Carvana’s new test drive center is not just a retail concept. It is a warning shot for used-car dealers.
The easy reaction is to focus on the flash.
A 10-by-10 LED cube. QR-code inventory browsing. A themed outdoor vehicle “playground.” A faux racetrack for performance models. A soccer-field display for minivans. An off-road style setup for Jeeps. A test drive process built around the customer’s phone.
But that is not the real story.
The real story is that Carvana is trying to remove friction from the buyer journey while blending new-car and used-car shopping into one experience.
And that should get every dealer’s attention.
PPO Takeaway:
Dealers do not need to copy Carvana’s building. But they do need to understand what Carvana is attacking: friction, presentation, cross-shopping, digital convenience, and the daily decision gap inside the store.
According to Car Dealership Guy News, Carvana’s Dallas test drive center starts with a four-sided LED cube at the entrance of the showroom. Shoppers scan a QR code, browse vehicle options on their own devices, and see the process displayed on a large screen.
From there, the experience moves outside.
The lot is set up more like a vehicle playground than a traditional dealership display. Minivans are positioned near a soccer goal. Performance vehicles are lined up near a faux racetrack. Jeeps are placed in a more outdoors-style environment.
The customer selects the vehicle digitally. An advocate brings the vehicle forward for a test drive. The rest of the process is designed to happen through the customer’s smartphone.
That matters because Carvana is not only changing how the vehicle is presented. It is changing how the customer moves from interest to decision.
The dealership experience is becoming less about the desk and more about the journey.
The most important part of the article was not the LED cube.
It was this:
Nearly 3 out of 4 new-car buyers at Carvana’s first franchise store originally started their journey shopping for a used car.
That should change the way dealers think about used-car traffic.
A used-car shopper is not always a used-car buyer. A new-car shopper is not always a new-car buyer.
The customer is often shopping for payment, value, convenience, confidence, availability, perceived risk, and monthly budget at the same time.
That means the store that controls the journey has the advantage.
For years, many dealerships have treated new and used as separate departments.
Separate managers. Separate meetings. Separate merchandising strategies. Separate pricing conversations.
The customer does not shop that way anymore.
The customer is comparing:
When Carvana places new inventory next to used inventory inside one digital shopping experience, it is not just adding another product line.
It is giving the customer fewer reasons to leave the platform.
That is the competitive lesson.
The customer does not care which department owns the inventory.
The customer cares whether the vehicle, payment, experience, and confidence line up.
Dealers do not need to build a playground to compete.
But they do need to know which vehicles deserve attention today.
That is where too many used-car operations still fall short.
They have the data.
The problem is that the data often lives in different places.
And by the time the store connects the dots, the gross problem or aging problem is already visible.
That is why I have been building the PPO Daily Used-Car Brief GPT.
The goal is simple:
Turn daily used-car data into a concise action plan.
Carvana’s experiment is not a reason to panic.
It is a reason to tighten your operating rhythm.
Here is the dealer response plan:
Do not let your oldest units become the only units that get reviewed. The risk often starts earlier — with weak activity, bad price position, poor merchandising, missed appraisal opportunities, or market mismatch.
If the customer is comparing used, certified, and new options in one journey, your used-car pricing has to make sense inside that broader value conversation.
A used car is not just competing against other used cars. It may be competing against an incentivized new vehicle, a certified unit, or a payment-driven alternative.
Carvana is proving that presentation matters.
Your store may not need a racetrack display, but every listing needs to answer the customer’s real questions:
If your listing does not build confidence, someone else’s will.
If a used-car shopper can become a new-car buyer, the reverse is also true.
A disciplined store should know when a new-car customer belongs in a used car and when a used-car customer may be better served with a new-car alternative.
That requires alignment between the desk, the used-car manager, the BDC, the sales team, the pricing strategy, and the inventory plan.
Data is only useful if it changes what the store does today.
A better operating brief should end with direct actions:
That is how daily data becomes daily execution.
Carvana is attacking friction.
Dealers need to attack the decision gap.
The winning dealers will not just be the ones with the flashiest showroom.
They will be the ones who connect inventory, pricing, appraisal, merchandising, and customer behavior into one daily operating rhythm.
That is the Profitable Pre-Owned advantage.
Carvana’s test drive center may look like a retail concept story.
I see it as an operating warning.
The store that controls the customer journey, the inventory story, and the daily action plan is going to have the advantage.
Don’t just watch the market change.
Build a better daily plan for your used-car operation.
Subscribe to the PPO BriefCarvana’s concept is not just about a different way to take a test drive.
It is about building a buying journey that feels easier, more connected, and more customer-controlled.
Dealers can respond without copying the building.
The response is operational:
That is how dealers protect gross, reduce age, and compete in a market where the customer no longer thinks in departments.
They think in options.
The dealer who organizes those options better wins.
Source: Car Dealership Guy News reporting on Carvana’s Dallas test drive center concept, published June 17, 2026.