Why the UAE calendar decides what an inspection can find
Most buyers treat a pre-purchase inspection as a fixed product: a technician, a checklist, a report. In the Gulf it is more useful to think of it as a weather-dependent measurement. An air-conditioning compressor that blows cold at 24 degrees in January can be ten percent down on refrigerant and you will never know; the same compressor at 46 degrees in a Deira car park either delivers vent temperatures of 6-10 degrees or it does not. A radiator with a lazy fan clutch idles happily in December and creeps toward the red zone in stationary August traffic. The car has not changed. The test conditions have.
The UAE used-car market also moves on a calendar of its own. Summer brings the expat departure wave, when families leaving in June and July sell quickly and sometimes cheaply. Ramadan compresses workshop hours and stretches seller patience. The winter months from October to April are peak buying season, when auction yards and the big physical markets in Al Aweer and Sharjah turn over stock fastest and the best cars go within days of listing.
None of this means you should only buy in one season. It means the inspection brief should change with the month. The sections below walk through the year the way a good UAE inspector experiences it, then cover the checks that matter regardless of the date: accident detection, GCC-spec verification, the OBD scan, the test drive, and why a registration-test pass tells you far less than sellers imply.
March to May: the pre-summer window that exposes cooling systems
Late spring is quietly the smartest time to buy in the UAE. Daytime temperatures are already pushing past 35 degrees, which is enough thermal load to make a marginal cooling system show itself, but workshops are not yet buried in the summer breakdown rush. An inspector working in April can run the engine to full operating temperature, sit it at idle with the AC on maximum, and watch what the coolant temperature and AC vent readings actually do. In January that same test proves very little.
The pre-summer inspection should lean hard on everything that heat will punish three months later. That means a pressure test or at least a visual check of the coolant system for weeping hoses and crusty residue around the radiator end tanks, a look at the condition of the water pump and drive belts, vent-temperature readings with a probe thermometer rather than a hand held over the vent, and a battery test under load. UAE batteries realistically last 24-36 months; one that scrapes through a March test will very likely strand the new owner in August, so a good report notes the battery's age and cold-cranking performance, not just pass or fail.
Tyres deserve the same forward-looking treatment. Check the DOT date codes on all four corners plus the spare: tyres older than five years fail the annual registration inspection in the UAE regardless of tread depth, and rubber that has baked through several Gulf summers can look fine while the sidewalls are quietly perishing. A car bought in April on 2021-dated tyres is a car that needs four new tyres before its next renewal, and that belongs in your price negotiation.
June to September: why august heat is an inspector's friend
Peak summer is unpleasant for everyone involved, and it is also the most honest test environment the UAE offers. At 45 degrees and above, there is nowhere for a weak component to hide. The AC either holds cabin temperature in slow traffic or it does not. A transmission with degraded fluid will hunt and flare on a hot test drive in a way it never does in December. Cooling fans, viscous couplings, auxiliary electric fans and radiator cores are all working at their design limit, so an inspector gets a free stress test simply by turning up.
Summer is also when supply tilts in the buyer's favour. The June-July expat departure season puts well-kept family cars on the market with motivated sellers on fixed timelines, and August is traditionally the slowest month for showroom traffic, which softens dealer margins on trade-in stock. The catch is logistics: an outdoor inspection at 2pm in August is a genuine safety issue for the technician and produces rushed work. Book morning slots, ideally before 10am, or arrange access to shaded or basement parking so the inspector can spend a full hour on the car rather than twenty minutes.
One summer-specific warning: do not let a seller hand you a car that has been pre-cooled and idling for half an hour before you arrive. Part of the value of a hot-weather inspection is the hot start and the heat-soak behaviour, meaning how the engine restarts and idles after sitting switched off for ten minutes in the sun. Fuel-system and ignition faults that vanish on a cold engine show up exactly there, and a seasoned inspector will deliberately build that pause into the visit.
Shamal season: what dust hides on a repainted panel
The shamal, the north-westerly wind that drives dust across the Gulf mainly between February and early summer, matters to a car buyer in two ways. First, years of suspended dust act as fine abrasive: original UAE-kept cars show a characteristic uniform micro-scratching on horizontal panels and a lightly sandblasted lower windscreen edge. A five-year-old car with a bonnet and front bumper in suspiciously perfect gloss next to pitted glass and dulled headlight housings is telling you those panels were painted recently, whatever the seller says about garage storage.
Second, never inspect a dusty car. A coat of shamal dust is the cheapest paint-defect concealer in the region: it flattens the reflections that reveal orange peel, overspray, ripples in filler and colour mismatch between panels. Insist the car is washed before the appointment, and try to view it in low-angle light, early morning or late afternoon, when panel waviness jumps out. Inspectors carry a paint-depth gauge precisely because eyes are not enough: factory paint on most mainstream cars measures roughly 100-180 microns, while readings of 300 microns and above usually mean filler and respray underneath.
Dust season also loads the car's filtration. Ask the inspector to pull the engine air filter and the cabin filter: a filter caked solid suggests skipped servicing, and fine dust ingestion past a cheap or badly seated filter is a known killer of mass-airflow sensors and turbochargers in the Gulf. It is a two-minute check that says a lot about how the car was maintained through the dusty months.
Winter rain and the flood-car problem
The UAE winter is short and mostly dry, but when it rains it can rain destructively, and the April 2024 storm that flooded large parts of Dubai and Sharjah pushed thousands of water-damaged cars into the system. Some were written off and exported; others were dried out, perfumed and quietly relisted months later. Flood damage is the single strongest argument for a professional inspection over a buyer's own walk-around, because a competent drying job fools almost everyone except someone who knows exactly where to look.
The tells are specific. Silt lines inside the spare-wheel well and under the boot carpet. Corrosion on seat rails, seatbelt anchor bolts and the metal frames under the seats, places that never rust on a dry-climate car. Fogging or watermarks inside headlight and tail-light housings. A musty note under the new-car fragrance, strongest when the AC first starts. Mud traces in wiring-loom connectors under the dashboard and in the fuse box. Electrical gremlins that come and go, because corroded connectors fail intermittently rather than all at once.
The seasonal angle: flood cars enter the market in waves, typically two to six months after a major storm, once repairs and paperwork clear. If you are buying in the autumn after a wet spring, brief your inspector explicitly to run flood checks, and ask for the car's insurance claim history where the seller can provide it. A car registered in a flood-affected area with a gap in its service records around the storm date deserves extra suspicion.
Ramadan and Eid: scheduling around the holy month
Ramadan reshapes the practical side of car buying more than any other period. Workshop and testing-centre hours shorten, many independent garages run reduced daytime shifts, and activity moves into the evening: the physical car markets and dealer rows are often at their liveliest after taraweeh prayers. If you want a daytime mobile inspection during Ramadan, book earlier in the day and earlier in the week than you normally would, and expect slots to be tighter in the final ten days of the month.
It is also a distinctive negotiating season. Sellers who want a deal closed before Eid travel are often flexible in the last week of Ramadan, and the days immediately after Eid al-Fitr see a burst of fresh listings as people upgrade. The flip side is time pressure: a seller pushing you to skip the inspection because the testing centre is closed for the holiday is handing you a reason to walk away, not a reason to hurry. Registration and inspection services resume within days; a genuinely good car will survive that wait.
Evening viewings, which become the norm in Ramadan, are bad conditions for paint and bodywork assessment. Artificial forecourt lighting hides colour mismatch and panel waviness. A sensible split is to do the paperwork, test drive and mechanical checks in the evening and hold back final agreement until the car has been seen, or professionally inspected, in daylight. Booking through the tamam app helps here, because you can compare which inspection vendors are actually operating and taking daytime slots that week rather than ringing around closed workshops.
Accident history versus honest respray: how inspectors tell the difference
Not all paint is a scandal. In the UAE, a respray on a bumper or bonnet is often just cosmetic repair of stone chips, sun fade or a car-park scrape, and plenty of well-maintained cars carry one. What you are paying an inspector to distinguish is cosmetic paint from structural repair, because the second one changes the car's value and, in a bad repair, its crash safety.
The paint-depth gauge starts the conversation but does not finish it. An inspector maps readings across every panel, looking for the pattern: one repainted door with factory readings everywhere else reads as a cosmetic fix; elevated readings across a whole corner of the car, plus filler-thick numbers on a quarter panel, read as collision repair. From there the inspection goes structural: tool marks or disturbed factory paint on the bolts holding the bonnet, doors and wings; missing or repainted factory spot welds along the radiator support and inner wings; kinked or wrinkled chassis rails visible from under the car; aftermarket headlights or a windscreen with a date stamp newer than the car; panel gaps that vary from one side to the other.
Airbag history is the non-negotiable check. A repaired car whose airbags deployed should show it in the OBD scan or in dashboard trim that no longer matches, and some repairs simply fit resistors to switch the warning lamp off. An inspector who checks that the airbag lamp illuminates with ignition and then extinguishes, and who scans the airbag module for crash data, is doing the part of the job you cannot do with your eyes.
GCC spec or import: reading the door-jamb sticker honestly
GCC-spec cars are built for this climate: uprated radiators and condensers, dust-rated filtration, and manufacturer warranties that are valid at local agents. Imports, mostly from North America, Japan and Korea, are a large and legitimate part of the UAE market and are often thousands of dirhams cheaper, but the discount exists for reasons an inspection should quantify. The first step is simple verification: the VIN plate, the door-jamb build sticker and the chassis stamping should agree with each other and with the registration card, and the sticker itself tells you the intended market.
For American imports, the history check is the inspection before the inspection. A VIN lookup against US auction and insurance databases will surface salvage titles, flood branding from hurricane seasons, and odometer discrepancies before anyone crawls under the car. Japanese imports come with auction grade sheets; ask for the sheet and have someone verify the grade and the recorded mileage rather than taking the windscreen sticker's word for it. On any import, mileage should be cross-checked between the cluster, service stickers, and where possible the ECU, because odometer adjustment remains a real problem in the re-export trade.
Physically, an import inspection adds a few line items: confirming the speedometer reads in kilometres or has been properly converted, checking that the cooling package copes at UAE ambient temperatures rather than Michigan ones, and confirming parts availability for market-specific components like North American bumpers and lighting. None of this makes imports a bad buy. It makes them a buy where the AED 300-500 spent on a thorough inspection has the highest expected payoff in the whole market.
The OBD scan: half an hour inside the car's memory
Every car built in the last two decades keeps records, and the OBD port is where a pre-purchase inspection stops being about opinions. A proper scan covers all modules, not just the engine: transmission, ABS, airbags, climate control and body electronics each store their own faults. In the UAE context the transmission module is often the most valuable read, because heat is the enemy of automatic gearboxes and stored overheat events or clutch-slip adaptations tell you how the car spent its summers.
Just as important as the codes present are the codes absent. If the scanner shows readiness monitors incomplete, meaning the emissions self-tests have not finished running, the fault memory was cleared very recently, often within a few dozen kilometres. Sellers do this before viewings to blank the dashboard. It is not proof of a hidden fault, but it is proof of an erased history, and an inspector will note it and recommend a longer test drive or a re-scan after 50-100 kilometres of driving.
The scan also anchors the mileage question. Many ECUs and modules log hours run, distance at last fault, and service counters that can be compared against the odometer. A cluster showing 90,000 km on a car whose modules remember events at higher distances is a car with an adjusted odometer, full stop. This is precisely the class of finding that separates a real condition report from a seller's assurance that the car is clean.
The test drive, season-adjusted
A pre-purchase test drive in the UAE should be at least twenty minutes and should include everything the car will actually face: stop-start traffic, a stretch of highway at 100-120 km/h, a few full-lock parking manoeuvres and at least one firm braking test from speed on an empty road. What you are listening and feeling for changes with the calendar. In winter, the brief morning cool is your only chance at a genuinely cold start, which reveals worn tensioners, hydraulic lifter noise and startup rattles that vanish within a minute. In summer, the valuable data comes at the other end: heat soak, hot restarts, and whether the AC keeps up at idle in a queue.
The AC test deserves its own discipline year-round because it is the most expensive common repair on a UAE used car. Run it on maximum with the car stationary and watch vent temperature over five minutes: it should reach and hold single digits Celsius. Then drive; if cooling is fine at speed but fades at idle, suspect the condenser fans or a tired compressor rather than a simple regas. In winter this test is easy to skip and easy to fake, which is exactly why it should not be skipped.
- Cold start (or hot restart in summer): no prolonged rattle, smooth idle within seconds
- Steering: no knocks at full lock, car tracks straight hands-light at 100 km/h
- Brakes: firm pedal, no pull to either side, no shudder from warped discs
- Transmission: crisp shifts when hot, no flare between second and third
- AC: single-digit vent temperatures held at idle, both fans cycling
- Underbody after the drive: no fresh drips of oil, coolant or ATF where it was parked
A Tasjeel pass is not a condition report
Every used car changing ownership in the UAE goes through a government-approved test, at Tasjeel, Shamil or Wasel centres in Dubai, ADNOC vehicle inspection centres in Abu Dhabi, or the equivalent in the northern emirates. Sellers lean on this heavily: the car passed, therefore the car is fine. The registration test is a roadworthiness screen, and a useful one, but it checks brakes on a roller, emissions at the tailpipe, chassis integrity, lights, tyres and glass. It takes minutes.
What it does not do is open the bonnet with a diagnostic eye. It will not measure paint depth, scan the transmission module, detect a head gasket beginning to weep, notice that the timing chain is due, spot flood silt under the carpets or tell you the AC compressor is on its last summer. A car can pass its transfer test on Tuesday and need AED 8,000-15,000 of mechanical work by the end of the year, and both facts can be true at once.
The practical rule: treat the government test as the floor and the independent inspection as the actual assessment. The strongest position for a buyer is a car that has both a fresh transfer test and a 150-plus-point condition report from an inspector who works for you, not for the seller. On tamam you can compare several verified inspection vendors with their AED price ranges side by side and book one to meet you at the seller's location before any money changes hands, which is the correct order of operations.
what it costs
Mobile pre-purchase inspections in the UAE cluster in the AED 200-600 band, with position in that band set by the depth of the checklist, the car itself, and how far the inspector travels. A basic roadworthiness-style check sits at the bottom; a full condition report with paint mapping, all-module OBD scan and photographed underbody sits at the top, and German or luxury badges push toward it regardless of depth.
| job | typical range |
|---|---|
| Basic mechanical and safety check (mainstream car) | AED 200–300 |
| Standard 150-point mobile inspection with OBD scan | AED 250–450 |
| Comprehensive report with paint-depth mapping and test drive | AED 350–600 |
| Luxury, performance or German-brand inspection | AED 400–600 |
| Import verification add-on (VIN history, mileage cross-check) | AED 100–250 |
| Second car inspected at the same visit | AED 150–300 |
Treat these as market bands rather than quotes: final pricing comes from comparing the verified vendors and their AED ranges side by side in the tamam app for your car, location and timing.
How a mobile pre-purchase inspection actually runs
The whole point of a mobile inspection is that the inspector comes to the car, wherever the seller keeps it: a villa driveway, a tower basement, a trader's yard at Al Aweer or Souq Al Haraj. Your job is coordination. Confirm with the seller that a third-party inspection is welcome, agree a slot when the car will be cold, and sort access: gated communities and tower basements usually need the visitor registered with security, and some buildings restrict work in parking areas, in which case a nearby open-air car park works fine. In summer, insist on shade or an early-morning slot for the inspector's sake and the report's quality.
A properly equipped inspector arrives self-contained: paint-depth gauge, multi-brand OBD scanner, battery and charging-system tester, vent thermometer, torch and mirror for the underbody, tyre tread and brake-pad gauges, and a jack or ramps where the location allows a look underneath. Expect 60-90 minutes for a thorough job on a normal car, longer for luxury or heavily optioned vehicles, plus a 15-20 minute test drive if the seller permits it, which you should push for. The output should be a written or in-app report with photos, gauge readings and a costed list of defects, not a verbal thumbs-up.
Prepare three things as the buyer: the car's advert and VIN sent to the inspector in advance so they can check history and known model weaknesses, your specific worries in writing, and your own presence at the inspection if at all possible, because a ten-minute conversation over the open bonnet teaches you more than the PDF will. Booking through tamam keeps the logistics in one place: you compare verified inspection vendors with transparent AED ranges, coordinate timing over WhatsApp, pay in-app, and can rebook the same vendor for a second car if the first one fails the test.
how it plays out emirate by emirate
dubai
Dubai has the deepest pool of mobile inspectors in the country, so same-day and next-morning slots are realistic even in peak season. The Al Aweer used-car complex in Ras Al Khor is the classic venue for meeting an inspector at the seller's yard, and most traders there are used to it; refusal is itself information. For tower residents in Marina or Downtown, confirm visitor-parking access with building security in advance, since many basements bar commercial work. RTA transfer testing runs through Tasjeel, Shamil and Wasel branches, several open late, which makes the inspect-in-the-morning, transfer-in-the-evening sequence workable in a single day.
abu dhabi
Abu Dhabi transfers run through ADNOC vehicle inspection centres under the Integrated Transport Centre, and the emirate's long highway commutes mean cars here often carry high kilometres of easy motorway running, which wears differently from Dubai stop-start traffic; a good inspector reads the wear pattern, not just the odometer. Mussafah's workshop district is where much of the emirate's repair trade lives, useful if the report flags work needing quotes. Al Ain deserves a special note: its private-seller market is rich in single-owner 4x4s, but desert use is common, so brief the inspector to check underbody, diffs and air filtration for sand history.
sharjah
Sharjah's Souq Al Haraj is the largest concentration of used-car stock in the northern emirates, and its pricing draws buyers from every emirate. It is also the heart of the re-export trade to Africa and the CIS, which means more repainted, refurbished and imported stock per square metre than anywhere else in the country; paint-depth mapping and VIN history checks matter more here, not less. Inspections inside the souq are routine and traders expect them. Sharjah was also heavily hit by the April 2024 floods, so for cars registered here since then, flood checks should be explicit in the inspection brief.
ajman
Ajman is the budget end of the UAE used-car market, with older stock, thinner margins and a cluster of trading yards around the Al Jurf industrial area serving both local buyers and exporters. That combination rewards caution: at AED 15,000-30,000 price points, an AED 250-400 inspection is a small premium against cars more likely to carry deferred maintenance. Fewer inspectors are based in Ajman itself, but Sharjah-based mobile technicians cover it with little or no call-out difference. Ajman's transfer testing queues are typically shorter than Dubai's, which traders use as a selling point for quick handovers; do not let the speed skip your own report.
ras al khaimah
RAK adds two mechanical stresses the southern emirates rarely see. Cars used on the Jebel Jais road accumulate brake and transmission heat cycles from long descents, so pads, discs and fluid condition deserve close attention on anything sold by an owner in the northern suburbs. Coastal humidity is also higher here for more of the year, and underbody surface rust, rare in Dubai, does appear on RAK-kept cars parked near the sea. The mobile-inspector pool is smaller, so book two or three days ahead rather than same-day, and expect vendors travelling from Sharjah or Dubai to schedule RAK visits in clusters.
fujairah
Fujairah's east-coast climate is the odd one out: Gulf of Oman humidity and salt air produce corrosion patterns closer to a coastal European car than a Dubai one, so an inspection here should spend real time under the car, on brake lines, subframes and exhaust hangers. Wadi driving is common recreation, which means checking for water-crossing history, silt in chassis box sections and worn suspension bushes on otherwise low-mileage 4x4s. The port economy also brings a steady flow of imported vehicles through the east coast. Inspector availability is the thinnest in the country, so daytime slots booked several days out are the norm.
umm al quwain
The used-car math in Umm Al Quwain is cross-border by default: residents shop the big Sharjah and Ajman markets, then register at the small UAQ traffic department, which is famously quick. That makes the pre-purchase inspection the one step worth doing before the car ever crosses into the emirate — a mobile inspector meeting you at the seller's lot in Sharjah beats discovering accident repair after you have driven it home to Al Salamah.
Before the inspector arrives: a buyer's preparation list
- Send the inspector the advert, VIN and your specific concerns at least a day ahead
- Confirm with the seller that a third-party inspection and test drive are permitted
- Ask for the car cold and washed: no pre-warming, no pre-cooling, no coat of dust
- Book a morning slot in summer and arrange shade or basement access for the inspector
- Gather what history exists: service records, registration card copy, any auction or import papers
- For imports, run the VIN through auction and insurance history databases before paying for the visit
- Check the DOT date codes on all five tyres yourself; over five years old means replacement cost
- Plan the transfer-test visit for after the inspection report, never before it
- Have your walk-away price written down before the report arrives, not after
mistakes to avoid
Inspecting a pre-warmed car
A cold start is a one-time diagnostic event per visit: startup rattles, smoke on first fire and cold-idle behaviour reveal wear that disappears within a minute of running. Sellers who warm the car before you arrive erase that evidence, deliberately or not. Ask for the car cold, and in summer add a hot-restart test after a ten-minute heat soak.
Trusting the registration test as a condition report
The Tasjeel or ADNOC test is a roadworthiness screen that takes minutes on rollers and gauges. It says nothing about paint depth, gearbox health, AC capacity, timing components or flood history. Treat a fresh pass as the floor requirement and the independent inspection as the actual assessment of what you are buying.
Skipping the AC stress test in winter
Between November and March, feeble air conditioning still feels adequate, and the most expensive common fault on UAE used cars sails through unnoticed. Insist on measured vent temperatures at idle over five minutes, not a hand over the vent. A system that only cools at speed has a fan or compressor problem waiting for June.
Reading a cleared fault memory as a clean car
An empty fault list with incomplete readiness monitors means the memory was wiped recently, which is the opposite of reassuring. Insist on a re-scan after 50-100 km of driving, or make the deal conditional on it. The absence of history is a finding, not a pass.
Paying GCC-spec money for an unverified import
The premium for GCC cars exists because of cooling packages, dust filtration and warranty validity. If the door-jamb sticker, VIN history and cooling hardware say the car was built for Michigan or Osaka, the price should say so too. Verify the build market before negotiating, because the discount is your compensation for extra risk.
Letting evening light close the deal
Forecourt lighting and Ramadan-hour viewings flatter paintwork: colour mismatch, orange peel and filler ripples vanish under artificial light. Do the conversation at night if you must, but make the final decision after the car has been seen washed, in low-angle daylight, ideally with gauge readings across every panel.
frequently asked questions
Is a pre-purchase inspection worth it on a cheap car?
Proportionally it is worth more, not less. On a car in the AED 15,000–25,000 bracket, a single hidden fault like a slipping gearbox or tired AC compressor can equal a quarter of the purchase price, and cheaper cars carry more deferred maintenance on average. An AED 200-300 basic check is small insurance at that price point.
What is the best time of year to buy a used car in the UAE?
Late spring and peak summer favour buyers: the June-July expat departure wave adds motivated sellers, and August is the slowest showroom month. The trade-off is that winter offers the widest selection as market activity peaks. Whenever you buy, match the inspection to the season, with cooling-system stress tests mattering most from April onward.
The car passed its Tasjeel test last week. Do I still need an inspection?
Yes. The registration test is a minutes-long roadworthiness screen covering brakes, emissions, lights, tyres and chassis integrity. It does not measure paint depth, scan gearbox or airbag modules, assess AC performance or check for flood damage. A car can pass the transfer test and still need five figures of work within the year.
How do inspectors detect a repainted or accident-repaired car?
With a paint-depth gauge first: factory paint typically reads around 100-180 microns, and readings over roughly 300 suggest filler. Then structurally, by checking bolt heads for tool marks, factory spot welds, chassis rails, panel gaps and glass date stamps. One repainted panel is usually cosmetic; elevated readings across a whole corner suggest collision repair.
Are GCC-spec cars really worth the premium over imports?
For many buyers, yes: uprated cooling, dust-rated filtration and locally valid warranties suit the climate, and resale is easier. But a verified import with a clean VIN history and a thorough inspection can be excellent value. The mistake is paying GCC money for an import, which is why the door-jamb sticker and VIN check come first.
How long does a mobile pre-purchase inspection take?
Plan for 60-90 minutes on site for a proper job, plus 15-20 minutes of test driving if the seller allows it. Anything finished in twenty minutes is a walk-around, not an inspection. In summer, early-morning slots produce better work because the inspector is not racing the heat.
Can the inspection tell if the odometer has been tampered with?
Often, yes. Scanners can read distance and hours data stored in modules beyond the instrument cluster, and these rarely agree with a wound-back odometer. Inspectors also cross-check service stickers, wear on pedals and steering wheel against the claimed mileage, and for imports, the recorded mileage in auction and insurance databases.
What are the signs of a flood-damaged car?
Silt in the spare-wheel well, corrosion on seat rails and seatbelt anchors, fogged light housings, a musty smell strongest at AC start-up, and mud traces in connectors behind the dashboard. After the April 2024 storms, flood checks became standard practice on cars registered in Dubai and Sharjah during that period.
Should I be there during the inspection?
If you possibly can. Ten minutes over the open bonnet with the inspector teaches you more than the written report, and you can ask for a verdict in plain terms: would you buy this car at this price. If you cannot attend, ask for a photographed report and a phone call before you commit.
The seller says the fault codes were just cleared during a service. Believe them?
Treat it as unverified. Cleared codes show up as incomplete readiness monitors on the scan, and a legitimate service does not require erasing history. The fair response is to drive the car 50-100 km and re-scan, or make the purchase conditional on a clean second scan.
Does Ramadan affect booking an inspection?
Yes, practically. Workshop hours shorten, daytime slots compress, and much of the market moves to evenings, which are poor conditions for paint assessment. Book earlier in the day and earlier in the week, and hold final agreement on any car viewed at night until it has been seen in daylight.
Will a trader at Al Aweer or Souq Al Haraj allow an independent inspection?
Established traders generally will, and many expect it; inspections inside both markets are routine. A flat refusal to allow an independent inspector near the car is a strong signal in itself, and at that point the sensible move is to walk to the next yard.
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