Home & Garden9 mins ago
MOT certificate
I had my car tested last week, it passed, I brought the certificate home, and I haven't seen it since!! It has vanished off the face of the earth. Does anyone know if it is possible to get a copy from the DVLA, and if so what will it cost? I went back to the garage and they said they would have to charge me £10, but advised me to leave it a week as loads of people go back, after having put it in a 'safe' place and losing it!! I have turned the house upside down, and no joy. Do I only need it if I either sell the car, or have to produce docs. at the police station, I don't think I would need it if I renewed my road tax either by 'phone or online, or am I wrong about that? TIA Shirl
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The DVLA doesn't deal with MOTs. It's VOSA that administers MOT testing and determines the maximum fees that garages can charge for providing MOT facilities. The maximum fee for a replacement certificate is £10. As far as I can see, you can only get a replacement certificate from the garage, not from VOSA.
As you suggest, you don't need an MOT certificate to tax your vehicle online (or by phone). If you were selling the car you should be able to persuade a potential buyer to accept the evidence of an online check on the vehicle's MOT status. You only need the registration number and V5 document number for that:
http://www.motinfo.gov.uk/
So you probably won't need to possess a certificate unless you're given a 'producer' by the police. That's extremely unlikely, since most police officers would now probably run a check on the tax, MOT and insurance status of the vehicle at the roadside, rather than waste everyone's time by forcing you to produce paper documents.
Chris
The DVLA doesn't deal with MOTs. It's VOSA that administers MOT testing and determines the maximum fees that garages can charge for providing MOT facilities. The maximum fee for a replacement certificate is £10. As far as I can see, you can only get a replacement certificate from the garage, not from VOSA.
As you suggest, you don't need an MOT certificate to tax your vehicle online (or by phone). If you were selling the car you should be able to persuade a potential buyer to accept the evidence of an online check on the vehicle's MOT status. You only need the registration number and V5 document number for that:
http://www.motinfo.gov.uk/
So you probably won't need to possess a certificate unless you're given a 'producer' by the police. That's extremely unlikely, since most police officers would now probably run a check on the tax, MOT and insurance status of the vehicle at the roadside, rather than waste everyone's time by forcing you to produce paper documents.
Chris