Rover 214 MOT Pass Rate
Overall pass rate across all manufacture years, based on 250,006 real MOT test results. Failure rate: 50.5%.
Data from official DVSA MOT testing records
Rover 214 MOT Reliability Overview
The Rover 214 is a very popular vehicle in the UK, with 250,006 MOT test results recorded in our database spanning 15 manufacture years. It has an overall MOT pass rate of 49.5% and a failure rate of 50.5%, which is significantly below the UK average of approximately 37%.
Based on this data, the Rover 214 earns a "Very Poor" reliability rating. The average Rover 214 presents for MOT with approximately 77,943 miles on the clock. Manufacture year matters: 2002 models achieve the highest pass rate at 64.5%, while 1996 models have the lowest at 45.6%. This 18.9 percentage point difference suggests notable variation in build quality or component durability across production years.
The most common MOT failure for the Rover 214 is Suspension, affecting 27.4% of all tests. Suspension failures typically involve worn bushes, leaking shock absorbers, broken coil springs, and damaged suspension arms. These affect ride quality, tyre wear, and road holding. The second most common issue is Lamps, Reflectors and Electrical Equipment at 27.2%. Brakes rounds out the top three at 25.5%. Together, these top 3 failure categories account for a significant portion of all MOT failures for this model.
Top failures across all manufacture years combined. Individual year pages may show different top failures.
What Fails Most
Best Year to Buy
📈 How Each Vintage Ages
Tracking how each manufacture year's MOT pass rate changes as the car ages. Showing 11 vintages — click year chips to highlight.
Multi-line chart showing how different Rover 214 vintages degrade over time, from age 3 to 29 years.
Only vintages with 100+ tests in at least 3 different test years are shown. Fleet average is the UK-wide pass rate for all cars at each age.
📉 How Age Affects Reliability
MOT failure rate by vehicle age for the Rover 214. The dashed red line marks when the manufacturer warranty typically expires (3 years).
Line chart showing MOT failure rate by vehicle age from 9 to 20 years, with warranty expiry marked at 3 years.
💡 What does the warranty cliff mean?
The Rover 214 shows a relatively stable failure rate after warranty — the change of 0% is negligible. Peak failure occurs at age 16 (52.9% fail rate).
Note: pass rates may improve for very old vehicles due to survivorship bias — only well-maintained cars remain on the road.
Pass Rate by Manufacture Year
* High Fail Rate badge indicates an MOT pass rate below 65% (failure rate above 35%).
What Fails on This Car?
Click a category to see specific failure items.
View as table
| Rank | Failure Category | Rate (%) | Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Suspension | 42.6% | 106,531 |
| 2 | Brakes | 42.4% | 106,069 |
| 3 | Lamps, Reflectors And Electrical Equipment | 42.2% | 105,678 |
| 4 | Exhaust, Fuel And Emissions | 35.2% | 88,079 |
| 5 | Tyres | 25.0% | 62,392 |
| 6 | Driver's View Of The Road | 17.1% | 42,783 |
| 7 | Seat Belts And Supplementary Restraint Systems | 9.8% | 24,555 |
| 8 | Steering | 8.6% | 21,468 |
| 9 | Body, Structure And General Items | 5.3% | 13,212 |
| 10 | Registration Plates And Vin | 3.2% | 8,114 |
| 11 | Items Not Tested | 1.9% | 4,748 |
| 12 | Road Wheels | 0.9% | 2,132 |
| 13 | Noise, Emissions And Leaks | 0.9% | 2,129 |
| 14 | Body, Chassis, Structure | 0.7% | 1,808 |
Failures per 10,000 Miles
avg. 77,943 miFor every 10,000 miles driven, this shows what percentage of MOT tests fail for each category. This accounts for how far cars are actually driven, not just raw pass/fail counts.
View as table
| Category | Rate / 10K mi | Raw % | Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| Suspension | 5.47 | 42.6% | 106,531 |
| Brakes | 5.44 | 42.4% | 106,069 |
| Lamps & Electrical | 5.42 | 42.2% | 105,678 |
| Emissions & Exhaust | 4.52 | 35.2% | 88,079 |
| Tyres | 3.20 | 25.0% | 62,392 |
| Visibility | 2.20 | 17.1% | 42,783 |
| Seat Belts | 1.26 | 9.8% | 24,555 |
| Steering | 1.10 | 8.6% | 21,468 |
| Body & Structure | 0.77 | 6.0% | 15,020 |
| Registration Plates and VIN | 0.42 | 3.2% | 8,114 |
| Items Not Tested | 0.24 | 1.9% | 4,748 |
| Wheels | 0.11 | 0.9% | 2,132 |
| Noise, emissions and leaks | 0.11 | 0.9% | 2,129 |
🚗 Similar Cars to Consider
Mileage at MOT
The average Rover 214 has 77,943 miles when tested for MOT.
📊 Mileage-Adjusted Failure Rate
How often this car fails MOT relative to how much it's driven — a fairer comparison than raw pass rate.
The Rover 214 has a mileage-adjusted failure rate of 6.48% per 10,000 miles driven. The average across all makes is 5.38%, so this model is worse than average.
About Rover 214 MOT Data
The Rover 214 is a very popular vehicle in the UK, with 250,006 MOT test results recorded in our database spanning 15 manufacture years. It has an overall MOT pass rate of 49.5% and a failure rate of 50.5%, which is significantly below the UK average of approximately 37%.
For Rover 214 owners, these results suggest above-average failure risk — thorough pre-MOT checks are recommended. Focus your pre-MOT checks on suspension and lamps, reflectors and electrical equipment for the best chance of a first-time pass. Use our detailed year-by-year breakdown and failure analysis below to understand how your specific 214 is likely to perform.
Suspension — 27.4% of failures
Suspension issues account for 27.4% of MOT failures on the Rover 214. Suspension failures typically involve worn bushes, leaking shock absorbers, broken coil springs, and damaged suspension arms. These affect ride quality, tyre wear, and road holding. Typical repair costs: £200–500. Pre-MOT check: Look for uneven tyre wear, listen for clunking over bumps, and check if the car pulls to one side. A bouncy ride suggests worn shock absorbers. Visually inspect coil springs for cracks.
Lamps, Reflectors and Electrical Equipment — 27.2% of failures
Lamps, Reflectors and Electrical Equipment issues account for 27.2% of MOT failures on the Rover 214. Lighting failures cover all external lights: headlights, tail lights, brake lights, indicators, fog lights, and reflectors. A single blown bulb will cause an MOT fail. This is one of the most preventable failure categories. Typical repair costs: £5–50. Pre-MOT check: Walk around the car and check every light — headlights (dipped and main beam), side lights, tail lights, brake lights, indicators, hazard lights, reverse light, rear fog light, and number plate lights. Replace any blown bulbs before the test.
Brakes — 25.5% of failures
Brakes issues account for 25.5% of MOT failures on the Rover 214. Brake-related failures include worn brake pads, corroded brake discs, leaking brake lines, and faulty brake servos. These are safety-critical components — any brake deficiency will result in an MOT fail. Typical repair costs: £150–400. Pre-MOT check: Listen for squealing or grinding noises. Check brake pedal feel — if it feels spongy or goes to the floor, have the system inspected immediately. Look at brake pad thickness through the wheel spokes (minimum 3mm).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the MOT pass rate for the Rover 214?
Based on 250,006 MOT tests in our database, the Rover 214 has an overall pass rate of 49.5% (50.5% fail rate).
What are the most common MOT failures on a Rover 214?
The top 3 reasons a Rover 214 fails its MOT are: 1. Suspension (27.4%), 2. Lamps, Reflectors and Electrical Equipment (27.2%), 3. Brakes (25.5%). Check these areas before booking your MOT.
Is the Rover 214 reliable?
With a 50.5% MOT failure rate, the 214 is less reliable than average compared to the UK average of ~40%.
What should I check before an MOT on my Rover 214?
Based on failure data, focus on: Suspension (27.4%); Lamps, Reflectors and Electrical Equipment (27.2%); Brakes (25.5%). These are the areas most likely to cause a fail. Also check all lights, tyres (minimum 1.6mm tread), and windscreen condition — these are quick wins that apply to all cars.
Based on DVSA anonymised MOT test data (2005–2024). Crown copyright, Open Government Licence v3.0.