Find your Buick VIN on the driver’s side dashboard or in the door jamb when the door is opened. VINs are vital to identify a car as it contains info about the car’s country of origin, manufacturer and assembly plant, vehicle information, and model year.
You’ll need your car’s VIN to update your vehicle’s registration, renew your driver’s license, and sell your car.
Jerry,
the car insurance
comparison app, has all the info you need to decode your Buick’s VIN. Learn where to find a VIN, how to read one, and what this information says about your Buick. We'll even show you how to lower your Buick insurance cost.
How to check your Buick’s VIN
VIN is an acronym for vehicle identification number. It is a combination of 17 letters and digits with each position communicating an important piece of information about a car.
You can find your Buick VIN in several different places:
On a metal tag affixed to the driver’s side of the dashboard
In the doorjamb when the door is opened
On your vehicle registration
On your car insurance policy
As part of a promissory note
If you can’t find your Buick’s VIN in any of these places, pop the hood and look at the front of the engine—it might be printed there.
How to decode a Buick VIN
VINs have been in use throughout the U.S. since the 1950s. In 1981, they became standardized thanks in part to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). They became the preferred method to identify a car via a standardized set (involving unique characters) across models, makes, and geography.
To decode your VIN, start by understanding that VINs avoid certain numbers and letters. All ten numerical digits (0-9) and every letter are used except I, O, and Q to avoid confusion with 1, 0, and 9.
First position: country of origin
In every VIN, the first three characters represent the world manufacturer identifier (WMI) code. More specifically, the first number or letter is a code for the country where the vehicle was manufactured.
If your VIN begins with either a 1, 4, 5, or 7 then your Buick’s country of origin is the United States. Here are the other places Buick’s are manufactured and their corresponding identification number/ letter:
Positions 2-3: manufacturer information
After the first letter or digit, you will find two numbers that refer to the manufacturer. The next digit conveys the vehicle type (SUV, passenger car, or truck). This means the code for a Buick Lesabre
will be different than the code for a Buick Encore
as they are different vehicle types. Positions 4-8: vehicle-specific information
The next part of a VIN is the vehicle-specific information, This allows someone to identify the engine type, body type, safety equipment, and other features and parts of a car.
Buicks, like most cars, come in a variety of trim levels and models. Recognizing this, the letters and digits in these positions narrow down the exact vehicle. Here, a DMV can see if your vehicle is a passenger car and if it has active seatbelts.
Position 9: the VIN check digit
Fraudulent VINs were once a big concern, so the 9th digit is used to verify a VIN’s authenticity. It’s a “check digit” based on the other digits present in a VIN.
Position 10: model year
Model years have the potential to cause the most issues with a VIN. This is due to VINs recycling characters that already belong to models on the market. The only digits that are typically not used in this position are U, Z, and 0.
Here is a table of the codes for the VIN model year over the last two decades:
4.717k Ratings 5M+Drivers Joined
7M+Cars Garaged
Position 11: assembly plant
Buicks are manufactured in Canada, China, the U.S., South Korea, and Germany. This position indicates the assembly plant where the car was built.
Positions 12-17: vehicle serial number
Now, we arrive at the final six digits of a VIN. Here is where you’ll find your car’s serial number. This code is unique to your Buick and is most likely a production sequence number.
If you see a low number it might not mean that your Buick was one of the first to be manufactured in its plant. It could mean a few things, so you might want to hold off on bragging to your friends.
How to find affordable Buick insurance
Decoding your VIN is useful to better understand your car, but it’s not quite as useful as having affordable car insurance. Use the Jerry app to find cheaper rates on policies that will better meet your driving needs.
In only 45 seconds, Jerry
will search for rates from a network of more than 50 top providers. You can then browse a list of competitive quotes to find a more affordable rate. The benefits don’t stop there, though. As a licensed broker
, Jerry will help you through the process and make sure you get your new policy with as little stress as possible. Best of all… Jerry users save an average of $887 a year on car insurance!
“I just financed a new car and knew my insurance premium was going to rise. Jerry
was well worth it to use. They helped me find a lower premium and canceled my old policy instantly when I was ready to switch!” —Meghana D.