The used car market crossed 40 million vehicles sold in 2024, and a growing share of those transactions never touched a traditional dealership lot. Online and hybrid retailers like CarMax now handle hundreds of thousands of those transactions every year — CarMax alone moves more than 770,000 used vehicles annually across 255+ U.S. locations. With Vroom shutting down its ecommerce arm in January 2024, CarMax’s main online-only competitor is now Carvana — and CarMax has been quietly modernizing its selling process to compete: at-home pickup launched nationwide in November 2025, and as of February 2026 sellers can even start the appraisal flow inside the ChatGPT app.
This guide walks through exactly how selling a car to CarMax works in 2026 — the appraisal process, how offers are calculated, what documents you need, and what to expect on price. For sellers in lower-demand markets, accepting the local CarMax offer can leave $2,000–$5,000 on the table compared to shipping the car to a higher-demand state and selling there — we cover that scenario too. Every claim is sourced to CarMax’s own published policies, KBB, NerdWallet, or recent industry reporting.
Key Takeaways
- CarMax pays roughly 15–20% below Kelley Blue Book private-party value, with offers valid for seven days after appraisal — quick, painless, and usually below what a private buyer would pay.
- The full process takes 30 to 45 minutes in person, or about 24 hours end-to-end with the new at-home pickup option launched in November 2025.
- Required documents are simple: title (or loan payoff info), valid registration, government-issued ID, and all keys.
- For sellers in low-demand markets, shipping a car to a higher-demand state and selling there can net $2,000–$4,000 more than accepting a local CarMax offer — even after factoring in transport costs.
What is CarMax and How Does It Work?
CarMax is the largest used car retailer in the United States, founded in 1993 and headquartered in Richmond, Virginia. Unlike fully online platforms, CarMax operates a hybrid model: more than 255 physical stores nationwide, plus an online platform that handles pricing, financing, vehicle transfers, and — increasingly — selling.
The company’s core proposition is no-haggle pricing on both sides of the transaction. When you buy from CarMax, the listed price is the price. When you sell to CarMax, the appraisal offer is firm and isn’t negotiable. That structure removes the most stressful part of car buying and selling for most people, but it also caps the upside: CarMax’s offers are intentionally below private-party market value because the company needs margin to recondition, warranty, and resell each vehicle.
CarMax buys cars whether or not the seller buys a replacement vehicle from CarMax. There’s no requirement to trade in, and the offer doesn’t change based on whether you’re trading or selling outright.
How to Sell Your Car to CarMax
The CarMax selling process is structured around four steps: research the value, get an appraisal, accept or reject the written offer, and complete the paperwork. The whole flow can be done in person at a CarMax store in 30 to 45 minutes, or remotely via the at-home pickup option launched nationwide in November 2025.
Determine Value of Car
Before getting a CarMax offer, check your vehicle’s market value through independent sources. The two most-used valuation tools are Kelley Blue Book (KBB) and Edmunds, both of which publish trade-in, dealer, and private-party values. KBB tends to reflect industry valuations; Edmunds leans on real-world transaction data and tends to reflect what buyers actually pay.
Pull both numbers for your specific year, make, model, trim, mileage, and condition. Knowing the private-party number is especially important — that’s the figure CarMax’s offer will trail by 15–20%, and the figure you’d need to clear to come out ahead selling privately.
Get an Appraisal
There are two ways to get a firm CarMax offer:
Online instant offer. Enter your vehicle’s 17-digit VIN or license plate number, mileage, ZIP code, email, and answer a short condition questionnaire. CarMax may also request photos. Within about two minutes, you receive an estimated offer. As of February 2026, the same offer flow is available inside the ChatGPT app.
In-store or at-home pickup appraisal. The instant offer is preliminary. To get a firm written offer, a CarMax appraiser must inspect the vehicle in person. You can either bring it to a CarMax store (30 to 45 minute appraisal) or schedule the new at-home pickup option, where a CarMax representative comes to your driveway, inspects the car, confirms the offer, and takes the vehicle with them. At-home pickup launched nationwide in November 2025 and is generally free within service areas.
The appraiser is checking for things the online form couldn’t catch: undisclosed damage, mechanical issues, signs of flood, aftermarket modifications, tires worse than disclosed, or a VIN that doesn’t match registration. If everything matches, the online estimate holds. If they find something, the offer drops.
Receive Offer and Accept or Reject
After the appraisal, CarMax presents a written offer that’s valid for seven days or 500 miles, whichever comes first. The offer reflects current wholesale auction data, the vehicle’s specific equipment and condition, and any disclosed history.
You’re not required to decide on the spot. The offer in writing means you can shop it against Carvana, KBB Instant Cash Offer, a local dealer, or a private buyer before deciding. Many sellers do exactly that — and per a FinanceBuzz comparison of more than 100 vehicles, CarMax’s offers came in roughly $1,000 higher than Carvana’s on average, with the gap widest on SUVs and older vehicles.
Can I negotiate with CarMax?
No. CarMax operates on no-negotiation pricing for both buying and selling. The written offer is firm and doesn’t move. The only way the number changes is downward — if the in-person appraisal reveals condition issues that weren’t disclosed online. CarMax’s framing is that no-haggle pricing eliminates pressure tactics; the trade-off is that there’s no upside negotiation if your car is in better-than-average condition.
If the offer feels low, your options are: shop it against another buyer (Carvana, private party, KBB Instant Cash Offer, a local dealer trade-in), or accept the trade-off of speed and certainty over maximum price.
Trade-In vs. Direct Sale
Trading the vehicle into a CarMax purchase reduces sales tax in most states. Tax is calculated on the difference between the new car price and the trade-in value rather than on the full sale price. On a $30,000 purchase with a $15,000 trade-in, that’s tax savings of $900 to $1,500 in most states.
A direct sale (no trade-in) returns the full offer in cash but doesn’t generate the tax offset. The CarMax offer itself is the same — the company doesn’t bump trade-in offers higher than direct-sale offers. The only difference is what happens with the money once you sell.
For sellers who recently bought a car in a different state and need to ship it before selling or trading, our trade-in vehicle shipping guide walks through the logistics math.
CarMax Selling Process at a Glance
| Step | Where | Time | What you need |
|---|---|---|---|
| Online instant offer | carmax.com or ChatGPT app | ~2 minutes | VIN or plate + mileage + ZIP |
| Appraisal — in-store | CarMax location | 30–45 minutes | The vehicle + keys + ID |
| Appraisal — at-home pickup | Your driveway | ~24 hours from booking | The vehicle + paperwork ready |
| Written offer review | At appraisal site | Same day | Offer valid 7 days / 500 miles |
| Sign and pay | At appraisal site | Same day | Title, ID, payoff info if financed |
| Payment received | Bank draft (in-store) or ACH (at-home) | Same day to next business day | Bank account info for ACH |
Required documents to complete the sale:
- Vehicle title in your name (or lienholder info if financed)
- Government-issued photo ID for everyone on the title
- Loan payoff information if the vehicle is financed
- Current vehicle registration
- All vehicle keys and remotes
- Lien release documentation if the loan is paid off but title still shows a lien
CarMax will not buy vehicles with salvage titles, frame damage, or flood damage. Non-running vehicles can be purchased but require coordination — CarMax may arrange towing in some markets, otherwise the seller is responsible for getting it to the appraisal location.
How Much Will CarMax Pay?
This is the question every seller asks, and the honest answer is “less than private party, more than most dealer trade-ins.” Specifically, per industry data and reporting from licensed dealers like CurbSold, CarMax’s offers run 15–20% below KBB private-party value on most vehicles.
| KBB Private-Party Value | Typical CarMax Offer (15–20% below) | Typical Gap |
|---|---|---|
| $10,000 | $8,000 – $8,500 | $1,500 – $2,000 |
| $20,000 | $16,000 – $17,000 | $3,000 – $4,000 |
| $30,000 | $24,000 – $25,500 | $4,500 – $6,000 |
| $40,000 | $32,000 – $34,000 | $6,000 – $8,000 |
Three factors push individual offers higher or lower within that band:
- Demand for the model in CarMax’s resale network. Pickups, fuel-efficient sedans, and CrossOvers in popular trims tend to come in toward the top of the band. Niche cars, manuals, and unusual colors come in at the bottom.
- Condition versus disclosure. Tires, dings, mechanical issues, modifications, and accident history all pull the number down. A vehicle that genuinely matches its disclosed condition holds the online offer.
- Geographic auction value. CarMax routes inventory through its national auction network. A vehicle that’s hard to sell locally but valuable elsewhere may still get a competitive offer because CarMax can move it.
CarMax tends to pay $1,000–$3,000 more than a typical local dealer trade-in offer, but $3,000–$8,000 less than a successful private-party sale. The trade-off is speed and certainty: a private sale can take weeks, requires meeting strangers, and isn’t guaranteed to close. CarMax pays the same day.
Where you live affects what you’ll get
CarMax’s offers reflect regional resale demand, even on identical vehicles. A pickup truck appraised in Detroit will come in lower than the same truck appraised in Phoenix, because CarMax knows the resale market for that vehicle is hotter in the Sun Belt. The same dynamic works in reverse — a fuel-efficient hybrid sells better in cold-weather metros than on a Texas lot. For sellers in low-demand markets, this regional gap can mean thousands of dollars left on the table.
| If you’re in… | And own a… | Best sell-it-elsewhere market | Estimated potential gain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northeast / Midwest | Convertible, sports car | Florida, Arizona, California | $2,000 – $4,000 |
| Rust Belt / Upper Midwest | Clean 4x4, truck, off-road SUV | Texas, Southwest, Mountain West | $2,500 – $5,000 |
| Pacific Northwest | Fuel-efficient hybrid or sedan | Midwest, Southeast | $1,500 – $3,000 |
| Cold-weather states | Classic, collector, exotic | Florida, California, Arizona | $3,000 – $8,000+ |
Estimated gains are based on typical KBB private-party value gaps between source and destination markets, less average open-carrier shipping cost. Confirm with a KBB private-party check in the destination market and a free shipping quote before deciding — actual numbers vary by vehicle, season, and exact ZIP codes.
Seller’s tip: If your local CarMax offer feels low, the 15-minute exercise of checking KBB private-party value in a high-demand market and pulling a free shipping quote either confirms CarMax is the right answer or surfaces a several-thousand-dollar opportunity to ship and sell elsewhere.
CarMax vs. Carvana on selling — head-to-head
| Factor | CarMax | Carvana |
|---|---|---|
| Offer process | Online instant + in-person verification | Online only, no verification visit |
| Offer hold period | 7 days / 500 miles | 7 days / 1,000 miles |
| Avg offer vs. competitor (per FinanceBuzz study) | ~$1,000 higher on average | ~$1,000 lower on average |
| Where Carvana wins | Newer high-mileage commuter vehicles | — |
| Where CarMax wins | SUVs, older vehicles, trucks | — |
| At-home pickup | Yes (launched Nov 2025) | Yes |
| Payment method | Bank draft (in-store) or ACH | ACH or check |
| Time to payment | Same day | Same day to next business day |
| Negative equity | Handles loan payoff; rollover available on purchase | Handles loan payoff; up to $2,500–$3,500 rollover |
| Title delays risk | Lower (physical store network) | Higher — see our Carvana review |
Why Use CarMax to Sell Your Car
The structural advantages CarMax offers most sellers:
- Speed. Same-day payment by bank draft (in-store) or ACH (at-home pickup). Private sales typically take 2–6 weeks to close.
- Certainty. A written offer good for seven days. No tire-kickers, no no-shows, no buyer financing falling through at the last minute.
- No-pressure pricing. No-haggle on both sides. The number you see is the number you get; no salesperson commission means no high-pressure tactics.
- No buyer obligation. CarMax buys vehicles even if you don’t buy a replacement from them. Sellers walk away with a check or ACH transfer.
- Accepts financed vehicles. CarMax handles loan payoff directly with the lender, even when the loan balance exceeds the offer (negative equity).
- At-home pickup nationwide. Launched November 2025, removes the trip to a CarMax store entirely in service areas.
- No prep required beyond a clean exterior. Detailing, repairs, or cosmetic touch-ups don’t typically move the needle on the offer enough to justify the cost.
- CarMax buys older and higher-mileage vehicles. Most dealer trade-ins focus on recent-model resale candidates; CarMax’s auction-based resale model means they’ll make offers on vehicles other channels won’t touch.
Common Complaints from Customers about CarMax
Per the patterns documented across BBB, Trustpilot, and ConsumerAffairs, the most-cited customer complaints fall into a few consistent patterns:
- Lower offers than expected. The most common single complaint: customers feel the CarMax offer is well below what their car is worth. The 15–20% gap below KBB private-party is real and structural, not a one-off.
- Offer reductions at appraisal. Customers report online estimates being reduced after the in-person inspection, sometimes substantially, when the appraiser identifies condition issues that weren’t disclosed online.
- Inconsistent customer service. Long phone hold times and inconsistent answers across stores are recurring complaints, particularly for post-sale issues like missing paperwork, payment delays, or warranty claims on a vehicle bought from CarMax.
- MaxCare warranty disputes. Customers who purchased the optional MaxCare extended warranty report friction on covered repairs, with some describing denied claims for issues they expected to be covered.
- Title and registration delays. Less common at CarMax than at fully online retailers, but still cited — particularly on out-of-state purchases that involve transfer paperwork across DMVs.
- The May 12, 2024 return policy reduction. CarMax shortened its money-back guarantee from 30 days to 10 days on May 12, 2024, per Kelley Blue Book. The 10-day, 500-mile window is now in line with the rest of the segment but is a notable reduction from the pandemic-era policy.
These don’t represent every transaction — most sellers and buyers complete CarMax transactions without issue — but they’re the documented failure modes worth planning around.
Should I Sell my Car to CarMax — or Ship It and Sell Elsewhere?
For most sellers in major metros with average vehicles, CarMax is a reasonable answer. The 15–20% gap below private-party value is the cost of speed and certainty, and many sellers happily pay that for the convenience.
The math changes when one of three things is true: (1) your vehicle is worth substantially more in another market, (2) you’re in a low-demand state and selling locally won’t clear what the car is worth, or (3) you have a niche, classic, exotic, or high-value vehicle where CarMax’s auction-based resale model doesn’t reflect true market value.
A concrete example
Say you own a 2022 Honda CR-V EX-L with 45,000 miles in Detroit, Michigan. KBB private-party value in Detroit is around $22,000. The local CarMax offer comes in at roughly $18,000 (about 18% below KBB).
The same vehicle in Phoenix, Arizona — a high-demand market for fuel-efficient SUVs — has a private-party value of around $24,500. Shipping cost from Detroit to Phoenix on an open auto carrier runs roughly $1,000 to $1,200 depending on season.
The math:
- Sell to CarMax in Detroit: $18,000
- Ship to Phoenix and sell private-party: $24,500 − $1,100 shipping = $23,400
The shipped-and-sold approach nets about $5,400 more than accepting the local CarMax offer, before tax.
Not every vehicle clears that math. The price gap between markets has to exceed the shipping cost plus the time cost of arranging a private sale at distance. The strongest candidates:
- Pickups and fuel-efficient SUVs in oversupplied northern markets, with strong demand in the Sun Belt
- Convertibles and sports cars in cold-weather states, with demand in coastal and southern markets
- Trucks and 4x4s with off-road equipment, where regional demand varies dramatically
- Classic, collector, and luxury vehicles where CarMax’s algorithm under-prices specialty markets
Before committing either way, run the numbers. Get a CarMax offer, check KBB private-party in the destination market, and request a free shipping quote — the comparison takes 15 minutes and either confirms CarMax is the right answer or surfaces a several-thousand-dollar opportunity to ship and sell.
For sellers who decide shipping is the right call, our cost to ship a car guide breaks down what to expect by route and vehicle type.
Bottom Line
CarMax is the most reliable fast-sale option for most used vehicles in 2026 — large network, no-haggle pricing, written offer good for seven days, same-day payment, and an at-home pickup option that removes the trip to the store entirely. The 15–20% gap below private-party value is the structural cost of speed and certainty.
The two scenarios where it’s worth pausing before accepting a CarMax offer: (1) you’re in a low-demand market and a vehicle that ships well to a high-demand market could clear several thousand dollars more, or (2) your vehicle is specialty, classic, or high-end enough that CarMax’s auction-based pricing under-values it. For both cases, getting an instant shipping quote takes 60 seconds and answers the question definitively.
SAKAEM Logistics ships vehicles nationwide with vetted FMCSA-licensed carriers, transparent pricing, and no upfront deposit — including to the highest-demand resale markets in the country. If a CarMax offer in your area looks low, ship the car to where it’s worth more.
Selling to CarMax FAQ
Do I need to clean my car before selling it to CarMax?
A reasonable cleaning helps — wash the exterior, vacuum the interior, remove personal items. A dirty car signals neglect to the appraiser and can affect the condition rating. That said, full detailing or paint correction won’t move the offer enough to justify the cost. Clean, presentable, and as honest about condition as possible is the right level of effort.
Is CarMax better than Carvana?
It depends on what you’re selling and where. Per a FinanceBuzz comparison of more than 100 vehicles, CarMax averaged about $1,000 higher than Carvana on instant offers, with the largest gaps on SUVs and older vehicles. Carvana sometimes pays more on newer, higher-mileage commuter vehicles. Both offer 7-day firm offers, so the right move is to get both before committing. For a fuller comparison, see our Carvana review.
What cars will CarMax not buy?
CarMax does not buy vehicles with salvage titles, frame damage, or flood damage. Non-running vehicles can sometimes be purchased but require coordination — the seller is generally responsible for getting the vehicle to the appraisal location, or arranging towing. Vehicles with extensive aftermarket modifications, missing keys, or unresolved liens will see significantly reduced offers or be declined entirely.
Does CarMax offer good trade-in value?
CarMax pays roughly 15–20% below KBB private-party value, but $1,000–$3,000 more than a typical local dealer trade-in. For most sellers, that puts CarMax in the middle of the market: better than a dealer trade-in, worse than a successful private-party sale. Whether it’s “good” depends on whether you value speed and certainty more than maximum price.
How long is the CarMax offer good for?
Seven days from the appraisal date or 500 miles of additional driving, whichever comes first. The written offer doesn’t change during that window unless the vehicle is damaged, modified, or driven beyond the mileage cap.
Can I sell a financed car to CarMax?
Yes. CarMax handles the loan payoff directly with the lender. If the offer exceeds your loan balance, you receive the difference as cash. If your loan balance exceeds the offer (negative equity), you’ll need to bring a check or arrange financing for the gap. CarMax also offers options to roll some negative equity into a financed purchase if you’re buying a replacement vehicle from them.
What documents do I need to sell my car to CarMax?
Vehicle title (or loan payoff info if financed), valid registration, government-issued photo ID for everyone on the title, all vehicle keys and remotes, and lien release documentation if the loan is paid off but the title still shows a lien. For a fuller paperwork checklist that applies to any sale or shipment, see our car shipping documents guide.
How fast does CarMax pay?
Same day for in-store transactions (bank draft) and same day to next business day for at-home pickup transactions (ACH transfer). Once paperwork is signed, the funds release without delay.
Will CarMax buy a car they didn’t sell to me?
Yes. CarMax buys cars regardless of where they were originally purchased. There’s no requirement to buy a replacement from CarMax, and the offer doesn’t change based on whether you’re trading in or selling outright.
What if I owe more than my car is worth?
Bring a check or arrange financing for the negative equity. CarMax will accept the keys and complete the title transfer once the loan is fully paid off. If you’re buying a replacement vehicle from CarMax, you may be able to roll up to $2,000–$3,000 of negative equity into the new financing, depending on your credit profile and the new vehicle’s loan-to-value ratio.
Does CarMax buy non-running cars?
Sometimes — but it requires coordination. The vehicle still needs to be inspected, which means getting it to a CarMax store or arranging at-home pickup. The seller is generally responsible for towing. Offers on non-running vehicles are significantly lower than on comparable running vehicles and reflect the cost of repair plus auction-recovery margin.
Should I ship my car instead of selling to CarMax?
If your vehicle is worth substantially more in another market — common for pickups in the Sun Belt, convertibles in cold-weather states, or specialty vehicles in collector markets — shipping the car and selling at the destination can net thousands more than the local CarMax offer. Get a CarMax appraisal, check KBB private-party value in the destination market, and request a shipping quote to compare. The 15-minute exercise either confirms CarMax is the right answer or surfaces a several-thousand-dollar opportunity to ship and sell elsewhere.