The 10th character of a VIN encodes the model year. For a 2029 vehicle that character is X. So if position 10 of a VIN reads X, the model year is 2029 (or the same code 30 years away — see below). Every sample VIN on this page is checksum-valid and decodes to 2029 via a real WMI.
Read a VIN left to right: positions 1–3 are the manufacturer (WMI), 4–8 describe the model, position 9 is the check digit, and position 10 is the model year. Position 11 is the plant and 12–17 are the serial. Only that single 10th character changes from a 2028 to a 2029 to a 2030 of the same vehicle.
Have a VIN to check? Decode it → · See the full 17-digit format →
VIN year codes repeat on a 30-year cycle, so the code X also marked 1999 and will mark 2059. The letters I, O, Q, U, Z and 0 are skipped, and digits 1–9 were used for 2001–2009. In practice you tell the two eras apart from context — the WMI, the check digit, and whether the vehicle plausibly looks 30 years newer or older.
In the 10th position of a VIN, X means model year 2029 for any recent vehicle. Because year codes repeat every 30 years, the same code also applied to 1999 and will apply again in 2059.
The 10th character. Count nine characters in from the left; the next one — position 10 — is the model-year code, X for 2029.
No — they are synthetically generated for testing. Each is checksum-valid, uses a real manufacturer WMI, and carries the correct X year code so it decodes as a 2029 vehicle. No real vehicle's VIN is used.