Jeep Leak Fix Scam — Fake Reviews & Redirect Scheme Exposed

🚨 Jeep Leak Fix Scam — Fake Reviews & Redirect Scheme Exposed

This page exists to protect Jeep owners from misleading marketing, inflated ratings, and deceptive domain tactics currently used by JeepLeakFix.com and its connected sites.

A) Clean → Dirty Domain Redirect

The “clean” domain JeepLeakFix.com ranks for key Jeep leak terms but silently redirects shoppers to LeakFixKit.com, where all the questionable reviews reside. This tactic insulates the ranking domain from being flagged for fake review practices, pushing the risk onto the secondary “dirty” site.

B) Unverified Review Imports in the DOM

Inspecting the HTML review components reveals data-verified-buyer="false" on every review, with no visible “Verified” badge. This is a hallmark of bulk manual/CSV/API review imports, not legitimate customer feedback.

Inspect Element screenshot showing fake review attributes data-verified-buyer set to false
Direct inspect-element capture showing data-verified-buyer="false" — confirming these reviews are unverified imports.

C) “Out of Store” Review Flags on Live Products

Reviews are tied to archived/duplicate product IDs flagged as “out of store,” yet those same products (e.g., JK 4-Door Elite Kit) are actively being sold — indicating deliberate review recycling.

D) Identical Review Metrics Across Products

Every major product displays exactly 144 reviews at ~4.75★ — a statistical anomaly that aligns with bulk duplication, not organic variation.

E) Why This Matters

While a handful of reviews may be genuine, the overwhelming majority inflate ratings and create a false sense of trust for Jeep owners considering a purchase.

This pattern constitutes deceptive marketing under FTC guidelines, misleading buyers into paying premium prices for products under false pretenses.

Published as a public service to Jeep owners. If you’ve been misled by these practices, report it to the FTC Fraud Report and your state Attorney General’s office.