Your Car Is Spying on You: What Data It Collects
Your car may know more about you than you think. Modern vehicles can collect where you drive, where you park, how fast you go, how hard you brake, what phone you connect, what warning lights appear, and sometimes how you use the vehicle every day.
The risk is not just that your car collects data. The bigger concern is who can access it, whether it is shared with insurers or data brokers, whether a dealer or lender still has access, and whether your driving history could be used against you after an accident, claim, loan dispute, or privacy breach.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: What Data Does Your Car Collect?
- Why Modern Cars Collect So Much Data
- Types of Data Modern Cars Can Collect
- Location Data: Where You Drive and Park
- Driving Behavior: Speed, Braking and Acceleration
- Diagnostic Data: Codes, Mileage and Vehicle Health
- Phone, App and Infotainment Data
- Camera, Cabin and Sensor Data
- Who Can Get Your Car Data?
- Can Car Data Affect Insurance Rates?
- Dealer, Lender and GPS Tracker Access
- Data Brokers and Third-Party Sharing
- How Car Data Can Hurt the Owner
- Used Car Privacy: Reset the Previous Owner’s Access
- How to Limit Vehicle Data Sharing
- Car Data Privacy Mistakes to Avoid
- Official Privacy and Consumer Resources
- Related Tracking and Privacy Guides
- Bottom Line
- Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s
Quick Answer: What Data Does Your Car Collect?
Modern connected cars may collect location, trip history, speed, braking, acceleration, odometer readings, diagnostic codes, battery status, crash data, app activity, phone-pairing details, infotainment use, seatbelt activity, remote-start use, charging data for EVs, and vehicle health information.
Some of this data is used for safety, maintenance, navigation, app features, warranty diagnosis, theft recovery, roadside assistance, or software updates. But the same data can also raise privacy concerns when it is shared with automakers, app providers, dealers, lenders, insurers, data brokers, repair networks, or third-party service providers.
Main risk: Your car data can reveal your daily routine, home address, workplace, driving habits, risky behavior, medical visits, school drop-offs, religious visits, relationship patterns, and accident details.
Why Modern Cars Collect So Much Data
Cars used to be mostly mechanical machines. Now many vehicles are rolling computers with cellular modems, GPS, cameras, sensors, microphones, smartphone apps, cloud services, infotainment systems, and over-the-air software connections.
Automakers collect data for many reasons: emergency response, navigation, diagnostics, remote commands, software updates, warranty analysis, theft recovery, battery monitoring, EV charging support, driver assistance, and product improvement. The problem is that broad data collection can continue beyond what many drivers expect.
Common Reasons Automakers and Services Collect Data
- Remote start, lock, unlock, climate, and charging controls
- Vehicle health alerts and diagnostic reports
- Navigation, traffic, and route planning
- Emergency crash response
- Roadside assistance
- Stolen vehicle recovery
- Warranty diagnostics and software updates
- Driver behavior scoring or insurance programs
- Fleet, lender, or dealer monitoring
- Marketing, analytics, and third-party service partnerships
Privacy warning: Convenience features often require data access. Before turning on connected services, check whether you are also agreeing to location tracking, driving behavior collection, or third-party sharing.
Types of Data Modern Cars Can Collect
Vehicle data is not one single category. A car can collect mechanical data, safety data, location data, app data, entertainment data, and driver behavior data. Some data stays in the vehicle. Some may be transmitted to the manufacturer, app provider, dealer system, insurer, lender, or connected-service vendor.
| Data Type | Examples | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Location data | GPS location, routes, parking spots, trip history | Can reveal personal routines and sensitive places |
| Driving behavior | Speed, braking, acceleration, cornering, night driving | May affect insurance, scoring, or accident disputes |
| Vehicle health | Diagnostic codes, odometer, battery voltage, tire pressure | Useful for maintenance but may expose vehicle condition |
| Phone and app data | Contacts, call logs, paired devices, app activity | Can expose personal relationships and device identity |
| Camera and sensor data | Crash data, driver monitoring, cabin sensors, exterior cameras | Can raise privacy and evidence concerns |
Location Data: Where You Drive and Park
Location data is one of the most sensitive types of car data because it can show where you live, work, sleep, shop, worship, receive medical care, meet people, and park overnight. A single location point may not seem serious, but months of location history can create a detailed personal profile.
Location Data May Come From
- Built-in GPS navigation
- Connected-car apps
- Emergency services or crash response systems
- Stolen vehicle recovery systems
- Dealer-installed GPS trackers
- OBD GPS tracking devices
- Insurance telematics programs
- EV charging apps and trip planners
- Phone projection systems and paired devices
Why this matters: Location data can expose private habits even when you have done nothing wrong. It can show patterns that are valuable to insurers, marketers, lenders, investigators, stalkers, data brokers, or anyone with account access.
Driving Behavior: Speed, Braking and Acceleration
Many connected systems can collect driving behavior data. That may include speed, hard braking, rapid acceleration, cornering, mileage, time of day, seatbelt use, crash events, and phone-related behavior depending on the system.
This data can be marketed as a way to reward safe driving or improve vehicle safety. But it can also create risk if the data is incomplete, taken out of context, shared with third parties, or used in insurance pricing, claims, or disputes.
Driving Behavior Data May Include
- Speed and speed-limit comparison
- Hard braking events
- Rapid acceleration
- Sharp cornering
- Late-night driving
- Mileage and trip frequency
- Crash or near-crash events
- Seatbelt use
- Driver-assistance activity
- Phone connection or app use while driving
Context problem: Hard braking may look risky in a data report, but it could happen because another driver cut you off, a child ran into the road, or traffic suddenly stopped. Data does not always explain why an event happened.
Diagnostic Data: Codes, Mileage and Vehicle Health
Cars collect diagnostic data to help identify problems. This can include Check Engine light codes, battery voltage, charging status, oil-life information, tire-pressure readings, odometer mileage, software version, emissions readiness, and module faults.
Diagnostic data can be useful when you need repair help. It can also reveal how the vehicle is being used, whether maintenance was skipped, whether warning lights were ignored, or whether a problem existed before a warranty claim, accident, sale, or repair dispute.
Vehicle Health Data May Include
- Diagnostic trouble codes
- Odometer readings
- Battery voltage and charging data
- EV battery state of charge and charging sessions
- Tire pressure readings
- Oil-life monitor data
- Emissions system status
- Software version and update history
- Crash event or airbag deployment data
For code-related problems, read OBD-II Codes: Diagnostic Trouble Codes, Fixes and Common Mistakes Explained and AutoZone Free Diagnostic: What It Can and Cannot Diagnose.
Phone, App and Infotainment Data
When you connect your phone to a car, the infotainment system may store more than you expect. Depending on the vehicle and settings, it may save paired device names, contact lists, call history, text message access, media information, navigation destinations, garage-door settings, and app login data.
This matters when you sell, trade, rent, or share a vehicle. A used car buyer, dealer employee, rental driver, or next owner may see private information if you do not reset the system.
Infotainment Data to Remove Before Selling
- Paired phones
- Contact lists
- Call history
- Text-message access permissions
- Home and work navigation addresses
- Saved destinations
- Garage-door opener settings
- Wi-Fi passwords
- App accounts and user profiles
- Digital keys and phone-as-key access
Before selling or trading: Factory reset the infotainment system, remove your phone, delete saved addresses, revoke app access, remove digital keys, and confirm the vehicle is no longer listed in your connected-car account.
Camera, Cabin and Sensor Data
Newer vehicles may use exterior cameras, radar, ultrasonic sensors, driver-monitoring cameras, cabin sensors, microphones, and event-data systems. Some systems are used for safety features such as lane keeping, automatic emergency braking, driver attention monitoring, parking assistance, or crash recording.
The privacy issue depends on what is recorded, what is stored, what leaves the vehicle, who can access it, and whether the driver can turn it off. A camera used for safety may still raise concerns if the data is stored or shared beyond what the owner expects.
Camera and Sensor Data May Include
- Exterior camera footage
- Cabin camera or driver monitoring data
- Parking and proximity sensor data
- Crash or impact recordings
- Driver attention or drowsiness information
- Voice command recordings or microphone interactions
- Autopilot, driver-assistance, or automated-driving logs
Check your settings: Some vehicles allow owners to limit camera data sharing, voice recording, analytics, or connected-service uploads. Others may require account-level changes or customer support.
Who Can Get Your Car Data?
Your vehicle data may be accessed by several parties depending on the car, app, subscription, contract, and privacy policy. The owner may assume the data only goes to the automaker, but connected services can involve multiple companies.
Possible Data Recipients
- Automaker and connected-service provider
- Mobile app provider
- Dealer or dealer-installed add-on provider
- Finance company or lender
- Fleet owner or employer
- Insurance company
- Roadside assistance provider
- Repair network or service center
- Data brokers or consumer reporting agencies
- Law enforcement through legal process or emergency situations
- Third-party analytics, marketing, or technology vendors
Do not assume: “My car company has the data” does not always mean only the car company sees it. Read the privacy policy, app terms, insurance program rules, and dealer add-on contract.
Can Car Data Affect Insurance Rates?
Yes, car data can affect insurance when you join a usage-based insurance program, safe-driver program, connected-car discount, or telematics scoring system. In some situations, driving behavior or vehicle data may be shared in ways that owners did not clearly understand.
Insurance-related data may include mileage, trip times, speed, braking, acceleration, cornering, phone use, location patterns, and crash events. The data may help some drivers get a discount, but it can also hurt drivers if the scoring model treats their driving as risky.
Insurance Risks to Watch
- A discount program may later affect pricing.
- Hard braking or late-night driving may be scored negatively.
- Data may not explain road conditions or why you braked.
- Shared data may be hard to review or correct.
- Opting out may remove discounts or app features.
- Driving data may become relevant after a claim or accident dispute.
Before enrolling: Ask whether the insurance program collects location, speed, braking, acceleration, mileage, phone use, and trip times. Also ask whether the data can increase rates, affect renewal, or be shared with third parties.
Dealer, Lender and GPS Tracker Access
Dealer-installed GPS trackers, lender devices, and buy-here-pay-here tracking systems are different from factory connected-car features. These devices may be installed for theft recovery, inventory control, financing risk, repossession, or dealer add-on profit.
The issue is consent and control. A buyer should know whether a device is installed, whether it is required, whether it can disable the vehicle, who sees the location, whether there is a subscription, and whether it remains active after the sale or after the loan is paid off.
Questions to Ask in Writing
- Is there a GPS, starter-interrupt, or telematics device installed?
- Is it required by the lender or optional dealer add-on?
- Who can track the vehicle?
- Can the device disable or prevent starting?
- Can I remove it after payoff?
- Is there a monthly or annual subscription?
- What data does it collect?
- Where is the privacy disclosure?
For the broader tracker breakdown, read car tracking devices, GPS trackers and dealer add-ons.
Data Brokers and Third-Party Sharing
Data brokers collect, package, analyze, and share consumer information for business purposes. Vehicle data can become valuable when combined with other information such as insurance records, location patterns, mobile app data, credit-related data, or consumer profiles.
The FTC has warned that geolocation and driver behavior data are sensitive. It has also taken action involving the sharing of precise location and driver behavior data with consumer reporting agencies. That is why car owners should treat connected-car permissions seriously.
Why Third-Party Sharing Is Dangerous
- You may not know who received the data.
- You may not know how long the data is kept.
- You may not be able to easily correct wrong data.
- Data may be used for pricing, risk scoring, marketing, or profiling.
- Location data can reveal sensitive personal places.
- Driving behavior data may be misunderstood without context.
Big concern: Once vehicle data leaves the car company or app provider, it may become difficult for the owner to track where it went, who used it, and whether it affected pricing, eligibility, claims, or consumer reports.
How Car Data Can Hurt the Owner
Vehicle data can be useful when it helps with safety, maintenance, theft recovery, or repairs. But it can also create real damage for the owner when it is collected too broadly, shared too loosely, or interpreted without context.
Possible Harms to Car Owners
- Insurance costs: Driving behavior may affect discounts, rates, renewal decisions, or claims handling.
- Privacy exposure: Location history can reveal home, work, schools, medical visits, and private relationships.
- Accident disputes: Speed, braking, or event data may be used in claims, lawsuits, or fault arguments.
- Dealer or lender pressure: GPS or starter-interrupt devices may create control issues in financed vehicles.
- Used-car tracking: A previous owner may still have app access if the vehicle is not reset and transferred.
- Data broker profiling: Driving and location data may contribute to consumer profiles you never see.
- Account hacking: A stolen connected-car login can expose location or allow remote commands.
- Battery drain: Poorly installed aftermarket trackers can contribute to parasitic draw problems.
- Workplace monitoring: Fleet or employer vehicles may collect more behavior data than drivers expect.
Most overlooked risk: The data does not need to be “secret” to hurt you. A driver may technically agree to terms but never understand that location, behavior, or diagnostic data could be shared outside the car company.
Used Car Privacy: Reset the Previous Owner’s Access
Used-car privacy is a major blind spot. A previous owner may still have the vehicle in a connected-car app. That could allow them to see location, lock or unlock the car, use climate controls, view charging status, or access other remote features depending on the vehicle.
Dealers do not always fully reset connected accounts before resale. Private sellers may forget to remove the vehicle from their app. Buyers should handle this before relying on the car for daily use.
Used Car Privacy Checklist
- Factory reset the infotainment system.
- Delete all paired phones and profiles.
- Remove saved home, work, and navigation addresses.
- Transfer the connected-car account to your name.
- Remove previous digital keys or phone-as-key access.
- Change app passwords and enable two-factor authentication.
- Check whether subscriptions are active.
- Call the automaker if the old owner still appears connected.
Used-car warning: Do not assume a car is private just because you have the physical keys. Connected app access may still exist until the account is transferred or reset.
How to Limit Vehicle Data Sharing
You may not be able to stop every type of vehicle data collection, but you can reduce unnecessary sharing. The available controls depend on the automaker, app, state privacy law, subscription, and vehicle features.
Step 1: Review the Connected-Car App
Check privacy, data sharing, analytics, location, insurance, driver score, and marketing settings.
Step 2: Check the Vehicle Settings
Look for data sharing, connected services, camera data, voice recordings, location services, and driver profile options.
Step 3: Remove Unneeded Phone Permissions
Disable contact sharing, message syncing, call-log access, and app permissions you do not need.
Step 4: Avoid Unnecessary Insurance Telematics
Do not enroll in a driving-score program unless you understand what is collected and how it can affect pricing.
Step 5: Ask the Dealer About Installed Devices
Ask for written confirmation of any GPS, telematics, or theft-recovery product and whether it can be removed.
Step 6: Use Privacy Rights Where Available
Depending on your state, you may have rights to access, delete, correct, or opt out of certain data sharing or sale practices.
Practical tip: Search your automaker account for terms like “privacy,” “data sharing,” “connected services,” “driver score,” “telematics,” “insurance,” “location services,” and “third-party sharing.”
Car Data Privacy Mistakes to Avoid
- Assuming a newer car is private by default. Many new cars are connected from the factory.
- Ignoring app permissions. The car app may collect location even when you rarely use it.
- Signing up for insurance tracking without reading the terms. A small discount may not be worth the data exposure.
- Leaving previous owner access active. Reset used cars and transfer connected accounts immediately.
- Letting dealers bury GPS products in add-ons. Ask what was installed and who controls it.
- Pairing your phone in rentals or borrowed cars without deleting it later. Remove personal data before returning the vehicle.
- Clearing warnings without saving codes. Diagnostic data can matter for repairs and disputes.
- Using weak passwords for car apps. A hacked account can expose location and remote vehicle controls.
Official Privacy and Consumer Resources
- FTC: Cars and Consumer Data
- FTC Action Involving GM, OnStar and Driver Data
- USA.gov State Consumer Protection Offices
- California Privacy Protection Agency
- Apple: Unwanted AirTag Tracking Alerts
- Google: Unknown Tracker Alerts on Android
Related Tracking and Privacy Guides
Car data privacy connects directly to GPS trackers, dealer add-ons, OBD devices, diagnostics, insurance, and used-car ownership. These guides can help you check whether your vehicle is being tracked or sharing more than expected.
Tracking Devices and Dealer Add-Ons
- Car Tracking Devices: GPS, Telematics and Dealer Add-Ons
- Dealer Maintenance Upsells: Services You May Not Need
- Car Repair Scams: Real Signs You’re Being Ripped Off
- Car Repair Estimate Red Flags: Charges That Should Make You Pause
Diagnostics, Apps and Vehicle Electronics
- AutoZone Free Diagnostic: What It Can and Cannot Diagnose
- O'Reilly Free Check Engine Light Test: What It Can and Cannot Diagnose
- OBD-II Codes: Fixes and Common Mistakes Explained
- Why Your Car Dies While Driving: Alternator Failure vs Dead Battery
Bottom Line
Your car can collect far more than basic mechanical information. Location, driving behavior, diagnostic codes, phone connections, app activity, camera data, and trip history can create a detailed picture of your life.
Protect yourself: Review connected-car privacy settings, avoid unnecessary driver-score programs, reset used-car accounts, remove phone data before selling or returning a car, and ask dealers in writing about GPS or telematics add-ons.
Frequently Asked Questions FAQ’s
What data does my car collect?
Your car may collect location, speed, braking, acceleration, mileage, diagnostic codes, app activity, phone-pairing data, crash data, camera information, and vehicle health details depending on the model and services enabled.
Can my car data be sold?
Vehicle data may be shared or sold depending on the automaker, app provider, privacy policy, consent, state law, and connected-service terms. Review opt-out settings and privacy rights available in your state.
Can car data raise my insurance rates?
Yes, car data can affect insurance when you enroll in usage-based insurance or when driving behavior data is shared with insurance-related companies. Ask whether data can affect rates, renewal, or claims.
Can my car track where I go?
Yes, many connected cars can collect location data through GPS, navigation, connected services, theft recovery, dealer GPS devices, or mobile apps. Check your app and vehicle privacy settings.
Can a previous owner still track my used car?
Yes, it is possible if the previous owner still has connected-app access, digital keys, or account control. Reset the infotainment system and transfer the vehicle account after buying a used car.
Can I stop my car from collecting data?
You may be able to reduce data sharing through app settings, vehicle privacy menus, subscription controls, and state privacy requests. Some safety, diagnostic, or required vehicle data may not be fully disabled.
Do OBD trackers collect driving data?
Many OBD trackers can collect location, speed, trip history, mileage, battery voltage, diagnostic codes, and driving behavior. Check any device plugged into the OBD-II port under the dashboard.
What should I do before selling my car?
Factory reset the infotainment system, remove paired phones, delete saved addresses, cancel or transfer connected services, remove digital keys, and revoke app access before selling or trading the car.
