Why Suspension Faults Are Now the Top Reason Cars Fail Their MOT

Drivers are advised to make New Year’s resolutions around vehicle safety
Drivers are advised to make New Year’s resolutions around vehicle safety
Drivers are advised to make New Year’s resolutions around vehicle safety
Drivers are advised to make New Year’s resolutions around vehicle safety

If you assume an MOT failure will come down to a blown bulb or a worn tyre, new research suggests you are looking in the wrong place. A nationwide study has found that suspension faults are now the single biggest reason cars fail their annual test in Britain, overtaking the lights and tyres that drivers can actually see. The problem is that almost nobody checks their suspension, because almost nobody can, and that is exactly why these faults are now sending so many cars home with a failure sheet and an unexpected repair bill.

Here is what the figures show, why suspension has quietly become the top MOT killer, and the practical steps that can stop your car joining the failure statistics.

What the Research Found

The study, carried out by HiQ Tyres and Autocare over a six week period, analysed MOT failure reports from a representative sample of its centres across the country. Suspension related defects, typically broken springs or leaking shock absorbers, were cited in nearly 40 per cent of all failed tests, making them the most common single reason for failure.

Lighting and electrical faults, such as blown bulbs and faulty headlights, came second at 37 per cent. Tyre defects and braking problems each appeared in roughly a quarter of failure reports, and steering faults featured in almost one in four. The pattern points to a shift away from the obvious, easily spotted issues towards hidden mechanical wear that builds up slowly and stays out of sight until a car is lifted on a ramp.

Craig Sprigmore, Retail Director UK and Ireland at HiQ Tyres and Autocare, said: ‘Many drivers expect MOT failures to come down to simple issues like tyres or lights, but what we are increasingly seeing are hidden mechanical faults that develop slowly and go unnoticed until inspection day. Suspension problems are a prime example: drivers may not feel any immediate change in the way the vehicle drives, yet these faults pose a serious safety risk.’

Why Suspension Faults Slip Past Drivers

Suspension components do their job silently. A shock absorber that has started to leak, or a coil spring with a hairline crack, will rarely announce itself with a warning light or an obvious noise. The car still starts, still steers and still stops, so the driver has no reason to suspect anything is wrong. The decline is gradual, and people adjust to the slightly softer ride or the faint knock over potholes without registering it as a fault.

That is very different from a flat tyre or a dead headlight, which most owners notice within minutes. Suspension parts are also tucked away beneath the car, behind wheels and panels, where a driver cannot inspect them without a ramp and the right tools. The result is a category of fault that only reveals itself on test day, when the examiner can see the underside of the car properly.

The condition of Britain’s roads is making the problem worse. Potholes and broken surfaces hammer springs, shock absorbers and steering joints far harder than smooth tarmac would, accelerating wear that the standard service schedule may not catch. The same research team previously found that more than one in four tyre replacements in the UK are directly linked to deteriorating road conditions, a sign of how much damage poor surfaces are doing to the parts of the car closest to the ground.

Heavier Cars and Longer Service Gaps

There is a second force at work. Cars are getting heavier, and electric models in particular carry a substantial battery pack that adds weight over every bump in the road. Heavier vehicles place more strain on suspension systems, and many electric cars run longer servicing intervals, which means problems are less likely to be spotted before the MOT comes around.

Sprigmore pointed to that combination directly. ‘Heavier vehicles, particularly electric models, place more strain on suspension systems, and longer servicing intervals mean problems are less likely to be detected before MOT day,’ he said, noting that electric cars now account for more than 20 per cent of the new car market in the UK. As the fleet gets heavier and service visits get further apart, the share of failures down to worn structural components looks set to grow rather than shrink.

What an MOT Failure Can Cost

A car MOT test is capped at £54.85 for a standard class 4 vehicle, but that is only the test fee. The real expense arrives when a car fails and needs parts and labour to put right. Suspension repairs are rarely cheap, because replacing a pair of shock absorbers or a broken spring involves several hours of work and parts that are not trivial to source. Leave the work undone and the car cannot legally return to the road once the old certificate expires, so there is no option to simply ignore it.

Failures stack up too. A car that fails on suspension may also be flagged for the worn tyres or tired brakes that often go hand in hand with a hard life on poor roads. Drivers who have let tyres run down to the limit face their own penalties, as our report on the six million illegal tyres on UK roads explained, and a clogged diesel filter can add to the bill, as we set out in our guide to how a faulty diesel particulate filter can fail your MOT and cost £1,000.

What To Do Before Your MOT

The single most useful habit is to book a free vehicle safety check or a pre MOT inspection a few weeks before the test is due. Many tyre and autocare chains, including the centres behind this research, offer free checks that put the car on a ramp and look at the parts you cannot see, which gives you time to budget for any work rather than being caught out on the day.

Between checks, pay attention to the subtle signs. A car that dips heavily at the front under braking, bounces more than once after a bump, pulls to one side, or sits visibly lower at one corner may have a suspension problem developing. A knocking noise over potholes or speed humps is worth investigating early. Keeping to the manufacturer service schedule, rather than stretching it to save money, gives a mechanic the chance to catch wear before it becomes a failure.

Finally, drive to the conditions. Slowing down for potholes and broken surfaces, and avoiding kerbing the wheels, reduces the shock loads that wear springs and dampers out early. None of this guarantees a pass, but it shifts the odds in your favour and spreads the cost of upkeep across the year rather than landing it all in one painful bill on test day. With suspension now the leading cause of failure, the drivers who come out ahead are the ones who look beneath the car before the examiner does.


Sources:

  • https://www.hiqonline.co.uk/about-hiq/news/nearly-four-in-ten-mot-failures-linked-to-hidden-suspension-faults-that-drivers-rarely-check-new-research-reveals
  • https://www.gov.uk/getting-an-mot
  • https://www.hiqonline.co.uk/about-hiq/news/britains-pothole-problem-nationwide-study-finds-one-in-four-tyre-replacements-are-caused-by-severe-road-damage

Jarrod

Jarrod Partridge is the founder of Motoring Chronicle and an FIA accredited journalist with over 30 years of experience following motorsport and the global automotive industry. A member of the AIPS International Sports Press Association, Jarrod has covered Formula 1 races and automotive events at venues around the world, bringing first-hand insight to every race report, car review, and industry analysis he writes. His work spans the full breadth of motoring — from the latest EV launches and road car reviews to the cutting edge of motorsport competition.

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