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AI Is Making Fake Car Dealerships Look Real—and It’s Costing Buyers Thousands

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AI Dealership Clones Are Getting Better

We are all too familiar with fake websites and social media pages that pose as celebrities or established businesses. Now scammers are pushing that playbook further with artificial intelligence.

As first reported by Automotive News, a recent case out of North Carolina shows how convincing this has become. A buyer wired $77,300 for a Lexus GX 550 that did not exist. The dealership he believed he was dealing with was real, but it had no involvement in the transaction. The fraudster cloned the dealer’s online presence and maintained contact for over a week.

What makes this case alarming is the level of detail. The scammer provided photos, documentation, and ongoing communication that mirrored a legitimate sales process. These are no longer crude phishing pages. Fraudsters are now building full replicas of dealership websites, complete with inventory listings, staff profiles, and even AI-generated reviews. The result is a near-seamless illusion that is catching even cautious buyers off guard.

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James Riswick

Even Legit Dealers Feel Sketchy Now, And Scammers Know It

As if dealing with legitimate dealerships was not already intimidating for some buyers, scammers are exploiting that uncertainty. Using AI tools, they create polished digital storefronts that appear more responsive and professional than the real thing. Experts say these scams are now appearing multiple times a week, costing consumers millions. Victims often only realize the truth after funds are wired and communication stops instantly.

Avoiding these traps now requires more than a quick glance at a website. Buyers need to verify independently. Call the dealership using a publicly listed number. Cross-check the website URL against official sources. Be cautious of any seller who pushes urgency or requests wire transfers. In today’s environment, flawless service and fast responses can be a red flag rather than reassurance.

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Old Scam, New Tech, Bigger Fallout

This is not an entirely new scheme. Criminals have long posed as legitimate businesses to trick buyers. The difference now is scale and precision. AI allows scammers to replicate branding, tone, and even customer interaction patterns with unsettling accuracy. That creates a secondary victim. Real dealerships are left to deal with reputational damage when angry buyers post negative reviews about transactions they never handled.

In rare cases, legitimate dealers step in to help victims recover or soften the blow. Those stories make headlines, but they are not the norm. Most businesses simply do not have the resources to compensate for crimes they did not commit. The burden ultimately falls on the consumer, who is left to navigate both financial loss and limited recourse.

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Google Street View

In-Person Car Buying Still Preferred

A recent study shows that many buyers still prefer the traditional, in-person car-buying process. Cases like this explain why. Physical presence offers verification that digital channels cannot increasingly guarantee. You can see the vehicle, meet the staff, and confirm the business exists beyond a screen. In an era where AI can fabricate nearly everything online, that matters more than ever.

At the same time, rising vehicle prices are pushing buyers to hunt aggressively for deals. That urgency creates the perfect opening for scammers. The promise of a well-priced vehicle like a Lexus GX 550 becomes a powerful hook. The takeaway is simple. If the deal looks exceptional and the process feels frictionless, slow down and verify. In today’s market, skepticism is part of the purchase process.

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Getty Images

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