"Full service history" is the most-claimed and least-verified phrase in SA car ads. Buyers treat it as proof the car is sound — but it only proves a narrow set of things, and a forged one is easy to spot once you know how. Here's what it actually tells you, what it doesn't, and how to check it in minutes.
Service history is the documented record of the scheduled services a car has had — when, where, at what mileage, and what was done. It usually takes one of three forms: stamps in a physical service book, a stack of workshop invoices, or a digital record held on the manufacturer's system. The strongest histories combine more than one of these.
| Type | What it looks like | How to read it |
|---|---|---|
| Franchise / dealer history | Stamps from the brand's official dealers | Strongest on paper — but stamps can be faked, so verify |
| Independent workshop history | Invoices from a private mechanic or specialist | Perfectly valid, often cheaper servicing — confirm the work with the workshop |
| Digital service history (DSH) | Book may look blank; records sit on the manufacturer database | Common on modern cars — ask a franchise dealer to pull it by VIN |
A blank service book doesn't automatically mean a neglected car — many modern brands record everything digitally. But it does mean you need to verify the digital record exists, rather than taking the seller's word.
This is the core misunderstanding: service history is about maintenance, not about the car's accident, finance or legal status. A spotlessly serviced car can still be a cloned write-off with money owing on it. You verify those separately — see our guides on checking the VIN and checking for outstanding finance.
These get mixed up constantly, and they're completely different things:
"It still has a service plan, so the history's sorted." A remaining service plan covers future services — it says nothing about whether past services were actually done. Always ask for both: the history behind it and any plan still running.
A genuine, verifiable full service history lowers your risk and justifies paying closer to the top of the market for that car. No history, or a history with unexplained gaps, should do the opposite — lower your offer and raise your scrutiny everywhere else. For some buyers, no verifiable history at all is simply a reason to walk, especially on a higher-mileage car.
A complete, verifiable history is one of the strongest things a private seller can offer, and one of the easiest claims for a chancer to fake. The difference is whether you can independently confirm it. If you can't verify it, price the car as if it has none.
Service history proves a car was maintained — not that it's accident-free, finance-free or legally clean. Check the stamps against the intervals, phone the workshops, and pull the digital record by VIN. A history you can confirm is worth paying for. A history you only hear about is worth nothing.
Every check that matters before you hand over money — printable, and built for SA buyers.