Hi
I’ve just put a deposit on a T6.1 Kombi from a main VW dealer, however just learned there’s no service history with it, or not one that was passed onto them.
The dealer has put it through it’s 1st Mot, and because there’s no service history they’ll do a full service.
The van’s a 150bhp manual with 47k miles and in vgc with 1 previous owner.
I’m looking at taking out their 2 year extended warranty + services for £800.
This will be my first van and not familiar with servicing etc., I will push them to contact the previous owner to get the history but obviously no service history raises many alarms. I’m wondering if I should walk away if its not found or available.
Has anyone here any views?
Thanks
Simon
Ps Happy New Year
Ok. Why do you need full service history? Are you starting a museum? Do you want to sit by the fire and read the kids the service history of the van like a sacred book?
A vehicle is only as good as its last MOT isn't it.
Many vans dont have history but you can do some checks to make sure its kosher.
But ultimately even with a full history youve got no idea what the components are like inside, not really. I mean you can see how its been treated etc and what oil / parts were used in the services....
But nothing guarantees anything.
1) look at the vehicles MOT history online.
2) Have the cambelt/Waterpump done as part of the deal (they can afford to do it...trust me there's plenty of profit in that van for them)
3) Have a VCDS done and be present when they do it. Ask them to fix the issues that flag up as part of the deal.
Thats about all you can do.
Service history is a thing of the past now in my opinion. In the olden days a 'full service history' was prestige, but the vehicles were oil puddling pieces of rusty crap and you had to have some idea of what work had been done to keep it running.
Who cares that a man called 'Paul' from Kent changed the oil filter in 2014?
With modern VW, you need a full service, cambelt and waterpump and run a VCDS to check for error codes. Those are the big 3 in my humble opinion. Everything else is how the van drives.
Think about it like this....you could be the start of the mythical service history chronicles.... people will look back in future generations and say...who was that mysterious man who changed the oil filter and washer bottle in 2024....
It may also be a nice bargaining point price wise.
Dont forget, these days the demand just isn't like it was and buyers have options. The tables have switched to the buyers advantage. So see if you can't use the lack of service history to get a few quid off