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MOT advice please - PeteComp

Hi,

I have a question about MOT's.

I was in an accident and I'm waiting for my claim to be resolved. I'm currently disputing the amount but my car will be written off.

My MOT runs out tomorrow and I can't drive my car to get a new MOT (and it will fail anyway plus will never go back on the road again).

I have road tax and insurance at the moment but am worried I could be fined for not having a valid MOT. Please note that my car is parked in my driveway, not on the road.

Can I be fined for not having an MOT?

I was planning to get the car SORN but cannot find my logbook. My plan is to apply for the SORN once I receive my new logbook.

Will having the car SORN possibly be a way to avoid a fine?

Thanks in advance for any advice.

MOT advice please - John F

Don't worry - the country is full of old cars rusting away in people's drives, back yards and fields with no MoTs. You only need a valid MoT if it's on a public road. AFAIK the only time you can legally drive without one is directly to an MoT garage for a booked test.

MOT advice please - Big John

By law you have to have a car taxed/insured(even if off the road) or SORN'd

However I don't think there is the same requirement re MOT. As specified above you can drive a car without MOT and tax directly to and possiby from a pre booked MOT, although as with any car it has to be roadworthy and it MUST have insurance.

PS I'd SORN as soon as possible if not just to get any balance of your car tax back.

If you don't have a V5C for the car, you're required to fill in an application for a vehicle registration certificate (V62) and could send it with your SORN application

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/781426/v62-application-for-a-registration-certificate.pdf

Edited by Big John on 09/05/2019 at 23:39

MOT advice please - NARU

It's not an offence to have a car on your drive without an MOT.

Indeed, driving a car without an MOT is regarded in law as a 'minor' offence - it carries a fine but no points. That can be contrasted with driving a car in dangerous condition - which is a much more major offence.