SEAT VIN Decoder — Free Lookup + Full History Report
Every SEAT (built in Spain or worldwide) has a unique 17-character VIN that encodes its plant of manufacture, model year, engine and equipment. Use the free Automano decoder to read it instantly — and pull a full NHTSA history report for $7.90 when you're ready.
Free unlimited VIN decoder. No signup, no email. Optional $7.90 full history report.
Free
SEAT VIN decoder, unlimited
VSS
Common WMI prefix(es)
$7.90
Optional full history report
Why decode a SEAT VIN before you buy?
SEAT is one of the most-traded brands in the US used-car market. Because demand is high, so is the risk of cloned VINs, undisclosed salvage rebuilds and odometer rollback. A free VIN decode confirms the SEAT you're looking at was actually built in Spain (or wherever the 11th VIN character says it was), with the engine and trim the seller claims. From there, a $7.90 cross-source history report cross-checks NHTSA recalls, federal title brands and odometer continuity in a single document.
What you'll find in a SEAT VIN decode
- Exact model year, plant of manufacture and trim level — confirm the seller's spec matches the VIN.
- Engine code and transmission — critical for SEAT Ibiza, Leon and Ateca listings that often misrepresent powertrains.
- Original equipment from the factory — what the car shipped with vs what's bolted on now.
- NHTSA recall status — uncompleted recalls are a red flag before any test drive.
- Title brands and odometer flags (in the optional $7.90 report) — salvage, rebuild, flood and theft history.
Where to find the VIN on a SEAT
1. Windshield (lower driver-side corner)
Stand outside the car, look at the lower corner of the windshield on the driver side. The VIN is etched into a small metal plate, readable from outside.
2. Door jamb sticker (driver-side B-pillar)
Open the driver door and look at the sticker on the B-pillar or door edge. The VIN appears alongside tire-pressure and gross-weight data.
3. Vehicle title or registration card
The title document (or your state DMV registration) lists the 17-character VIN at the top. Use this if the car is locked or the windshield is obscured.
SEAT-specific things to check
Every make has its own recall history and known weak points. For SEAT in particular, the items below are the ones that move resale value the most.
SEAT is not sold in the US. Any US-titled SEAT is a private import — verify federalization and that VW-shared parts (it's a VW Group brand) match the actual platform.
Stay informed after the check
SEAT recall and title-status updates don't stop at purchase. Add the VIN to Watch This Car and Automano will alert you if NHTSA posts a new recall, the title brand changes or the odometer history shifts.
SEAT VIN — frequently asked questions
Is the SEAT VIN decoder free?
Yes. The Automano SEAT VIN decoder is free and unlimited — no email, no signup, no credit card. The optional full history report (with NHTSA recalls, title brands and odometer history) is $7.90.
How long is a SEAT VIN?
Every SEAT built after 1981 has a 17-character VIN. Older SEAT vehicles may have shorter VINs (11–13 characters) and need a manual decode — the Automano tool accepts both.
What does the 11th character of a SEAT VIN mean?
The 11th character is the plant code — it tells you which SEAT assembly plant built the vehicle. Combined with the WMI prefix (typically VSS for SEAT), this confirms the build origin.
Can I check SEAT recall status for free?
Yes. The free Automano SEAT VIN decoder surfaces open NHTSA recalls inline. The $7.90 report adds the full recall completion history and any unresolved campaigns from prior owners.
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Decode your SEAT VIN now
Free unlimited VIN decoding for every SEAT ever built. Add a $7.90 report when you're ready to buy.