Five channels exist for buying a used car in Germany. The same Škoda Octavia Combi exists simultaneously on an authorized dealer's lot, in the stock of an independent Kfz-Handel two districts over, in a manufacturer Das WeltAuto programme, on a private seller's driveway, and possibly at a BCA auction. The price spread across those five places is €4,000 to €7,000 for the same car. The legal protections are completely different.

The five buying channels in Germany at a glance

Channel Price vs Schwacke Gewährleistung Typical buyer
Authorized brand dealer (Vertragshändler) +8% to +15% 12 months statutory Wants warranty, brand servicing, zero surprises
Independent Kfz-Handel +3% to +8% 12 months statutory Price-conscious, willing to verify
Manufacturer CPO +10% to +18% Statutory + 12–24 month Garantie Premium brand with strong after-sale
Private seller (Privatverkauf) −5% to +0% None — 'gekauft wie gesehen' Hands-on, knows cars or brings an expert
Auction (BCA, Manheim) −15% to −25% None — sold as-is to trade Trade buyers, import/export

Source: DAT Report 2026 (27 January 2026); ADAC Gebrauchtwagenkauf guide; Schwacke methodology.

According to the DAT Report 2026, the independent Kfz-Handel overtook the authorized brand dealer segment for the first time in 2025 — 38% of all ownership transfers versus 36%. Private transactions accounted for the remaining 24–26%.

Authorized brand dealer: paying for the safety net

A Vertragshändler is the franchised retailer for a specific manufacturer. Everything about this channel is engineered around reducing risk for the buyer. The car has been through a manufacturer-approved workshop. The service history is verified. You pay 8% to 15% above the Schwacke dealer sale value. What you get legally is a 12-month statutory Gewährleistung plus, in almost every case, an optional Garantie extension of 12 to 24 months.

Independent dealer (freier Kfz-Handel): the new market leader

In 2025 independents took 38% of all used-car ownership transfers versus 36% for the authorized brand side, per DAT Report 2026. They have the same statutory 12-month Gewährleistung obligation, a leaner cost structure, and pricing that undercuts the authorized dealer by 5% to 10%.

Manufacturer CPO: Junge Sterne, Das WeltAuto, BMW Premium Selection

Programme Brand Warranty included
Junge Sterne Mercedes-Benz 12-month Mercedes-Benz warranty (extendable)
BMW Premium Selection BMW (also Mini) 12-month warranty, extendable to 24
Porsche Approved Porsche Up to 24-month warranty, worldwide
Das WeltAuto VW, Audi, Škoda, SEAT/Cupra 12-month warranty, optional 12-month extension

Source: Manufacturer programme pages accessed April 2026.

Private seller: lowest price, no warranty, all verification on you

A private sale in Germany is legally a different transaction from anything a dealer handles. The standard clause in every private-sale Kaufvertrag is 'gekauft wie gesehen' — bought as seen — which excludes the seller's Sachmängelhaftung for anything a reasonable inspection would have revealed. The private-sale price sits roughly at the Schwacke Händlereinkaufswert level — a €1,500 to €3,500 saving over the equivalent dealer listing.

Key takeaways

  • Germany has five used-car buying channels — authorized brand dealer, independent Kfz-Handel, manufacturer CPO, private seller, and auction — each with distinct price, warranty, and risk.
  • Independent Kfz-Handel overtook the authorized brand dealer segment in 2025, taking 38% of all ownership transfers (DAT Report 2026).
  • Since 1 January 2022 any business-to-consumer used-car sale carries a minimum 12-month statutory Gewährleistung under §476 BGB.
  • Private sales use 'gekauft wie gesehen' to exclude Sachmängelhaftung; §444 BGB overrides the clause when the seller concealed a defect.
  • Auction prices sit 15% to 25% below Schwacke dealer sale value — a trade channel, not a retail one.
  • Average used-car transaction price in Germany in 2025: €18,310 (DAT Report 2026).

Sources and methodology

  • DAT Report 2026 — Deutsche Automobil Treuhand, Kurzbericht published 27 January 2026.
  • ADAC — Gebrauchtwagenkauf guide and §476/§477 BGB explainer, accessed April 2026.
  • §§434, 476, 477 BGB — consolidated civil code text, in force since 1 January 2022.