The FTC dropped warning letters on 97 auto dealership groups this March, affecting over 1,000 locations nationwide. These aren’t gentle suggestions—each violation carries penalties up to $50,000 per infraction. The biggest target? Dealerships advertising cars that don’t exist or have already sold, a practice the industry calls “ghost inventory.”
Six specific violations landed dealers in the FTC’s crosshairs:
- Hiding mandatory fees from advertised prices
- Offering rebates only available to select customers
- Burying required down payments
- Conditioning prices on dealer financing
- Mandating undisclosed add-ons
- Advertising unavailable vehicles
Christopher Mufarrige, FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection Director, made the agency’s position crystal clear: “The Trump-Vance FTC is committed to preventing auto dealers from misleading consumers with low advertised prices and then adding on mandatory fees.”
Here’s the compliance nightmare: the FTC deliberately refused to specify how quickly sold car ads must come down. Industry expert Adam Crowell from KPA notes, “Not taking down the listings in a timely fashion certainly could be an issue.” Dealerships often keep sold vehicle ads live intentionally—they’re digital fishing lures to hook customers for similar (usually pricier) alternatives. This practice now sits in regulatory limbo, leaving dealers guessing at compliance timelines while facing massive potential penalties.
The enforcement pattern suggests this crackdown is just getting started. The FTC previously charged 10 dealers across seven states for deceptive advertising, with penalties reaching $16,000 per day per violation. Past cases have resulted in substantial settlements industry-wide, signaling the agency’s commitment to sustained oversight.
Your dealership’s digital advertising strategy needs immediate attention. With consumer trust already strained by high vehicle prices, the cost of non-compliance extends beyond fines. Smart dealers are investing in automated inventory management systems that sync ads with actual availability in real-time. The alternative—playing compliance roulette with a regulator wielding $50,000 hammers—makes those tech upgrades look like bargains.





























