DVLA verified
MOT valid
Check service history

VOLKSWAGEN GOLF2017 · 2.0L Diesel

GD66 ABZ

Vehicle Insight Summary

This 2017 VOLKSWAGEN GOLF is a Diesel vehicle with a 1968cc engine. Currently it has a valid MOT and is not currently taxed. The latest recorded mileage is 65,880.

MOT
Valid
Expires 16/12/2026
Tax
No data
Fuel
Diesel
Year
2017
Engine
1968cc
Expert AI · Mechanic's Insight
The Volkswagen Golf presents a currently roadworthy status, with the most recent DVSA test on 17 December 2025 at 65,880 miles returning a pass and no defects recorded. Maintenance trend across the available history reads as stable. The vehicle cleared the 9 December 2024 examination at 55,805 miles and the 12 February 2024 check at 52,381 miles, both with no defects recorded. A solitary failure appears on 23 November 2024 at 55,801 miles, yet the tester logged no defects; this anomalous result reversed within sixteen days via a clean pass, suggesting an administrative or presentation issue rather than mechanical deficiency. Mileage accumulation aligns with typical use for a nine-year-old hatchback. The record opens at 48,436 miles on 1 February 2023. By 12 February 2024 the odometer showed 52,381 miles, an annual gain of 3,945. Between February and November 2024 the car added 3,420 miles, then covered merely four miles before the December 2024 retest. The largest single-year increase came by 17 December 2025, reaching 65,880 miles, a 10,075-mile span that still equates to roughly 7,300 miles per annum overall. Such figures indicate gentle touring rather than high-stress urban cycling, though the missing pre-2023 entries leave earlier wear undocumented. No recurring faults, corrosion warnings, or suspension and brake defects appear in the supplied data, so the buyer faces no flagged mechanical risks from the MOT trail. Prudent physical inspection should still target age-sensitive components: front suspension bushes, coil springs, brake disc thickness, and underbody structural integrity for rust. The unexplained November 2024 failure warrants a DVSA certificate check to confirm no hidden brake binding or emissions anomaly was omitted from the advisory field. The clean pass sequence implies the previous keeper presented the car in compliant condition, but the odd fail with zero defects hints at possible lapse in paperwork rather than skipped consumable upkeep like tyres or wiper blades. Given the low mileage, rubber components may exhibit weathering rather than abrasion, and a thorough visual check of exhaust emissions hardware remains sensible.

AI insights are experimental and can be incorrect. All claims should be manually verified.

Free vehicle health score

83
/ 100 · Good

Public record health check: Good.

Based on free DVLA & DVSA signals. Premium checks for stolen/finance/write-off history are locked below.

✓ Valid MOT
! Tax Status Unknown
✓ Good MOT pass rate (80%)
A score of 83 doesn't mean it's safe to buy. Private markers don't appear in public data.
Verified Experian Data

Full History Report

Official provenance and safety check for GD66ABZ

Data provided by Experian
Stolen
Locked
Finance
Locked
Write-off
Locked
Salvage
Locked
Imported
Locked
Exported
Locked
Scrapped
Locked
Destruction
Locked
V5C Logbook
Locked

Premium Data Locked

Unlock the full Experian-powered report to reveal outstanding finance, write-off history, stolen status, and more.

Data provided by Experian

Technical Specifications

AI Intelligence

What's this car worth today?

Get an instant, AI-powered valuation based on live market data, this exact model, and recent auction results.

Full MOT History

MOT data last updated: 4/15/2026, 4:56:25 PM

Expert AI · Mechanic's Insight
The Volkswagen Golf presents a currently roadworthy status, with the most recent DVSA test on 17 December 2025 at 65,880 miles returning a pass and no defects recorded. Maintenance trend across the available history reads as stable. The vehicle cleared the 9 December 2024 examination at 55,805 miles and the 12 February 2024 check at 52,381 miles, both with no defects recorded. A solitary failure appears on 23 November 2024 at 55,801 miles, yet the tester logged no defects; this anomalous result reversed within sixteen days via a clean pass, suggesting an administrative or presentation issue rather than mechanical deficiency. Mileage accumulation aligns with typical use for a nine-year-old hatchback. The record opens at 48,436 miles on 1 February 2023. By 12 February 2024 the odometer showed 52,381 miles, an annual gain of 3,945. Between February and November 2024 the car added 3,420 miles, then covered merely four miles before the December 2024 retest. The largest single-year increase came by 17 December 2025, reaching 65,880 miles, a 10,075-mile span that still equates to roughly 7,300 miles per annum overall. Such figures indicate gentle touring rather than high-stress urban cycling, though the missing pre-2023 entries leave earlier wear undocumented. No recurring faults, corrosion warnings, or suspension and brake defects appear in the supplied data, so the buyer faces no flagged mechanical risks from the MOT trail. Prudent physical inspection should still target age-sensitive components: front suspension bushes, coil springs, brake disc thickness, and underbody structural integrity for rust. The unexplained November 2024 failure warrants a DVSA certificate check to confirm no hidden brake binding or emissions anomaly was omitted from the advisory field. The clean pass sequence implies the previous keeper presented the car in compliant condition, but the odd fail with zero defects hints at possible lapse in paperwork rather than skipped consumable upkeep like tyres or wiper blades. Given the low mileage, rubber components may exhibit weathering rather than abrasion, and a thorough visual check of exhaust emissions hardware remains sensible.

AI insights are experimental and can be incorrect. All claims should be manually verified.

AI Analysis · MOT Narrative

Our records for this Volkswagen Golf (GD66 ABZ) from 2017 show a total of 5 MOT tests between February 2023 and December 2025.

With 4 passes and 1 failures, the lifetime MOT pass rate stands at 80%. The car boasts an impressive record, which typically reflects a conscientious ownership history.

AI insights are experimental and can be incorrect. All claims should be manually verified.

PASS
FAIL
ADVISORY