auction. Private collection sales and dealer auctions sometimes bypass the standard auction record system.
- Upload delay β recently sold vehicles sometimes have a delay of weeks or months before their record appears in the database.
- Data gap β very occasionally, records are simply missing due to technical issues at the auction house.
What "No Online Record" Does NOT Mean
A missing online record does not mean the car was never auctioned in Japan or that no record exists. It simply means the record is not in the standard digital database JP Sheet searches automatically.
Warning: Some sellers say "it was a personal import" or "it never went through auction" to explain a missing record. While this is sometimes true, it is also a common way to hide a car with a bad auction history. Always pursue the record before accepting this explanation.
What Is Manual Search?
When the standard database returns no result, JP Sheet's manual search service contacts the auction house or archive directly to locate the original record. Our team in Japan:
- Identifies which auction house likely sold the vehicle based on chassis number prefix
- Contacts the auction house records department directly
- Requests the original auction sheet, photos, and inspection data
- Delivers the full record to you within 24β48 hours
What Can You Receive from a Manual Search?
Depending on what the auction house has on file, you may receive:
- Full original auction sheet with damage diagram and inspector notes
- Auction photos (exterior, interior, engine bay)
- Auction sheet only (without photos, if photos were not archived)
- Confirmation that no record exists β in which case you receive a full refund
Manual Search vs Standard Verification
| Standard Verification | Manual Search | |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | Instant | 24β48 hours |
| Cost | $7 | $35 |
| Source | Digital database | Direct from auction house |
| If nothing found | No charge beyond initial fee | Full refund |
Guarantee: If our manual search team cannot locate any record for your chassis number, you receive a complete refund. You only pay if we find something.
Should You Buy a Car with No Online Record?
Do not complete a purchase based on a missing record. Always run a manual search first. A car with a confirmed record β even if found through manual search β is far safer than a car with no verified history at all. The $35 manual search fee is a small cost compared to the risk of buying a car with hidden accident damage or mileage fraud.
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