Copart, Inc.
The dominant US salvage vehicle auction marketplace — $4.6 billion in revenue, zero debt, $5.2 billion in cash, 30% ROIC, 37% operating margins, and an irreplaceable land-ownership moat in a duopoly market.
Business Overview
What does Copart do, and why is it the dominant salvage auction platform?
Copart is not a used car dealer — it is the dominant online marketplace for salvage and total-loss vehicles, and one of the most quietly powerful businesses in America. Founded in 1982 and headquartered in Dallas, Texas, Copart operates the world's largest online vehicle auction platform, connecting insurance companies, fleet operators, banks, and individual sellers with over 1 million registered buyers in more than 185 countries.
The company's business model is elegantly simple and extraordinarily profitable: when an insured vehicle is damaged beyond economical repair, the insurance company declares it a total loss and consigns it to Copart. Copart then stores the vehicle at one of its 250+ physical yard locations, processes it through its proprietary VB3 online auction platform, and sells it to the highest bidder — collecting fees from both the seller and buyer. This fee-based marketplace model generates 80–85% of revenue from services, with the remainder from direct vehicle sales.
What makes Copart truly special is its land-ownership strategy. Unlike competitors who lease their yards, Copart owns the vast majority of its 250+ locations outright. Many were purchased decades ago when land on the outskirts of major cities was cheap. Today, those areas are heavily developed, and new permits for salvage yards are virtually impossible to obtain due to zoning restrictions and environmental regulations. This creates a physical moat that money alone cannot replicate.
The US salvage auction market is effectively a duopoly: Copart and Insurance Auto Auctions (IAA, now owned by RB Global) control roughly 80% of the market. Within this duopoly, Copart has steadily pulled ahead on margins, technology, and global buyer reach. International buyers purchase vehicles at prices 38% higher than comparable domestic buyers, directly benefiting insurance company returns and reinforcing Copart's preferred status.
Insurance Services
~75–80% of volume. Major US insurance carriers consign total-loss vehicles to Copart. Fee-based model earns buyer premiums, seller fees, and ancillary services (towing, storage, title processing). Service revenue grew 11.4% in FY2025.
Non-Insurance & Blue Car
~15–20% of volume. Banks, rental companies, fleet operators, and dealers consign vehicles through Copart's Blue Car service (grew 27% YoY). Purple Wave auctions heavy machinery and farming equipment (grew 8% YoY). Growing diversification beyond insurance.
International Operations
11 countries including US, Canada, UK, Germany, Brazil, Spain, UAE, Finland, Ireland, Bahrain, and Oman. International revenue grew 18% YoY. Germany's consignment model transition drove 35% gross margins. International buyers pay 38% more than domestic buyers.
Financial Fundamentals
Three tests every quality business must pass
Moat Analysis
Five dimensions that determine competitive durability
Brand Loyalty & Pricing Power
8/10Copart is the preferred partner for the largest US insurance carriers, who rely on its platform to maximise salvage returns. The company achieved record average selling prices (ASPs) in Q2 FY2026 — US insurance ASPs increased 6% YoY (9% excluding catastrophe units). International buyers consistently pay 38% more than domestic buyers, directly benefiting insurance consignors and reinforcing Copart's preferred status. While not a consumer-facing brand, Copart's reputation with institutional clients is unmatched.
High Barriers to Entry
10/10This is arguably the strongest barrier-to-entry moat on any US stock exchange. Copart owns 250+ physical yard locations, many purchased decades ago when suburban land was cheap. Those same areas are now heavily developed, and new salvage yard permits are virtually impossible to obtain due to zoning restrictions and environmental regulations. Even a well-funded competitor with billions of dollars simply cannot replicate Copart's physical footprint. IAA (its only real competitor) leases most of its yards, giving Copart a permanent structural cost advantage. This land moat compounds over time as urban sprawl makes permits even scarcer.
High Switching Costs
8/10Insurance carriers deeply integrate their claims management systems with Copart's technology platform. Switching to a competitor means re-integrating IT systems, retraining adjusters, disrupting established towing and logistics networks, and risking lower salvage returns during the transition. Copart's consistently higher ASPs (driven by its global buyer network) create a financial disincentive to switch — every dollar of lower salvage return directly impacts the insurer's combined ratio. Long-term contracts with volume commitments add further inertia.
Network Effect
8/10Copart operates a classic two-sided marketplace with strong network effects. More sellers (insurance carriers) listing vehicles attracts more buyers. More buyers bidding drives up prices (ASPs), which attracts more sellers. With 1 million+ registered members in 185+ countries, Copart's global liquidity pool generates higher salvage returns than any competitor. International buyers consistently purchase at 38% premiums. More bids per lot means better outcomes for insurers, creating a self-reinforcing flywheel that competitors struggle to match.
Economies of Scale
9/10As the largest salvage auction operator globally, Copart benefits from massive fixed-cost leverage. Its 250+ owned yards, proprietary VB3 technology platform, and nationwide towing infrastructure have largely fixed costs that scale efficiently with volume. The result: 37% operating margins and 45% gross margins — far above the 7.4% industry average. Each incremental vehicle unit requires minimal additional capital, translating modest volume increases into outsized free cash flow growth. FY2025 free cash flow was $1.26 billion (+28% YoY).
Bull & Bear Thesis
Both sides of the coin — so you can decide for yourself
Bull Case
Bear Case
Growth Drivers
Where the next wave of revenue comes from
Rising Total Loss Frequency
Vehicle complexity is the single most powerful secular tailwind for Copart. ADAS sensors, cameras, LiDAR modules, and integrated electronics make modern vehicles dramatically more expensive to repair. Total loss frequency has risen from 15.6% in 2015 to 24.2% in late 2025 and is expected to continue climbing. Every percentage point increase in total loss frequency translates to hundreds of thousands of additional vehicles flowing to Copart annually — regardless of economic conditions.
International Market Expansion
Copart's international operations are its fastest-growing segment, with revenue growing 18% YoY. The company operates in 11 countries and is actively replicating its US model in Europe, the Middle East, and Latin America. Germany's consignment model transition alone drove 35% gross margins. International markets are years behind the US in salvage auction digitisation, presenting a massive runway for Copart to export its technology-driven marketplace model and capture market share.
Non-Insurance Diversification
Copart's Blue Car service (banks, rental companies, fleet operators) grew 27% YoY. Purple Wave (heavy machinery and farming equipment auctions) grew 8%. The Direct Buy programme earns referral fees connecting individual sellers to junk buyers. These non-insurance channels reduce Copart's dependence on the insurance cycle, expand the addressable market, and leverage existing yard infrastructure with minimal incremental capital. Non-insurance is the fastest path to revenue diversification.
Global Buyer Network & ASP Growth
Copart's VB3 platform connects sellers to 1 million+ buyers in 185+ countries. This global liquidity consistently drives record average selling prices — US insurance ASPs increased 6% YoY in Q2 FY2026 (9% ex-CAT). Higher ASPs mean better returns for insurance consignors, which reinforces Copart's preferred status and creates a virtuous cycle. As Copart adds more international buyers and expands into new markets, the buyer pool deepens and ASPs should continue their upward trajectory.
Investment Risks
Every investment has risks — here is what could go wrong
Insurance Volume Decline & Uninsured Drivers
Global insurance units declined 9% in Q2 FY2026. Rising auto insurance premiums are driving a growing uninsured population, reducing the number of vehicles flowing through the total-loss pipeline. If insurance affordability continues to deteriorate, Copart's core volume source could face a prolonged structural headwind. Management acknowledged a modest increase in uninsured drivers relative to pre-COVID levels — a trend that directly reduces Copart's addressable market.
High SeverityIAA / RB Global Competitive Threat
Insurance Auto Auctions (IAA), now part of RB Global ($7.3B combined entity), is investing heavily in digital infrastructure and leveraging cross-selling with its dealer network. ADESA is also expanding its digital auction capabilities. While Copart's land-ownership advantage remains intact, competitors are targeting non-insurance and dealer consignment channels where Copart's moat is narrower. Market share erosion in commercial segments could compress growth rates over time.
Medium SeverityGrowth Deceleration & Multiple Compression
Back-to-back earnings misses in Q1 and Q2 FY2026 have shaken investor confidence. Revenue declined 3.6% in Q2 FY2026, unit volumes dropped 6.7% in Q1, and the stock has fallen 38% from its 52-week high. If growth continues to decelerate, the market may re-rate Copart from a premium-growth compounder to a mature-value business, resulting in further PE compression. The current trailing P/E of ~23x could contract to 18–20x if growth stalls.
Medium SeverityEnvironmental & Regulatory Risk
Salvage yards are subject to environmental regulations regarding fluid containment, soil contamination, and waste disposal. Tighter regulations could increase operating costs. Additionally, changes to title transfer laws, cross-border vehicle export restrictions, or emissions standards for salvage vehicles could impact Copart's business model. While Copart's owned land provides regulatory stability versus leased competitors, new environmental compliance requirements could raise costs industry-wide.
Medium SeverityValuation & Intrinsic Value
What is this business actually worth?
As of 21 February 2026, Copart, Inc. (CPRT) is trading at approximately 33% below its estimated intrinsic value based on our discounted cash flow model. With 29.9% ROIC, a completely debt-free balance sheet with $5.2 billion in cash, 37% operating margins, a wide-moat duopoly position with irreplaceable land assets, and the secular tailwind of rising total loss frequency, the current discount appears driven by near-term volume softness and back-to-back earnings misses that overweight transitory headwinds while underestimating long-term compounding power.
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This research is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. The information presented is based on publicly available data and our independent analysis. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.