The proliferation of affordable GPS tracking devices has led to a significant increase in covert vehicle tracking across the United States and worldwide. Privacy expert Michael Auletta, President of USA Bugsweeps, has responded to growing public concern by releasing a digital guide designed to teach everyday drivers how to find hidden GPS trackers on their cars and safely conduct detection sweeps.
Market data from Statista estimates that tens of millions of GPS tracking devices are currently in use globally. Additional reports from Fortune Business Insights, MarketsandMarkets, and Grand View Research value the GPS tracking device market in the multi-billion-dollar range, with strong double-digit annual growth fueled largely by consumer and vehicle tracking adoption.
As more drivers search online for terms such as "GPS tracker on my car" and "how to find a GPS tracker on your car," concerns about unauthorized surveillance continue to rise. Professional Technical Surveillance Countermeasures (TSCM) GPS tracker detection sweeps typically cost between $850 and $1,500 for a single vehicle inspection, placing expert services out of reach for many individuals.
Auletta's guide, titled How to Sweep Your Vehicle for GPS Trackers, provides a practical alternative by walking readers step-by-step through proven methods to sweep for GPS trackers without specialized tools or technical training. The digital guide and sweep checklist are available as an instant PDF download at https://www.usabugsweeps.com/how-to-sweep-your-vehicle-for-gps-trackers/.
"GPS tracking is now one of the most common forms of modern surveillance," said Auletta. "We routinely encounter trackers used in stalking cases, domestic disputes, corporate conflicts, and criminal activity. This guide empowers people to protect themselves immediately instead of waiting days or spending thousands."
The book covers common hiding locations for GPS trackers on vehicles, simple sweep techniques anyone can perform, warning signs of covert tracking, what to do if a tracker is discovered, and steps to reduce the risk of future tracking. This development matters because it addresses a significant privacy gap created by increasingly accessible surveillance technology, potentially impacting millions of drivers who may be unknowingly tracked.
The guide's release comes as the GPS tracking industry continues to expand rapidly, creating both legitimate uses for fleet management and parental monitoring while simultaneously enabling unauthorized surveillance that can threaten personal safety and privacy. For the publishing industry, this represents a growing niche of practical, self-help security publications responding to technological threats that affect everyday consumers.



