Land Rover Discovery Sport Se D 4X2
From 441 MOT tests. Above average for its class.
Common MOT failure categories
Pass rate by registration year
What goes wrong?
The most common MOT failure reasons are wiper blade missing or obviously not clearing the windscreen, a tyre seriously damaged and a tyre cords visible or damaged. The top issue, wiper blade missing or obviously not clearing the windscreen, caused 9 failures in 2024. Checking tread depth (1.6mm legal minimum, 3mm recommended) before your test can save an unnecessary fail. You can check prices at Black Circles if you need replacements. If you need repairs before retesting, sites like BookMyGarage let you compare local prices.
| wiper blade missing or obviously not clearing the windscreen | 9 |
| a tyre seriously damaged | 8 |
| a tyre cords visible or damaged | 7 |
| engine mil illuminated indicating a malfunction | 6 |
| a brake lining or pad worn below 1.5mm | 6 |
| a suspension pin, bush or joint excessively worn | 6 |
| the aim of a headlamp is not within limits laid down in the requirements | 5 |
| tyre tread depth not in accordance with the requirements | 4 |
| smoke opacity levels exceed the manufacturer's specified limit | 2 |
| reflector defective or damaged by more than 50% of the reflecting surface | 2 |
How serious are these failures?
Not all MOT failures are equal. 49.1% of Discovery Sport Se D 4X2 failures are safety items (worn brakes, tyre damage, steering play). The car still drives, but you shouldn't. Only 10.9% are the kind that would actually strand you. When it does fail, the average repair bill is around £88.
By registration year
| Year | Pass rate | Top failures |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 85.6% | a tyre cords visible or damaged, engine mil illuminated indicating a malfunction |
| 2020 | 88.2% | wiper blade missing or obviously not clearing the windscreen, the aim of a headlamp is not within limits laid down in the requirements |
Typical mileage
Half of all Discovery Sport Se D 4X2s tested had between 23,312 and 36,900 miles on the clock. Relatively low mileage overall. Many are still fairly young.
At 26,065 median miles, the Discovery Sport Se D 4X2 has 0.049 failures per 10,000 miles driven.
Other Land Rover models
Common questions
What is the Land Rover Discovery Sport Se D 4X2 MOT pass rate?
The Land Rover Discovery Sport Se D 4X2 has a 87.3% MOT pass rate based on 441 real MOT tests. This is above the national average.
What are common MOT failures on a Land Rover Discovery Sport Se D 4X2?
The most common MOT failure on the Land Rover Discovery Sport Se D 4X2 is wiper blade missing or obviously not clearing the windscreen, which caused 9 failures. Other common issues include a tyre seriously damaged.
What is the typical mileage of a Land Rover Discovery Sport Se D 4X2 at MOT?
The median mileage at MOT for a Land Rover Discovery Sport Se D 4X2 is 26,065 miles. The middle 50% of vehicles tested have between 23,312 and 36,900 miles.
Buying a used Discovery Sport Se D 4X2?
Start with the free tools. Look up the specific vehicle's MOT history on GOV.UK The mileage at each test will show if it's been wound back, and the advisory history tells you what's wearing. Cross-reference that against the typical failures above to see if anything looks unusual for this model.
The free data won't tell you about outstanding finance, theft markers, or write-off history. For that, you need a vehicle history check This is especially important on a private sale where you have fewer legal protections.
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MOT data from DVSA anonymised test results, 2024 test year. Fleet data from DfT vehicle licensing statistics. Crown copyright, OGL v3.0. MOT pass rates are statistical summaries of test outcomes, not assessments of individual vehicle safety or condition. Always inspect a vehicle and check its full MOT history before purchasing. See terms of use.