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2020 Hyundai I800 — MOT History by Age

How cars manufactured in 2020 perform at MOT as they age

6 years
Current Age
61.5%
Latest Pass Rate
145
Total Tests (All Years)
40,219 mi
Avg Mileage (Latest)

Data from official DVSA MOT testing records

Compared to Average at Age 4

This car: 61.5%
Average: 81.1%

⚠️ 19.6% below average (23031 models compared)

How This Car Ages

Pass rate progression for the 2020 Hyundai I800 as it ages.

At 3 years: 63.7% pass rate · At 4 years: 61.5% pass rate

Bar chart showing pass rate by car age from 3 to 4 years

Fail Rate %
📊 View as table
AgePass RateTests
3 yrs63.7%80
4 yrs61.5%65

Pass Rate Trend

How the 2020 Hyundai I800 pass rate changes as it ages, from first MOT to most recent.

Trend shows stable over 2 years

Pass Rate %
📊 View as table
BuiltPass RateTests
2024 (4 yrs)61.5%65
2023 (3 yrs)63.7%80

Year-by-Year MOT Results

2023High Fail Rate
63.7%
Age (yrs) 3Tests 80Avg Mileage 30,310Top Failure Lamps, reflectors and electrical equipment — 37.5%
2024High Fail Rate
61.5%
Age (yrs) 4Tests 65Avg Mileage 40,219Top Failure Lamps, reflectors and electrical equipment — 27.7%

Common MOT Failures

Top failure categories across all test years for 2020 Hyundai I800, with age trends.

Lamps, reflectors and electrical equipment
32.6%
↓ Decreases with age
Brakes
20.1%
↓ Decreases with age
Tyres
18.6%
↓ Decreases with age
Visibility
13.0%
↓ Decreases with age
Non-component advisories
10.0%
— Consistent

How Failures Change With Age

Comparing failure rates between the youngest and oldest test years.

CategoryAt YoungestAt OldestChangeTrend
Visibility21.3% (3 yrs)4.6% (4 yrs)
-16.7%
🟢 ↓
Tyres26.3% (3 yrs)10.8% (4 yrs)
-15.5%
🟢 ↓
Brakes26.3% (3 yrs)13.8% (4 yrs)
-12.5%
🟢 ↓
Lamps, reflectors and electrical equipment37.5% (3 yrs)27.7% (4 yrs)
-9.8%
🟢 ↓

Other Manufacture Years

Looking for the best year to buy? See the full comparison on the Hyundai I800 page →

About This Data

This page shows how Hyundai I800 cars manufactured in 2020 perform at MOT as they age. Data spans from 2023 to 2024, covering 145 tests. Pass rates naturally decline with age as components wear.

Based on DVSA anonymised MOT test data (2005–2024). Crown copyright, Open Government Licence v3.0.

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