Chatting to a good friend earlier today and the subject of cars as per usual crops up. He casually explains (after me enquiring about the cost) that he has never had his three year old BMW 435d serviced to date. Now this car is on a very costly PCP and will have to be returned at the end of year 4 in retailable condition and one thing the dealer will be looking for is the service history. I explained that he’ll be billed for it which will mean any saving will be wiped out as the car is now substantially devalued and no longer suitable to be sold as an approved used example meaning it’ll end up at auction despite him having looked after the body and interior to a very high standard. Who’d buy a 4yr old twin turbo prestige car like this with no history?
Wise words, SLO. BMW no longer issues service books, the main dealers simply keep a record of each car (well, supposedly, anyway).
What's silly about your friend's situation is, BMW's variable service regime isn't particularly expensive. In fact, the 'minor' and 'major' inspections are pretty much a fixed cost, irrespective of whether the car is a 116i or a high-end variant.
For example, my 225xe was on company contract hire, and on variable servicing. In the 3 years I had it, it needed only one service (at 2 years / 18K miles). That service was a 'minor' (basically, oil / filter change and a plug into the OBD port). £270 all in. The car went back to the lease firm with the next service due in 2021 at 35,000 miles. That 'major' service would be £430. The cost for all minor and major services are pretty close across the BMW range and BMW dealers in the UK.
Putting aside the merits or otherwise of BMW's variable servicing, your friend would probably only have needed 2 services in 4 years (i.e. a cost of about £700) to avoid the upcoming hassle with the lease firm - that's around £3.50 per week. Which is trivial compared with the lease cost, insurance etc.
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