Looking at an LX470 that has a mileage rollback - what replacement parts might be an explanation?

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I won't bury the lead: I need opinions on whether an odometer rollback should be a disqualifier for a 100-series purchase I'm considering.

Current situation: I recently purchased an '02 LX470 that was the best/cleanest I could find in my budget (<$20k). FL car until 2023. It's this car (though I wasn't the one who made the purchase on BaT, I'm the next owner down the line). Mechanically good except needs brakes & most bushings up front redone. It's had timing belt and new AHC globes done 3,000 miles ago so the really expensive stuff is sorted (knock on wood).

The potential deal: I really wanted a '06-'07 but they didn't exist where I am for the price/condition I wanted. I've now found an '06 LX470 ~5 hours from me that looks super clean outside, inside, and underneath (from the photos - haven't traveled to see the car in person yet). The only issue is that at the time the car transferred from the first owner to the 2nd owner in 2017 (private sale) the odometer unexplainably dropped by 21,000 miles. Current owner insists he bought the truck with 156,500 on it and says that because he was buying it from a wealthy individual who split time in CT/FL (I believe it - car has extensive service records in wealthy areas of both CT and FL) and the car was immaculate when viewed in person, he didn't question/check the vehicle history and only found out after.

The carfax is very clean except for that mileage discrepancy - every oil change is on there showing mileage progression in 3-5k increments from '06 up to 177,000mi '17, and then same thing again for the new owner showing steady service increments from 156,500mi in '17 to 169,500mi today. So computed "real" mileage is 190,000mi, no big deal for these cars.

What I can't get over is why the original owner might have rolled the odometer back 21,000mi before selling to the new owner, or why the new owner would do the same and lie about it to me. Most logical explanation I can think of is that there was some sort of service done to the car where a used part was installed that resulted in inheriting the mileage of the donor (ECU? other driveline components?) but I am not really comfortable spending the $16,500 he's asking until I pinpoint a good explanation.

On the other hand... since 2017 he's put 13,000 miles on the car with the service records to back it up, so if it was something sketchy he's certainly bought into the ruse for a long time. I just can't decide if this is a deal breaker on an otherwise really clean 100-series, or whether I just adjust my offering price for the grief factor of a car with a carfax blemish and bite the bullet. Oh and perhaps an important detail on the topic of grief factor: I would have to sell the '02 for $13-$15k to make this work - I don't have the cash to own both at once so there's a bit of a dance I'd have to do there.

Opinions please! (on both the purchase, and what might be the cause of the mileage discrepancy).
 
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It’s such an inconsequential change that it’s very unlikely it was done to deceive anyone. It wouldn’t scare me away, but I would also pay appropriately for the actual mileage and the headache involved. You might try calling the shops that did service on either side of the change to see if they can explain.
 
I agree with @Bisho, really not worth the worry since it's not like it's a significant adjustment. Probably a mishap in the paperwork, happens all the time.
A rust free 06/07 with relatively low mileage for $16k seems like a no brainer. These aren't real collectors items where every mile/detail counts.
 
Most likely an error on data/service entry…
 
If you have multiple oil change records from 156k to 177k it's not a DMV error, it's a rollback, either fraud or a parts swap. It's fishy, which is why the vehicle is not selling. You're going to face the same suspicion when you sell and it will depress the price when you sell. But the older the vehicle the less important the matter becomes. So if you're keeping it a long time it's not a big deal. Btw, if it were me I'd stick with the nice 2002 you have - it's a lower maintenance, more durable vehicle.
 
@excessive @delz05 it's more than a clerical error because the odometer actually shows the revised mileage. Unless there's a way it could have been reset via techstream (I don't know), actual parts were swapped at some point, I am just not knowledgeable about these trucks (yet) to know which part(s) carry the digital odometer reading with them, and how much might have been swapped in order to make everything "play nice". I'm trying to figure out if the potential list of parts swapped (and what their swap implies) that resulted in the mileage adjustment is concerning. I agree with what @Bisho and @97 AZ LC said about the miles not being that concerning and it being less so with time as the truck presents a track record of running fine in spite of the mileage discrepancy. But point taken @97 AZ LC - sometimes the devil you know is better than the devil you don't 😆

My inclination based on the input here is to stick with the devil I know and finish getting the '02 dialed in.

For someone who is reading this and isn't intimidated by the mileage issues, here's the listing: Log into Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/963599088745896/. I paid for the carfax (it's clean other than the mileage issue) and I'd be happy to share the details of it by DM to anyone here in the forum as a TY in return for the help and advice I've received through this community. Heads up - owner indicates that everything works, but AHC can't go from N to H (it'll cycle between N and L).
 
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