Kentucky Auto Dealer License Guide.
This comprehensive guide will walk you through every step of getting your Kentucky auto dealer license.
Why It Matters
Relevant to automotive professionals operating in KY.
Welcome to your daily briefing on automotive developments in Kentucky. Today we're covering 6 key stories including updates on kentucky automotive headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.
3 stories
This comprehensive guide will walk you through every step of getting your Kentucky auto dealer license.
Relevant to automotive professionals operating in KY.
(missing).
Relevant to automotive professionals operating in KY.
Is your driver's license up for renewal in 2025? New vision screening requirements in Kentucky may affect you.
Relevant to automotive professionals operating in KY.
Reach professionals in this market
3 stories
Federal law prohibits the sale of new vehicles under an open recall; the rules vary for used vehicles by state. Several states now require dealers to disclose open recalls to used-car buyers and to repair recalled vehicles before sale. Compliance varies widely across regions.
Selling a vehicle with an undisclosed open recall produces consumer-protection exposure and, in some states, automatic rescission rights for the buyer. The cost is far higher than the recall repair would have been.
Floor-plan lenders perform unannounced inventory audits to verify that every financed vehicle is on the lot, in the condition reported, and not sold-out-of-trust. The audit cycle is typically monthly. Discrepancies — a vehicle not present without proof of sale and payoff — trigger acceleration of the entire credit line in many agreements.
Sold-out-of-trust findings can convert a manageable cash-flow gap into immediate demand for the entire floor-plan balance. Recovery from a single bad audit can take years.
A dealer may pull a credit report only with the consumer's authorization or for a specific permissible purpose under FCRA — typically completion of a credit transaction initiated by the consumer. Pulling a credit report based on a sales-floor walk-in without explicit authorization is a violation, even with intent to "save the customer time.".
FCRA violations carry statutory damages even without proof of harm, plus attorney fees. A pattern of unauthorized pulls can produce class-action exposure.
Get Kentucky automotive intelligence delivered to your inbox every morning.
Subscribe FreeView all past issues
Feature your brand across the U.S., Canada, and select international markets and 10 industry verticals.
Become a National Partner