Community evidence
→ Stable
The DealerRefresh community largely views CarGurus as a vendor that delivers on audience reach — citing 15 million monthly visitors and, on paid tiers, qualified leads with direct contact information — but trust has eroded sharply over pricing conduct and platform design. Dealers across multiple threads report dramatic, non-negotiable subscription increases (documented hikes ranging from 62% to 400% to a doubling to $5,640/month), which the community characterizes not as partnership but as exploitation of dealers whose own merchandising success drives the platform's traffic. Beyond cost, the community raises structural objections: the 'Instant Market Value' and 'Average Price Paid' overlays are seen as actively undermining dealer pricing credibility with shoppers; endorsement badges on dealer sites reportedly redirect customers to CarGurus and competitors rather than converting them for the dealer; and the free tier is described as increasingly degraded, with blurred photos and withheld contact info, functioning more as a conversion funnel to paid tiers than a genuine option. A smaller but real positive signal exists — some respondents on month-to-month paid plans report lead quality and flexibility that justify the spend — but it is consistently outnumbered by accounts of opaque pricing, platform features that serve CarGurus' monetization over dealer outcomes, and a 'take it or leave it' negotiation posture that the community finds antithetical to a true vendor partnership.
Aggressive and opaque pricing / fee increases9 mentions
Lead quality and contact-info access on paid vs. free tiers6 mentions
Platform features that redirect or capture dealer customers for CarGurus4 mentions
Pricing tools (IMV, Average Price Paid) undermining dealer advertised prices3 mentions
High audience reach and purchase-intent traffic3 mentions
Review system integrity and spam/fake reviews2 mentions
DMS data access and dealer agreement terms2 mentions
SMS availability-check feature adding lead friction1 mention
Inventory display errors and pricing disclaimer omissions2 mentions
Month-to-month flexibility as a differentiator2 mentions
143 mentions · 18 positive · 52 negative · Scored from 20+ years of candid DealerRefresh discussion. Scores shift as new conversations happen.
NEUTRAL
"Dealers noticed that Carvana listings appeared to have disappeared from CarGurus search results, speculating this might be due to increased listing costs. A follow-up clarification indicated Carvana inventory is still present on the platform in at least some markets."
Looking like Carvana pulled CarGurus →
NEUTRAL
"major third-party automotive sites (AutoTrader, Cars.com, CarGurus) will evolve as digital retailing gains traction, with Ryan Everson proposing they might adopt a commission-based Kayak model rather than subscription fees"
Digital Retailing on Third Party Sites? →
NEUTRAL
"rising used car acquisition costs in the current market may naturally favor Cars.com over competitors like AutoTrader and CarGurus"
Increase In Conversions →
NEUTRAL
"dealer complaints about third-party automotive listing sites (TrueCar, Cars.com, CarGurus) have evolved beyond traditional concerns like cost, features, and lead volume to reflect a more fundamental shift in how these platforms operate"
The True Car, Cars.com, and Cargurus events →
NEUTRAL
"We have several other strong players that have more-less organically grown (SEO, SEM, Referrals, Partners, and such) in popularity, like CarGurus.com, Usedcars.com, USAA, EveryCarListed.com, CarsDirect, and maybe Craigslist would be included here."
The Top Vehicle Listings Websites - Who's NEXT? →
NEUTRAL
"The rates charged by AT, Cars.com and Cargurus changes by market and other factors."
AutoTrader for Newbie →
NEUTRAL
"A dealer asks about managing spam reviews on CarGurus and receives guidance from a CarGurus representative to use the orange feedback button to report problematic reviews."
Cargurus.com Reviews →
NEUTRAL
"We currently get leads from cargurus, TrueCar, Auto Alert, all the manufacturer websites and manufacturer 3rd party leads, we use dealer.com, Dealer e Process, DealerFire, and CDK for our websites."
Best lead sources in your opinion →
NEUTRAL
"Did you visit internet automobile shopping sites? (as best as you can recall, please check all that apply) OEM.com, Cars.com, AutoTrader.com, CarGurus.com, KellyBlueBook.com, Other"
Buyer Survey (at delivery) →