DVLA verified
MOT valid
Tax valid

LAND ROVER DISCOVERY2003 · 2.5L DIESEL

MIL 3010

Vehicle Insight Summary

2003 LAND ROVER DISCOVERY — DIESEL, 2495cc. This vehicle has 134,059 miles on record. MOT status: valid. Tax: paid. Review the complete history and specs.

MOT
Valid
Expires 12/02/2027
Tax
Taxed
Expires 01/03/2027
Fuel
DIESEL
Year
2003
Engine
2495cc
Expert AI · Mechanic's Insight
The Discovery presents a broadly stable maintenance picture in its most recent years, though the record reveals a vehicle that has required consistent attention to ageing chassis and suspension components. The most recent test on 13 February 2026 at 134,059 miles passed with only a minor advisory for an offside rear tyre worn close to the legal limit on its edge. This marks a notable improvement over the preceding November 2021 failure at 131,601 miles, which flagged excessively worn anti-roll bar linkage ball joints on both rear corners, corroded rear chassis legs, an oil leak, and a non-opening front passenger door. The December 2021 retest at 131,620 miles passed, confirming those specific defects were addressed, and subsequent tests in March 2023 and February 2026 show no recurrence of the linkage wear or door fault. The maintenance trend since late 2021 can therefore be characterised as resolving, with the vehicle moving from a failure with multiple safety-related defects to a clean pass with only a single tyre advisory. The mileage accumulation tells a story of very light use for a vehicle approaching its twenty-third birthday. Covering just 2,439 miles between December 2021 and February 2026, a span of over four years, indicates either extremely low annual driving or prolonged periods of inactivity. The broader record shows 129,090 miles in September 2020, rising to 134,059 miles by February 2026, which equates to roughly 890 miles per year over that five-and-a-half-year window. Such low mileage can preserve mechanical components from wear but introduces its own risks, including perished rubber bushes and tyres from age rather than use, dried seals causing minor oil leaks, and brake corrosion from standing. The slight mileage gap between the November 2021 failure and the December 2021 pass, just 19 miles apart, confirms the retest occurred immediately after repairs, which is standard practice. Prospective buyers should focus their physical inspection on the areas the MOT history has repeatedly highlighted. The rear chassis legs appeared corroded in both 2021 tests, and while the tester judged structural rigidity was not significantly reduced at that time, corrosion on a Discovery of this age warrants close examination with a torch and probe, particularly around the rear crossmember and mounting points. The anti-roll bar linkage ball joints were excessively worn in November 2021 and the dust covers deteriorated on the front in March 2023, suggesting the suspension has seen age-related deterioration that may now have progressed further. Check for play in all four ball joints and inspect the dust covers for splits. The recurring oil leak advisory, noted in 2020 and 2021, should be traced to its source, likely a rocker cover gasket, crankshaft seal, or oil cooler pipe on the 4.6-litre V8. Tyre condition has been flagged in three consecutive tests, with perishing and edge wear indicating the rubber is ageing out rather than wearing out, meaning all four tyres and the spare may need replacement regardless of remaining tread depth. The handbrake travel advisory from 2020 and the missing offside front suspension bump stop from the same test were not flagged in later entries, suggesting they were rectified, but a test drive should still verify handbrake effectiveness on a steep gradient and listen for clunking over broken surfaces that would indicate worn bump stops or top mount bearings. The windscreen wipers and driver's door mirror glass flagged in 2020 also appear to have been replaced. Given the low mileage and long periods of standing, a thorough inspection of brake calipers for seized slides, brake discs for surface corrosion, and fuel system for stale fuel or tank corrosion would be prudent before committing to purchase.

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

Free vehicle health score

85
/ 100 · Good

Public record health check: Good.

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✓ Valid MOT
✓ Taxed
✓ Good MOT pass rate (80%)
! Older vehicle
A score of 85 doesn't mean it's safe to buy. Private markers don't appear in public data.
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Full History Report

Official provenance and safety check for MIL3010

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Stolen
Locked
Finance
Locked
Write-off
Locked
Salvage
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Imported
Locked
Exported
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Scrapped
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Destruction
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V5C Logbook
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Full MOT History

MOT data last updated: 6/16/2026, 2:26:40 AM

Expert AI · Mechanic's Insight
The Discovery presents a broadly stable maintenance picture in its most recent years, though the record reveals a vehicle that has required consistent attention to ageing chassis and suspension components. The most recent test on 13 February 2026 at 134,059 miles passed with only a minor advisory for an offside rear tyre worn close to the legal limit on its edge. This marks a notable improvement over the preceding November 2021 failure at 131,601 miles, which flagged excessively worn anti-roll bar linkage ball joints on both rear corners, corroded rear chassis legs, an oil leak, and a non-opening front passenger door. The December 2021 retest at 131,620 miles passed, confirming those specific defects were addressed, and subsequent tests in March 2023 and February 2026 show no recurrence of the linkage wear or door fault. The maintenance trend since late 2021 can therefore be characterised as resolving, with the vehicle moving from a failure with multiple safety-related defects to a clean pass with only a single tyre advisory. The mileage accumulation tells a story of very light use for a vehicle approaching its twenty-third birthday. Covering just 2,439 miles between December 2021 and February 2026, a span of over four years, indicates either extremely low annual driving or prolonged periods of inactivity. The broader record shows 129,090 miles in September 2020, rising to 134,059 miles by February 2026, which equates to roughly 890 miles per year over that five-and-a-half-year window. Such low mileage can preserve mechanical components from wear but introduces its own risks, including perished rubber bushes and tyres from age rather than use, dried seals causing minor oil leaks, and brake corrosion from standing. The slight mileage gap between the November 2021 failure and the December 2021 pass, just 19 miles apart, confirms the retest occurred immediately after repairs, which is standard practice. Prospective buyers should focus their physical inspection on the areas the MOT history has repeatedly highlighted. The rear chassis legs appeared corroded in both 2021 tests, and while the tester judged structural rigidity was not significantly reduced at that time, corrosion on a Discovery of this age warrants close examination with a torch and probe, particularly around the rear crossmember and mounting points. The anti-roll bar linkage ball joints were excessively worn in November 2021 and the dust covers deteriorated on the front in March 2023, suggesting the suspension has seen age-related deterioration that may now have progressed further. Check for play in all four ball joints and inspect the dust covers for splits. The recurring oil leak advisory, noted in 2020 and 2021, should be traced to its source, likely a rocker cover gasket, crankshaft seal, or oil cooler pipe on the 4.6-litre V8. Tyre condition has been flagged in three consecutive tests, with perishing and edge wear indicating the rubber is ageing out rather than wearing out, meaning all four tyres and the spare may need replacement regardless of remaining tread depth. The handbrake travel advisory from 2020 and the missing offside front suspension bump stop from the same test were not flagged in later entries, suggesting they were rectified, but a test drive should still verify handbrake effectiveness on a steep gradient and listen for clunking over broken surfaces that would indicate worn bump stops or top mount bearings. The windscreen wipers and driver's door mirror glass flagged in 2020 also appear to have been replaced. Given the low mileage and long periods of standing, a thorough inspection of brake calipers for seized slides, brake discs for surface corrosion, and fuel system for stale fuel or tank corrosion would be prudent before committing to purchase.

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

AI Analysis · MOT Narrative

Checking the history for this 2003 Land Rover Discovery (MIL 3010), we found 5 MOT results in the period of September 2020 to February 2026.

Historically, this vehicle has passed 80% of its MOT tests, totaling 4 passes against 1 fails. Such a high pass rate is a positive indicator of the car's general condition and maintenance history.

The most commonly flagged areas across all MOT tests are: Tyres (5 issues), Bodywork (4 issues), Lighting (3 issues), Suspension (2 issues), Brakes (1 issue). These areas are worth paying attention to when inspecting this vehicle.

There are 18 advisory notices in the MOT history. Advisories are not failures but indicate areas that may need attention in the future.

A total of 3 failure items have been recorded across all tests. Recent failure items include: “Offside Rear Anti-roll bar linkage ball joint excessively worn (5.3.4 (a) (i))”; “Nearside Rear Anti-roll bar linkage ball joint excessively worn (5.3.4 (a) (i))”; “Front passenger door cannot be opened from outside the vehicle (6.2.3 (a))”.

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

PASS
FAIL
ADVISORY

Vehicle & Plate History

Previous plates for this vehicle