RealCost Tool

Car Maintenance Cost Calculator UK

Car maintenance costs are easy to underestimate because servicing, MOTs, tyres and repairs do not always arrive neatly every month.

Use this calculator to estimate yearly, monthly, per-mile and ownership-period maintenance costs based on mileage, servicing, MOT, tyres and repair allowance.

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Estimate servicing costs

Use service cost and service interval to estimate how much servicing may cost each year.

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Plan for tyres and MOT

Include MOT cost, tyre set cost and tyre lifespan so regular maintenance is not forgotten.

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Add a repair buffer

Used and older cars can need unexpected repairs, so include a realistic yearly allowance.

Calculate your car maintenance costs

Enter your annual mileage, servicing, MOT, tyre and repair estimates to calculate yearly, monthly, per-mile and ownership-period maintenance costs.

This calculator gives an estimate. Real maintenance costs can vary depending on car age, condition, mileage, service history, garage prices, driving style and unexpected repairs.

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Maintenance costs are easy to miss

Maintenance rarely feels like a fixed monthly bill. A service may arrive once a year, tyres may be needed unexpectedly, and MOT advisories can quickly become repairs.

RealCost note: This calculator separates servicing, MOT, tyres and repairs instead of asking for one vague maintenance number. For the full ownership picture, use the Car Cost Calculator UK. If you are buying used, also check the Used Car Buying Checklist UK before committing.

What the calculator includes

The calculator uses practical inputs that help turn uneven maintenance bills into a clearer budget.

Annual mileage

Enter how many miles you expect to drive each year.

Service cost each time

Enter the typical cost of one service for the car.

Service interval

Enter how many miles the car normally travels between services.

MOT cost

Enter the MOT test cost or a basic MOT allowance.

Tyre set cost

Enter the cost of replacing a full set of tyres.

Tyre lifespan

Enter how many miles you expect a tyre set to last.

Unexpected repairs allowance

Add a yearly buffer for unexpected repairs, especially on older, used or higher-mileage cars.

Years of ownership

Enter roughly how long you expect to keep the car.

What the results tell you

The results show maintenance cost across the year, by month, per mile and across the ownership period.

Services per year

Estimated number of services needed each year based on mileage and service interval.

Service cost per year

Estimated yearly servicing cost based on your mileage and service interval.

Tyre cost per year

Estimated yearly tyre cost based on mileage and tyre lifespan.

Maintenance cost per year

Estimated yearly cost for servicing, MOT, tyres and repair allowance.

Maintenance cost per month

Estimated monthly maintenance cost for easier budgeting.

Maintenance cost per mile

Estimated maintenance cost for each mile driven.

Total maintenance over ownership

Estimated total maintenance cost over the number of years entered.

Repairs buffer over ownership

The total repair allowance across the ownership period.

Example maintenance result

This example uses 10,000 miles per year, £250 service cost, £55 MOT, £400 tyre set cost, 20,000-mile tyre lifespan, £300 yearly repair allowance, 3 years of ownership and a 10,000-mile service interval.

Annual mileage

10,000

Service cost

£250

Tyre set cost

£400

Repair allowance

£300/year

Services per year

1

Service cost per year

£250

Tyre cost per year

£200

Yearly maintenance

£805

Monthly maintenance

£67.08

Cost per mile

£0.08

Total over 3 years

£2,415

Repair buffer total

£900

What this means: In this example, maintenance is about £67 per month before fuel, insurance, tax and depreciation are included. The repair buffer stops the estimate being unrealistically optimistic.

Small car vs large premium car

The purchase price does not always tell you what the car will cost to maintain.

Small simple car

  • Lower tyre costs
  • Cheaper routine servicing
  • Less complex parts
  • Often easier to budget for

Large premium car

  • More expensive tyres
  • Higher labour and parts costs
  • More electronics and complexity
  • Can be costly if bought cheaply used

What affects car maintenance costs?

Two cars can have very different maintenance costs even if they cost a similar amount to buy.

Mileage
More miles usually means more servicing, tyres, brakes and wear-related repairs.
Car age
Older cars may depreciate less, but they can need more maintenance and repairs.
Car type
SUVs, premium cars and performance models often have higher maintenance costs.
Service history
A well-maintained car can be cheaper long term than a neglected cheap car.
Tyre size
Large wheels and specialist tyres can raise replacement costs quickly.
Repair complexity
Complex engines, gearboxes, electronics and suspension can increase repair risk.

When this calculator is most useful

Use it when maintenance could change whether a car is worth buying, keeping or replacing.

Buying a used car
Comparing maintenance costs between cars
Planning a yearly car budget
Checking whether an older car is worth keeping
Estimating tyre and servicing costs
Checking the cost of a premium used car

How to reduce car maintenance costs

These checks can help stop small ownership costs turning into expensive surprises.

Choose a car with affordable parts
Avoid unnecessarily large wheels
Keep up with servicing
Check tyre pressures regularly
Do not ignore warning lights
Check MOT advisories before buying

Repair your current car or replace it?

If maintenance costs are rising, compare the repair pattern against the cost of changing cars.

Keeping the car may make sense if

  • The car is otherwise reliable
  • The repair is a one-off cost
  • You know the car’s history
  • Replacement cars are expensive

Replacing the car may make sense if

  • Repairs are becoming frequent
  • The car is unreliable
  • MOT advisories keep returning
  • Maintenance is more than the car is worth

Before replacing: Use the Used Car Buying Checklist UK so you do not swap one expensive problem for another.

Maintenance is not the full cost

Use these calculators next to see whether the car still makes sense after other ownership costs are included.

Full ownership cost
Open calculator →
Depreciation
Open calculator →

What to calculate next

Use these tools to connect maintenance to the wider car ownership decision.

Car Cost Calculator UK

Estimate full ownership costs including maintenance and running costs.

Open calculator →

Car Depreciation Calculator UK

Check whether value loss is bigger than maintenance cost.

Open calculator →

Car Insurance Cost Calculator UK

Add insurance into the true monthly ownership cost.

Open calculator →

Road Tax Calculator UK

Add estimated road tax into your yearly car budget.

Open calculator →

Fuel Cost Per Mile Calculator UK

Compare maintenance with fuel cost per mile.

Open calculator →

Car Rent vs Buy Calculator UK

Compare renting or subscribing against buying and maintaining a car.

Open calculator →

Related maintenance and used-car guides

Use these guides when maintenance risk is part of the car-buying decision.

Cheapest Cars to Maintain UK

Find lower-maintenance car choices for UK drivers.

Read guide →

Most Expensive Cars to Maintain UK

Avoid high-risk maintenance traps before buying.

Read guide →

Most Reliable Used Cars UK

Choose used cars with lower problem risk.

Read guide →

Used Car Buying Checklist UK

Check a used car before buying so you avoid expensive surprises.

Read guide →

Cheapest Used Cars to Run UK

Compare used-car choices where total running costs matter.

Read guide →

How to Reduce Car Running Costs UK

Cut fuel, insurance, maintenance and ownership costs.

Read guide →

Car maintenance cost calculator FAQs

How do I calculate car maintenance costs?

Estimate servicing, MOT, tyres and repairs based on your yearly mileage and how long you plan to own the car. This calculator turns those costs into yearly, monthly, per-mile and ownership-period estimates.

What maintenance costs should I include?

Include servicing, MOT, tyre replacement and a realistic allowance for unexpected repairs, especially on used, older or higher-mileage cars.

Why does mileage affect maintenance cost?

Higher mileage usually means more servicing, faster tyre wear and more wear on brakes, suspension and other parts.

Are used cars more expensive to maintain?

Used cars can be more expensive to maintain if they are older, higher mileage, poorly serviced or have expensive parts. A well-maintained used car can still be affordable to run.

Why are premium cars more expensive to maintain?

Premium cars often have more expensive tyres, parts, labour and technology. Even when they are cheap to buy used, they can still carry premium repair bills.

How can I reduce car maintenance costs?

Choose a reliable car, keep up with servicing, avoid neglected examples, check MOT advisories before buying, maintain tyre pressure and fix small problems before they become expensive.

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