- Apr 16, 2026
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- Emily
Welcome to the REV. A weekly briefing on what the Auto industry can learn about customer experience from millions of Google reviews. Every Thursday, we Rank, Explore & Visualize automotive reputation & sentiment data.
Our latest research report analyzes 5.5M Google Reviews from 18,000 U.S. dealerships, revealing what customers are saying across the auto industry. Get your copy below:
Report: 2026 Voice of the Customer Report
Read online. Subscribe to REV
Company-wide, Carvana posted a record 155,941 retail units in Q3 2025, up 44% year over year. The digital model is working at scale. But what happens when a low-friction, transaction-first operator takes over a physical showroom and a service drive?
Of the seven acquired locations, we focused our analysis on the stores where we could directly compare full-year 2025 performance against Q1 2026. The story is polarized, but consistent.
The most unambiguous signal in the dataset isn't star ratings, it’s response rates. Across many of the recently acquired locations, operators have largely stopped responding to customer reviews.
Response Rate Drop-Off (2025 vs. Q1 2026)

Under prior ownership, these stores were responding to between 58% and 95% of customer reviews. Under Carvana in Q1 2026, the highest response rate across any location is 27.3%, with one store at zero.
Response rate is a direct measure of post-sale relationship management. Right now, the data says: once the car is over the curb, the communication stops. That's consistent with Carvana's core model — minimize human touchpoints, automate where possible. In a digital transaction, that works. In a brick-and-mortar environment, the lack of communication shows up fast and permanently, in customer feedback.
The transaction side is improving. At Carvana CDJR of Atlanta, positive mentions of the sales department jumped from 38.8% to 66.7%. At Carvana CDJR of Sacramento — the lowest-rated store in the dataset before acquisition — negative sales mentions dropped by more than half, from 44.9% to 22.2%.
Carvana's streamlined purchasing model is translating to the physical floor. That part works. The service side is a different story.
At Carvana CDJR of San Diego, the overall rating dropped from 4.10 to 2.64 stars, and the negative review share more than doubled to 63.6%. Within those negative reviews, service department complaints account for 71.4% of the feedback, with wait times making up 42.9%.
Sacramento puts it most plainly. Sales negativity fell from 44.9% to 22.2% while service negativity surged from 42.0% to 66.7%. Same location. Same period. The transaction improved. The service experience did not. That's the thesis in a single data point.
The transaction can be systematized. The service bay cannot. When communication breaks down, and traditional service operations are disrupted, the feedback is immediate — and loud.
Carvana CDJR of Boston is the clearest illustration of that timing. Acquired in late March 2026, the store entered the network as the strongest in the dataset — 4.55 stars, a 93.68% response rate — and held that standard through the end of the month. In April, its first full month operating entirely under the Carvana umbrella, the response rate dropped to 0%.
Not gradually. Immediately. Carvana has proven it can systematize the transaction. The human relationship is a different problem entirely.

As the Carvana data shows, customer reviews don't just measure star ratings—they diagnose your operational reality.
When Northtown Automotive looked at their data across 13 stores, they assumed communication was their biggest service lane hurdle. But by utilizing Widewail's sentiment analysis, they uncovered what was actually driving their feedback: customers cared far more about repair accuracy and professionalism.
See how upgrading their review management process with Widewail helped Northtown learn exactly where to focus their operational efforts—boosting total review volume by 43% in the process.
Read the full case study here.
See you next week - Emily, Marketing @Widewail
Explore more Data & Insights. Book at Widewail Demo.
Our latest research report analyzes 5.5M Google Reviews from 18,000 U.S. dealerships, revealing what customers are saying across the auto industry. Get your copy below:
Report: 2026 Voice of the Customer Report
Read online. Subscribe to REV
RANK
Response Rates Are Collapsing
Between February 2025 and today, Carvana has acquired 7 franchised CDJR dealerships across six states — its first foray into traditional, in-person retail.Company-wide, Carvana posted a record 155,941 retail units in Q3 2025, up 44% year over year. The digital model is working at scale. But what happens when a low-friction, transaction-first operator takes over a physical showroom and a service drive?
Of the seven acquired locations, we focused our analysis on the stores where we could directly compare full-year 2025 performance against Q1 2026. The story is polarized, but consistent.
The most unambiguous signal in the dataset isn't star ratings, it’s response rates. Across many of the recently acquired locations, operators have largely stopped responding to customer reviews.
Response Rate Drop-Off (2025 vs. Q1 2026)

Under prior ownership, these stores were responding to between 58% and 95% of customer reviews. Under Carvana in Q1 2026, the highest response rate across any location is 27.3%, with one store at zero.
Response rate is a direct measure of post-sale relationship management. Right now, the data says: once the car is over the curb, the communication stops. That's consistent with Carvana's core model — minimize human touchpoints, automate where possible. In a digital transaction, that works. In a brick-and-mortar environment, the lack of communication shows up fast and permanently, in customer feedback.
EXPLORE
The Transaction Thrives. The Service Lane Doesn't.
If you split the dealership into two functions, the transaction and the human relationship, Carvana's strengths and weaknesses map directly onto them.The transaction side is improving. At Carvana CDJR of Atlanta, positive mentions of the sales department jumped from 38.8% to 66.7%. At Carvana CDJR of Sacramento — the lowest-rated store in the dataset before acquisition — negative sales mentions dropped by more than half, from 44.9% to 22.2%.
Carvana's streamlined purchasing model is translating to the physical floor. That part works. The service side is a different story.
At Carvana CDJR of San Diego, the overall rating dropped from 4.10 to 2.64 stars, and the negative review share more than doubled to 63.6%. Within those negative reviews, service department complaints account for 71.4% of the feedback, with wait times making up 42.9%.
Sacramento puts it most plainly. Sales negativity fell from 44.9% to 22.2% while service negativity surged from 42.0% to 66.7%. Same location. Same period. The transaction improved. The service experience did not. That's the thesis in a single data point.
The transaction can be systematized. The service bay cannot. When communication breaks down, and traditional service operations are disrupted, the feedback is immediate — and loud.
Carvana CDJR of Boston is the clearest illustration of that timing. Acquired in late March 2026, the store entered the network as the strongest in the dataset — 4.55 stars, a 93.68% response rate — and held that standard through the end of the month. In April, its first full month operating entirely under the Carvana umbrella, the response rate dropped to 0%.
Not gradually. Immediately. Carvana has proven it can systematize the transaction. The human relationship is a different problem entirely.
VISUALIZE
Response Rates From Acquisition to Now

As the Carvana data shows, customer reviews don't just measure star ratings—they diagnose your operational reality.
When Northtown Automotive looked at their data across 13 stores, they assumed communication was their biggest service lane hurdle. But by utilizing Widewail's sentiment analysis, they uncovered what was actually driving their feedback: customers cared far more about repair accuracy and professionalism.
See how upgrading their review management process with Widewail helped Northtown learn exactly where to focus their operational efforts—boosting total review volume by 43% in the process.
Read the full case study here.
See you next week - Emily, Marketing @Widewail
Explore more Data & Insights. Book at Widewail Demo.