The 30-second version
- eNaTIS verification is your due diligence before buying — confirming the car's VIN, engine and title match the RC1 and the physical vehicle.
- SAPS police clearance is a formal physical inspection, required only in specific cases (engine change, imports, rebuilds, stolen-and-recovered, number mismatches).
- A clearance confirms the VIN, chassis and engine numbers aren't flagged as stolen and match the record.
- Vehicles built before 1 September 2012 must be microdotted to be cleared.
- If the numbers on the car don't match the RC1, treat it as a red flag until SAPS says otherwise.
This is the verification side of buying and owning a car in South Africa — the part that protects you from the worst outcome of all: paying for a car that turns out to be cloned, stolen, or impossible to register. There are two separate processes at play, and confusing them is common. Let's keep them clearly apart.
Two different things
- eNaTIS verification — checking the national vehicle record to confirm a car is what the seller says it is, before you hand over money. This is something a buyer does as due diligence.
- SAPS police clearance — a formal inspection by the South African Police Service confirming a vehicle's identifying numbers aren't linked to crime, required by law in particular circumstances before the car can be registered, licensed or transferred.
You'll almost always do the first when buying used. You'll only need the second if your situation triggers it.
What eNaTIS is — and why you check it
eNaTIS (the electronic National Administration Traffic Information System) is the national database that records every registered vehicle: its VIN, engine number, description, registered owner and title holder, licence status, and any flags such as a stolen marker or outstanding finance. When you verify a used car against eNaTIS, you're confirming the paperwork and the metal tell the same story.
This is your single best defence against a cloned car — a stolen vehicle disguised with the identity (number plates and VIN) of a legitimate one. If the physical numbers don't match the record, or the "owner" selling it isn't the registered title holder, that's exactly what verification is designed to catch.
How to verify a car before you buy
Pre-purchase verification checklist
- Match the VIN everywhere. The VIN on the dashboard, the driver's door pillar, the engine bay and the RC1 must all be identical. Any discrepancy is a stop sign.
- Check the engine number against the RC1. A ground-off, re-stamped or mismatched engine number needs explaining — and a SAPS clearance.
- Confirm the seller is the title holder. The name on the original RC1 should match the seller's ID. If the car is financed, the bank is the title holder.
- Look for microdots. A UV torch reveals them; the microdot certificate should be registered to the vehicle.
- Run a history / verification check. A paid vehicle-history service flags outstanding finance, accident write-offs, stolen markers and previous owners.
What a SAPS police clearance is
A SAPS police clearance certificate confirms that a vehicle's VIN, chassis number and engine number have been physically inspected by the police and are not flagged as stolen or linked to criminal activity on national — and, for cross-border cases, regional — databases. The point of the procedure is to ensure the information on eNaTIS matches the actual vehicle on the road.
Crucially, this is done at a specialist SAPS Vehicle Identification Section (VIS) or clearance unit — not your local police station. Hours vary and queues can be long.
When SAPS clearance is required
You don't need a fresh police clearance for every ordinary used-car sale. It's triggered by specific situations:
- An engine change — the new engine number must be cleared and updated on eNaTIS.
- A stolen-and-recovered vehicle — it must be cleared (with the stolen marker removed by the investigating officer first) before it can be licensed or transferred.
- A built-up, rebuilt or assembled vehicle — to confirm no stolen parts were used; SAPS then assigns a new VIN.
- An imported vehicle, or re-registering a previously deregistered vehicle.
- Cross-border travel or export to neighbouring SADC countries (a SARPCCO clearance).
- When the VIN, chassis or engine numbers don't match the eNaTIS record — which is also what a roadworthy station or licensing office will pick up and refer.
The SAPS clearance process
- Gather your documentsCertified copy of your ID, proof of address within the last three months, the original registration certificate (not a copy), the microdot certificate if the vehicle predates September 2012, and supporting papers such as an engine invoice for an engine change.
- Go to a SAPS Vehicle Identification SectionThe dedicated clearance unit, not a regular police station. For a stolen-and-recovered vehicle, it must be the unit where the vehicle is registered.
- Physical inspectionOfficials inspect the engine, VIN and chassis numbers and cross-check them against the databases.
- Certificate issued & eNaTIS updatedIf everything matches and there are no flags, SAPS issues the clearance certificate and updates the vehicle's eNaTIS record.
- Then licence / roadworthy / transferWith the record corrected, you can proceed to the roadworthy, disc renewal or change of ownership that the clearance was blocking.
Timeframes vary with SAPS queues — typically one to a few working days. If an engine number is missing or has been ground off, SAPS has a stamping process that adds a little time before clearance can be granted.
What happens if you skip it
If a vehicle needs clearance and doesn't have it — or its numbers don't match eNaTIS — you simply can't transact: no licence disc renewal, no roadworthy certificate, and no change of ownership will go through. Worse, driving a vehicle that's flagged as stolen can get the driver arrested, even if you bought it in good faith. That's why the verification happens before the money, not after.
Frequently asked questions
Verify before you pay — every time
The numbers, the finance, the history and the physical condition. Run the full check before any money changes hands.
See the 60-point inspection →Clearance requirements, units and processes are governed by the National Road Traffic Act and SAPS procedures, and can vary by province and change over time. This is general guidance for South African motorists as of June 2026, not legal advice or official confirmation. Confirm your specific situation with a SAPS Vehicle Identification Section, your registering authority, or NaTIS (natis.gov.za).