Pricing

Simple, transparent pricing

One plan. All features. Unlimited analyses.

Get it on Google Play

Why DealJudge?

The average used car buyer overpays by $3,000 or more. A single DealJudge analysis pays for itself many times over by giving you the market intelligence you need to negotiate a fair price.

Your first analysis is free — no signup required. Then $4.99/month for unlimited analyses. Cancel anytime.

Not satisfied? Contact us within 7 days for a full refund.

Average buyer saves $3,000+ per deal

What You Get for $4.99/Month

Every DealJudge analysis pulls data from multiple sources — NHTSA recall databases, real-time market listings, VIN decoders, and our own repair cost intelligence — then synthesizes it into a single report you can act on immediately. That report includes a Deal Score from 0 to 100, a fair price range calibrated to the car's actual condition, estimated repair costs for every issue you observed, and ready-to-send negotiation scripts with your calculated opening offer and walk-away price.

Most used car pricing tools stop at a price range. They tell you a 2019 Honda Civic is worth $17,000 to $20,000 and leave you to figure out the rest. They don't account for the check engine light you saw during the test drive, the worn tires, or the fact that the car has 15,000 more miles than average for its year. DealJudge does. Every observation you enter adjusts your repair forecast and changes the numbers in your negotiation scripts.

The subscription covers unlimited analyses. Run one analysis or fifty — the price is the same. If you're shopping for a car and comparing three or four options over a weekend, each analysis gives you the data to compare them side by side. There are no per-report fees, no credit packs, and no upsells.

How $4.99 Pays for Itself

The average used car transaction price in the United States is over $27,000. Studies consistently show that buyers who negotiate with market data pay $1,000 to $3,000 less than those who don't. A single DealJudge analysis arms you with the exact data points dealers and private sellers respond to: comparable listings in your area, specific repair costs for the issues you found, and a fair price range that accounts for condition, mileage, and trim.

Even if you only use DealJudge once, the subscription pays for itself hundreds of times over. But most buyers look at multiple cars before deciding. Each analysis takes about two minutes to set up and gives you a complete picture — deal score, risk flags, repair estimates, and negotiation scripts — so you can make faster, more confident decisions without second-guessing yourself.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the first analysis really free?

Yes. Download the app, enter a VIN, and get your full analysis — no account or payment required. If you want to run more analyses after that, subscribe for $4.99/month.

Can I cancel anytime?

Yes. Cancel through Google Play at any time. There are no cancellation fees, no long-term contracts, and no hoops to jump through. Your subscription runs until the end of the billing period.

What if I'm not satisfied?

Contact us within 7 days and we'll issue a full refund. No questions asked.

Do I need an OBD-II scanner?

No. OBD-II codes are optional. You can enter visual observations — check engine light, worn tires, oil leaks, dents, rust — and DealJudge will factor them into your repair forecast and deal score. If you do have OBD-II codes from a scanner, adding them makes the analysis more precise.

How is DealJudge different from Kelley Blue Book or Edmunds?

KBB and Edmunds give you a price range based on model-year averages. DealJudge analyzes the specific car in front of you — including the issues you observed during your inspection — and gives you negotiation scripts with calculated offers. It's the difference between knowing a car's average value and knowing what to actually offer for this car.