RealCost Guide

Average Car Maintenance Cost UK

Car maintenance cost is not just one annual service. MOT work, tyres, brakes, batteries, fluids, repairs and wear-and-tear can all change what a car really costs to keep on the road.

Use this guide to estimate a sensible yearly maintenance budget, understand why costs rise with age and mileage, and avoid buying a car that looks cheap but is expensive to maintain.

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Maintenance cost depends heavily on the car

A small, simple petrol car with affordable tyres can be cheap to maintain. A premium, high-mileage, neglected or complex car can cost much more, even if it was cheap to buy.

Do not judge maintenance cost from the purchase price alone. Age, mileage, service history, tyre size, parts cost and known faults matter.

Calculate your car maintenance cost

Use the Car Maintenance Cost Calculator to estimate servicing, MOT, tyres, repairs and wear-and-tear as part of your yearly car budget.

If you are unsure, run a cautious estimate for older, higher-mileage, premium or poorly maintained cars.

Quick answer: average car maintenance cost should include servicing, MOT, tyres, brakes, repairs, battery, fluids and wear-and-tear. A simple car with low mileage may need a modest yearly budget, while an older, high-mileage or premium car needs a larger repair buffer.

What car maintenance cost includes

Maintenance is not only the annual service. These costs all belong in the budget.

Servicing
Oil, filters, checks, fluids and scheduled maintenance.
MOT and advisories
The MOT test itself is small. Repairs and advisories can be the real cost.
Tyres
Tyre size, brand, wear rate and driving style can change cost quickly.
Brakes and suspension
Pads, discs, suspension arms, springs and bushes are common wear costs.
Battery and fluids
Batteries, coolant, brake fluid, wipers and bulbs still add up.
Unexpected repairs
Clutch, gearbox, electronics, turbo, DPF or engine faults can change the whole budget.

Small car vs family car vs premium car

The type of car makes a major difference to maintenance risk.

Small simple cars

Usually cheaper for tyres, parts and routine servicing. Still check service history and MOT advisories.

Family cars and SUVs

Can cost more for tyres, brakes and suspension, especially with high mileage or school-run use.

Premium cars

Often have higher labour, parts, tyre and diagnostic costs. A cheap used premium car can still be expensive to maintain.

What affects average maintenance cost?

Two cars with the same purchase price can have very different maintenance bills.

Age
Older cars often need more wear-and-tear repairs.
Mileage
Higher mileage brings tyres, brakes, servicing and component wear sooner.
Service history
Missed services increase risk and reduce buyer confidence later.
Tyre size
Large wheels and performance tyres can make ordinary maintenance expensive.
Parts and labour
Premium brands, awkward jobs and specialist parts can increase cost.
Known faults
Some engines, gearboxes or systems have expensive common problems.

Maintenance cost vs repair risk

Routine maintenance and unexpected repairs are related, but they are not the same thing.

Maintenance

Predictable work such as servicing, tyres, MOT preparation, fluids, filters and brake wear.

Repairs

Less predictable faults such as clutch failure, suspension problems, electronics, cooling issues or engine trouble.

RealCost rule: if you are buying older, high-mileage or premium, use a bigger repair buffer. A low maintenance estimate is only sensible for a car with strong history and low risk.

Example maintenance budgets

These are practical budgeting examples, not fixed national averages.

Lower-risk car

Small, simple, well-serviced, affordable tyres, no known faults. Budget mainly for servicing, MOT, tyres and wear items.

Average used family car

Budget for routine servicing, MOT repairs, tyres, brakes and some unexpected wear-and-tear.

Higher-risk car

Premium, high-mileage, complex, neglected or known-problem cars need a much larger repair buffer.

Why skipping maintenance is false economy

Saving money by ignoring maintenance can create a bigger bill later.

Skipping servicing can increase engine and turbo risk
Ignoring tyres and brakes affects safety and MOT results
Small leaks, noises or warning lights can become bigger faults
Poor service history can reduce resale value
Cheap repairs can become expensive if delayed too long
A car is not cheap to run if maintenance is only being postponed

Used-car maintenance warning

A used car can be good value, but only if the condition and history support the price.

Check service history, not just mileage
Read MOT advisories carefully
Look at tyre condition and matching brands
Watch for clutch, suspension, brake and warning-light issues
Research known faults for that engine and model
Leave money aside after purchase for early repairs

Useful next step: use the Used Car Buying Checklist UK before buying a used car.

Monthly vs yearly maintenance budgeting

Maintenance rarely arrives neatly every month, so budget for it before it appears.

Yearly view

Useful for seeing servicing, MOT, tyres and likely repair costs over a full year.

Monthly view

Useful for setting aside a repair and maintenance pot so annual bills do not cause panic.

How to reduce maintenance cost without taking bad risks

Cutting maintenance costs should not mean ignoring safety or delaying essential repairs.

Choose simple, reliable cars with affordable parts
Avoid large wheels if tyre cost matters
Keep up with servicing rather than delaying it
Fix small issues before they become major faults
Check MOT history before buying used
Avoid cars with known expensive common failures

How this page is different from the maintenance calculator page

This page explains maintenance budgeting. The calculator page is the main tool page.

This page
Explains average maintenance cost, repair risk, used-car warnings and budgeting decisions.
Maintenance calculator page
Focused on using the calculator to estimate your own maintenance cost.
Car cost calculator page
Combines maintenance with insurance, fuel, tax, depreciation and other costs.

Useful maintenance and ownership guides

Use these before buying a car that could become expensive to maintain.

Maintenance calculator
Open calculator →
Full car cost
Open calculator →
Average yearly car cost
Read guide →
Cost of running a car
Read guide →
Cheapest cars to maintain
Read guide →
Used car checklist
Read checklist →

Related guides

Use these if maintenance cost is a major concern.

Most Expensive Cars to Maintain UK

Avoid cars where parts, tyres, labour or known faults can punish your budget.

Read guide →

Most Reliable Used Cars UK

Look for used cars less likely to create painful repair bills.

Read guide →

Cheapest Used Cars to Run UK

Find used cars where maintenance, insurance and fuel are more likely to stay sensible.

Read guide →

How to Reduce Car Running Costs UK

Cut costs without skipping the maintenance that protects the car.

Read guide →

Average car maintenance cost UK FAQs

What is included in car maintenance cost?

Car maintenance cost can include servicing, MOT work, tyres, brakes, battery, fluids, filters, repairs and wear-and-tear parts.

How much should I budget for car maintenance?

Budget depends on the car’s age, mileage, condition, service history, tyre size and repair risk. Older, premium or high-mileage cars need a bigger buffer.

Does higher mileage increase maintenance cost?

Usually, yes. Higher mileage brings servicing, tyres, brakes, suspension wear and repair risk sooner.

Are premium cars more expensive to maintain?

Often, yes. Premium cars can have higher parts, labour, tyre, servicing and diagnostic costs, especially as they age.

Is skipping maintenance a good way to save money?

No. Skipping servicing, tyres, brakes or warning signs can create bigger repair bills and reduce resale value.

How can I reduce car maintenance cost?

Choose reliable cars with affordable parts, avoid expensive tyre sizes, check service history, keep up with servicing and avoid models with known expensive faults.

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