About Hyundai VINs
Hyundai was founded in 1967 (South Korea). Long warranties and rapidly improving quality. Every Hyundai sold in the United States carries a unique 17-character Vehicle Identification Number (VIN). Hyundai VINs commonly begin with KMH, 5NP, where the first three characters (the World Manufacturer Identifier) encode the country of origin and manufacturer. Decoding the VIN confirms the model year, plant, engine, and trim — and lets you pull the car's full history before you buy.
What to check on a used Hyundai
Hyundai models hold up well on the used market, but a few brand-specific issues are worth confirming before you commit. Theta II engine failures (2011–2019 Sonata/Santa Fe) — confirm engine recall/replacement was performed. Beyond the mechanicals, the records that matter most are the ones a seller can't see at a glance: a salvage or flood title applied in another state, an open lien, an odometer rollback, or a theft record. A VIN history report surfaces all of them.
What's included in a Hyundai VIN report
- Title & brand history — salvage, rebuilt, junk, and flood titles across all 50 states (NMVTIS).
- Theft records — active theft reports filed with the NICB.
- Lien check — outstanding loans recorded against the vehicle.
- Odometer history — reported readings with rollback and tampering alerts.
- Specs & recalls — full Hyundai decode plus open safety-recall lookups.
Popular Hyundai models to VIN check
These are the Hyundai models buyers check most often:
- Hyundai Elantra
- Hyundai Sonata
- Hyundai Tucson
- Hyundai Santa Fe
- Hyundai Kona
How to check a Hyundai VIN number
- Find the 17-character VIN on the windshield, driver-side door jamb, title, or registration.
- Enter the VIN (or a U.S. license plate and state) in the search box above.
- Review the free preview, then unlock the full Hyundai history report.
Hyundai VIN data — sources
Reports combine the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System (NMVTIS), the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB), and state DMV title and registration databases, so a brand or odometer problem recorded in any state shows up — even if the car was retitled to hide it.