A woman’s trip to a car dealership has gone viral after a commenter warned her she may have been overheard by the dealership itself.
Hannah (@hannahlynnganschow) recorded herself during a recent visit, saying it felt like she couldn’t leave until a deal was done.
Eventually, a manager approached and asked for her “magic number”—the price she’d be comfortable paying for a car.
“I’m sitting here like, why don’t you [expletive] do your best deal, and we’ll go from there?” Hannah recalls in a TikTok. In the end, she said the dealership did come down in price, suggesting she either bought the car or was close to doing so.
But the real twist came in the comments. One viewer warned her to be careful about what she says in a dealership cubicle.
“They have microphones in the cubicles to listen to your convo when they go back to the office,” the commenter wrote. “I hate buying cars. It feels so gross. Wishing y’all the best!”
In a follow-up clip, Hannah laughs as she reads the comment, then realizes how much she’d said at the dealership without knowing anyone might be listening.
“I didn’t say anything that bad,” she says to her companion, who looks horrified. A text overlay reads, “I just told him about the microphones.”
As of Tuesday, her follow-up video had racked up over 542,000 views.
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While not universal, there’s mounting anecdotal evidence that some car dealerships use microphones in their offices, often without customers realizing it. In a since-deleted 2023 post on the r/askcarsales Subreddit, one user claimed the dealership they visited had hidden mics capturing conversations.
Others backed the idea. “I consult with many dealerships,” one wrote. “Quite a few of my stores have cameras and microphones mounted in [Finance & Insurance] offices.”
In another thread on r/LifeProTips, a Redditor warned buyers to keep an eye on the desk phone speaker. If the light is on, they claimed, the conversation might be getting piped into a back office.
“It happened to us when I bought my first used car at a VW dealership,” they wrote. After privately discussing their bottom line—$1,000 under asking—the salesperson returned and offered exactly what they’d just agreed on. “Later, I got an office job with the same phones and learned that a green light meant the microphone was active,” they added.
It’s unclear how common this practice is or what the intent always is. Some dealerships may record for compliance, training, or security reasons. Others likely avoid it altogether due to privacy concerns and legal gray areas.
The majority of US states follow “one-party consent” laws, meaning only one person involved in a conversation needs to agree to the recording.
That can allow dealerships to legally record interactions—whether during test drives, financing talks, or service appointments—without informing the customer.
However, the rules aren’t the same everywhere. Some states require all parties to consent or mandate that businesses post clear disclosures informing patrons that they are being recorded.
Even in one-party states, legal experts say dealers should tread carefully, especially if microphones are recording private conversations without direct participation.
Hannah never confirmed whether the dealership she visited was actually recording her, but the comment she highlighted sparked a wave of distrust in the replies.
“This is why my husband and I sit there and text each other,” one woman said. “We don’t say a word. Trust no one at a car dealership.”
“Do not talk in the office or cubicles,” another warned.
Some commenters, however, many claiming to have worked at dealerships, dismissed the idea entirely.
“I’ve never seen this in any dealership,” one person wrote. “I don’t think it’s common.”
“Yeah, I’ve worked at dealerships, and that was never a thing,” said another.
“Lol my husband is a salesman and this is not a thing,” a third added. “He doesn’t care what you say on your test drive. This is funny tho.”
“Literally not true,” another insisted.
Motor1 has reached out to Hannah via a TikTok direct message. We’ll be sure to update this if she responds.
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