How Often Should You Service Your Car?

By Salek Tyre & Mechanic · Ashford, TW15

Regular servicing is the cheapest way to keep your car reliable and avoid big repair bills. But how often is "regular", and what's the difference between all the service types? Here's the simple version.

A service and an MOT are not the same thing

This is the most common mix-up we hear. An MOT is a legal safety check that confirms your car meets minimum standards on the day. A service is preventative care — fresh oil and filters, plus a thorough check of wear-and-tear parts — to keep the car healthy and stop small problems becoming expensive ones. You need both.

The general rule

As a rule of thumb, service your car once a year, or every 10,000–12,000 miles — whichever comes first. If you do lots of short trips, heavy stop-start town driving, or high mileage, more frequent servicing is worth it.

Always check your handbook. Every manufacturer sets its own service schedule, and sticking to it is especially important if your car is still under warranty or on a finance/lease agreement.

Interim vs full service

Interim service — roughly every 6 months / 6,000 miles

A lighter, in-between check to keep things ticking over between full services. It typically includes an oil and oil-filter change plus inspection of key safety items — ideal for higher-mileage drivers.

Full service — roughly every 12 months / 12,000 miles

A comprehensive check covering everything in an interim service plus more filters, fluids and a longer list of inspection points. This is the one most drivers should have once a year.

There are also major services at longer intervals that include extra items like spark plugs and additional filters.

What's usually included in a service

Why regular servicing actually saves money

Signs your car needs a service sooner

Due a service in Ashford?

Interim, full or major — we'll service your car properly and only recommend work it genuinely needs. Book online or call us on Feltham Road.

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