The End of Mandatory Second-Hand Vehicle Inspections in Belgium: What It Really Means for Buyers
Belgium has recently removed the obligation for a mandatory inspection when selling a second-hand vehicle. At first glance, this might seem like a simplification of the buying and selling process. Less paperwork, fewer delays, and reduced costs. But beneath that convenience lies a more complex reality that every buyer should understand.
Because when a safeguard disappears, the risks don’t just vanish with it. They shift directly onto the buyer.
A Market with Less Protection
Without mandatory inspections, there is no longer a guaranteed, standardized checkpoint verifying a vehicle’s condition before it changes hands. That opens the door to several well-known risks that were previously easier to detect or prevent:
Odometer fraud becomes harder to catch without official verification moments
Electric vehicle manipulation, such as altered battery data, can go unnoticed
Hidden defects may remain undisclosed until it’s too late
For buyers, this means one thing: more uncertainty. And in a market where vehicles represent a significant investment, uncertainty is the last thing you want.
The Growing Importance of Transparency
The removal of mandatory inspections does not reduce the need for reliable information. In fact, it makes transparency more important than ever.
When you can no longer rely on a government-mandated check, you need alternative ways to verify what you’re buying. Trust alone is no longer enough. Data becomes essential.
How Caralyzr Fills the Gap
At Caralyzr, we believe that transparency should never be optional in a used car transaction. Whether inspections are mandatory or not, buyers deserve access to clear, objective, and complete information.
That’s why our platform provides:
Full vehicle history based on license plate or chassis number, giving you insight into past usage and records
Fraud detection tools to identify inconsistencies and potential manipulation
Battery analysis for electric vehicles, so you know the actual battery condition rather than relying on assumptions
Electronic inspections, offering a detailed view of the car’s real technical state even without a traditional check
The Reality: Responsibility Has Shifted
The removal of mandatory inspections hasn’t eliminated risk. It has simply transferred responsibility from regulation to the individual buyer.
This new landscape requires a more informed approach. Buyers need to ask better questions, verify more data, and rely on independent tools to make confident decisions.
The Bottom Line
The mandatory inspection may be gone, but the need for reliable, trustworthy vehicle data has only increased.
If anything, it’s no longer just a precaution. It’s a necessity.

