Car shipping scams cost consumers millions of dollars each year. The auto transport industry has one of the highest rates of consumer fraud of any service industry. Most victims are first-time shippers who did not know what to look for. Here are the seven red flags that expose bad actors before they get your money or your vehicle.
1. The Too-Low Quote
The most common auto transport scam starts with a quote that is 20-40% below every other company you contacted. This is called low-ball quoting. The company quotes a price below market to win your business. Once a carrier is assigned — or never assigned — the price increases significantly.
2. Large Upfront Deposits
Legitimate auto transport companies charge on delivery — not before. Any company asking for a large deposit before your vehicle is even picked up should be treated with caution. This is the primary mechanism scammers use to collect money and disappear. ShipCargo charges nothing until confirmed delivery.
3. No USDOT or MC Number
Every legitimate auto transport broker or carrier in the US is required to be registered with the FMCSA and have an active USDOT number and MC authority number. Verify any company at safer.fmcsa.dot.gov. If a company cannot provide these numbers, do not use them.
4. No Physical Address
Many car shipping scammers operate without a physical address, using only a website and a VOIP phone number. Google the company’s address. Verify their phone number. ShipCargo is located at 2700 Post Oak Blvd #144, Houston, TX 77056.
5. Vague Insurance Claims
Scam operations give vague answers like “our carriers are fully insured” without providing specifics. Ask specifically: how much insurance coverage is on my shipment, and what company provides it? Every ShipCargo shipment is covered by $200,000 in third-party cargo insurance.
6. Pressure Tactics and Artificial Urgency
High-pressure tactics — “this price is only available for the next 2 hours” — are classic signs of a scam. Real auto transport dispatch does not work this way. A real company will hold your quote for 24-48 hours without pressure.
7. No Written Contract
If a company does not provide a written order confirmation with the agreed price, pickup window, insurance coverage amount, and cancellation policy before you pay anything — they are not operating legitimately. Require written confirmation of all terms before booking.






















