Free factory window stickers by VIN are currently available for Ford, Lincoln, Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram & Fiat only. Don’t see your brand below? See the coverage table.
Which brands offer a free window sticker by VIN?
Only some manufacturers publish the factory sticker publicly by VIN. Here’s exactly what works — and what to do for the rest.
Free by VIN here
- Ford
- Lincoln
- Chrysler
- Dodge
- Jeep
- Ram
- Fiat
We link straight to the manufacturer’s own factory PDF.
No free public sticker
- GM — Chevrolet, GMC, Buick, CadillacNo viewable public PDF (the endpoint returns data only). Ask the selling dealer.
- Toyota & LexusNo free public lookup — the dealer, or a licensed Monroney-data service.
- Honda & AcuraOwner account only (owners.honda.com).
- Hyundai, Genesis & KiaOwner app or the selling dealer.
- Nissan, VW/Audi, BMW, Mercedes, Subaru, Mazda, VolvoNo free public lookup — the dealer or owner portal.
What is a window sticker (Monroney label)?
The sticker federal law requires the manufacturer to put on every new car.
Named after Senator Mike Monroney, the Automobile Information Disclosure Act of 1958 requires the manufacturer to create and affix a label to every new vehicle disclosing its price and equipment. It’s the single best record of how a car left the factory — what it cost, exactly what was on it, and its EPA and safety figures. Buyers use it to confirm a used car’s original equipment and MSRP; dealers use it to merchandise and verify a vehicle.
What’s on a window sticker
MSRP & pricing
The base price, the price of each factory option and package, the destination charge, and the total MSRP.
Standard & optional equipment
Everything the vehicle came with from the factory — standard features plus the specific options and packages that were ordered.
EPA fuel economy
The city / highway / combined MPG (or MPGe and range for EVs), the fuel-cost estimate, and the smog/greenhouse-gas scores.
Safety & warranty
NHTSA crash-test star ratings where available, the factory warranty terms, and the parts content / port-of-entry information.
Want the build specs too?
Window sticker FAQ
Coverage, what’s on the label, and where to get it.
Is this window sticker lookup really free?
Yes. For the supported brands it links you straight to the manufacturer’s own free window-sticker PDF — no account, no email, no payment. Many sites charge for this; we don’t, because we link out to the OEM’s own page rather than reselling the document.
Which brands can I get a free window sticker for by VIN?
Ford, Lincoln, Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram, and Fiat publish the original factory window sticker by VIN, so those work here. Most other makes — GM (Chevrolet/GMC/Buick/Cadillac), Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Hyundai, Kia, VW, BMW, Mercedes, Subaru, Mazda, Volvo — don’t offer a free public by-VIN sticker; you’d get those from the selling dealer, the manufacturer’s owner portal, or a paid Monroney-data service.
What is a window sticker (Monroney label)?
The Monroney label is the sticker federal law (the Automobile Information Disclosure Act of 1958) requires the manufacturer to affix to every new car. It lists the MSRP and every option price, the standard and optional equipment, the EPA fuel-economy estimates, NHTSA safety ratings, the warranty, and the port of entry / parts content.
Why can’t I find a window sticker for my Toyota or Honda?
Those manufacturers don’t expose a free public window-sticker lookup by VIN. Honda and Acura put it behind an owner account; Toyota and most import brands provide it only through the selling dealer or a licensed data provider. There’s no free public endpoint to link to, so they aren’t in the dropdown.
Is the PDF the official window sticker?
It’s the manufacturer’s own document, opened directly from their site — but treat it as an informational copy, not the official label that was affixed to the new car. It may also be unavailable for older or fleet vehicles. For anything legal or contractual, confirm with the dealer.
What’s the difference between a window sticker and a VIN decode or history report?
A window sticker shows how the car was originally configured and priced from the factory. A VIN decode (try our free VIN decoder) shows the build specs encoded in the VIN. A vehicle-history report (Carfax/AutoCheck) shows title, accident, and odometer history. They answer different questions — the sticker is about original equipment and MSRP.
AutoDealer.io links to each manufacturer’s own publicly available window-sticker document and does not host, alter, or resell it. Brand names are the property of their respective owners. The linked PDF is an informational copy for reference, not the official label affixed to a new vehicle, and may be unavailable for some vehicles — confirm details with the selling dealer.
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