14 January, 2026
Words That Sell
14 January, 2026
How to Create a Detailed Car Description That Builds Trust
A good description doesn’t convince. It confirms. By the time a buyer reads your text, interest already exists. Your job is not to oversell. Your job is to remove doubt. The best descriptions don’t sound clever. They sound clear.1. Understand What the Description Is For
A car description has one purpose: Help a buyer decide whether to continue. Not to impress. Not to entertain. Not to hide flaws. Every sentence should answer one silent question: “Can I trust this car?” If the answer feels unclear, the buyer leaves.2. Start with Facts — Not Opinions
Avoid adjectives as a starting point. “Beautiful.” “Perfect.” “Like new.” These are claims — and claims create resistance. Instead, open with verifiable facts:- Make, model, year
- Mileage
- Engine and transmission
- First registration
- Number of owners
- Current inspection status
3. Structure Beats Creativity
Buyers don’t read descriptions. They scan them. Use structure:- Short paragraphs
- Clear sections
- Bullet points where it helps
- Vehicle overview
- Condition and history
- Equipment and options
- Maintenance and inspections
- Known issues
- Sale details
4. Describe Condition Precisely
Condition is where deals are made or lost. Be specific:- “Small scratch on rear bumper, right side”
- “Interior shows normal wear on driver’s seat”
- “Windscreen replaced in 2023 due to stone chip”
5. Service History Is a Story — Tell It
A service history isn’t just a list. It’s proof of care. Explain it clearly:- Where services were done
- Whether intervals were respected
- What was recently replaced
6. Equipment: Relevance Over Volume
Long option lists don’t impress if they’re unreadable. Group features logically:- Safety
- Comfort
- Technology
- Winter equipment
- Driver assistance systems
- Infotainment and connectivity
- Seasonal extras like winter tires
7. Address Weak Points Before the Buyer Finds Them
Every used car has imperfections. Ignoring them doesn’t hide them. It delays the problem. Acknowledge issues early:- Cosmetic damage
- Upcoming maintenance
- Known quirks
- Filters out unrealistic buyers
- Builds credibility with serious ones
8. Align Description with Photos
Your text should match what the photos show. If photos show:- Worn tires → mention tread depth
- Stone chips → explain age and use
- Clean interior → confirm care
9. Keep the Tone Neutral and Human
Write like a person, not an ad. Avoid:- ALL CAPS
- Excessive exclamation marks
- Sales language
10. End with Clear Next Steps
Don’t leave the buyer guessing. End with:- Availability for viewing
- Test drive conditions
- Documents included
- Payment and handover expectations