If you (the OP) still needs a car, then it's far better to get the existing one you know well fixed (but at a competent, honest repair shop) than flog it and buy another secondhand one, which you won't know how it was treated or used as much as yours.
Selling it and not replacing it may only be worthwhile if you're 100% you'll neve need a car again. To do so for scrap is unnecessary, given the faults, if taken as correctly diagnosed by the MOT, are not that serious, and whose repair would be well under what the car is currently worth in the current market.
What it will be (the second hand market) in 6 months as the likely big recession hits, people significantly tighten their belts (which is saying something given the current situation), depends on many factors, though I suspect second hand car prices will be much nearer the historical trend than has been the case over the last year or so.
I'd keep it and get it fixed if the things Oil Rag suggests don't resolve some of the problems flagged up.
Edited by Engineer Andy on 09/09/2022 at 11:40
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