
When A Car Has “Historic” Status
#1
Posted 31 July 2021 - 08:19 PM
• Also, do I have to MoT it in order for it to then be “MoT exempt” in future, or is it automatically exempt due to age ?
Thanks !
#2
Posted 31 July 2021 - 08:32 PM
Then you can tax it for free on your phone at DVLA website, takes 5 mins.
You fill in a MOT exemption form which is a self declaration.
My local Post Office were incompetent. Then they asked me if I wanted 6 months or a year!!
#3
Posted 01 August 2021 - 08:37 AM
#4
Posted 01 August 2021 - 10:52 AM
Find a good local post office that deals with car tax and know what they are doing, you may have to try a few!.....The DVLA can be a long wait at present and often lose original documents sent in, take copies of everything you send to the DVLA or any documents you hand over to a PO.
Edited by mab01uk, 01 August 2021 - 10:54 AM.
#5
Posted 01 August 2021 - 11:17 AM
Find a good local post office that deals with car tax and know what they are doing, you may have to try a few!.....The DVLA can be a long wait at present and often lose original documents sent in, take copies of everything you send to the DVLA or any documents you hand over to a PO.
I agree with the above - my car became "historic" this year, went to the main post office in town and they dealt with it quickly, got my paperwork back within a couple of weeks. I'm sure that a smaller PO would have struggled! Also agree that you need to keep copies of your V5 or any other documents they send off, had log books lost in the system before and that was pre-Covid
#6
Posted 01 August 2021 - 08:11 PM
My local Post Office were incompetent. Then they asked me if I wanted 6 months or a year!!
Why is that incompetant? It might not make a lot of sense to take 6 momths when 12 months is free, but someone might have it garaged in the winter and only need 6 months.
#7
Posted 01 August 2021 - 08:51 PM
#8
Posted 05 August 2021 - 07:53 AM
There is no requirement to MOT it to make MOT exempt.• Also, do I have to MoT it in order for it to then be “MoT exempt” in future, or is it automatically exempt due to age ?
Thanks !
#9
Posted 05 August 2021 - 08:03 PM
They now state that the car must have been presented for an mot every 5 years...... even though they are exempt.......
Brilliant requirement i asked them why... they said if you want insurance then that is easy enough.. plenty other companies i was told....
So i moved......me and my money walked on..they tried to pull the non refund but was within the 14 days cooling off so ombudsman was on my side..
RESULT......
#10
Posted 05 August 2021 - 10:12 PM
#11
Posted 06 August 2021 - 09:00 AM
It does seem odd to me that you can claim MoT exemption without having to show the car anywhere. I bet I'm not alone in having a "bottom drawer garage" of about half a dozen V5s that'll now be tax & MoT exempt. What's to stop me resurrecting the registrations on something similar?
Interesting about insurers stepping in with their own requirements, will VOSA's recording system be happy with random MoT's on exempt vehicles, or will we hear about people getting pinged by ANPR?
#12
Posted 06 August 2021 - 09:00 AM
The FBHVC are also now "key-stakeholders" with the DVLA so their input into how classic cars are handled should improve things for owners ...
#13
Posted 06 August 2021 - 09:22 AM
If owners share FBHVC's views on what classic cars are about, but that's a different matter.
#14
Posted 06 August 2021 - 10:10 AM
Working on a historic car as an amateur and being happy that it's road legal would cut no ice in a court of law should you unfortunately end up there. if you can't back it up with a valid competence accreditation for yourself or a valid mot, experience of working on it for donkeys years means very little.
I was a gas engineer for 38 years before retiring but once my competence certification lapsed touching anything on any appliance except user controls leaves you open to prosecution should the proverbial hit the fan. So my message is be careful about not having a mot certificate for years on end and at the relatively small cost of one it doesn't really make sense not to.
#15
Posted 06 August 2021 - 11:03 AM
MOT means to me that at a certain moment in time some things were meeting the legal minimum standards applying only to the parts you can see with no dismantling and in the opinion of a person whos judgement may vary from another persons.At refresher sessions VOSA are continually demonstrating testers are being over strict on some things,Corrosion being one( a Land Rover can have a body mount completely missing at the back and be OK)brake discs can be completely covered in rust as long as they meet the brake weight etc.
There are some yes/no such as lights emissions,cats etc but a classic has less of these than you think.A tester I knew used to go outside to some cars and ask them if they had some different number plates and can they fit them?NO? fail.
It is up to every driver to ensure their vehicle is roadworthy at all times.A6month old MOT would be worthless if your tyres were now bald and your brakes worn out.
People on here have alluded to "friendly testers"or the "MOT will be no trouble."
I have 4 MOT exempt cars which have not been tested,sadly my MIni is not one of them and in these uncertain times has become a large ornament.
Have fun out there,life is passing by every day,Steve..
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