CAR stuck in Italy - MOT expired

CAR stuck in Italy - MOT expired

Author
Discussion

ferrarino

Original Poster:

42 posts

120 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Hi all,
i had taken my car to italy for summer holidays (S63 Convertible) with the idea of driving it back to UK sometime in september/october.

I just realised that MOT expired, hence technically i cannot take it back driving it.

Was thinking of putting it on SORN, and then find an insurance willing to cover me for the length of the trip (first stop once in UK will be the MOT)

Anyone knows any insurance that will cover me while the car is SORN?

Thanks in advance for anyone who has any idea that can help me!

Desiderata

2,393 posts

55 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Just book an MOT in the UK and as long as you drive it straight there it will be legal . No limits on the distance you can travel to a test as long as you go directly to the MOT station. Most insurances will cover you, it's a fallacy that your insurance won't cover without an MOT. Most require that the cari is roadworthy, but don't specifically mention the MOT. Just check the policy for exclusions.

Edited by Desiderata on Sunday 2nd October 06:58

Stuart70

3,936 posts

184 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
This - done it previously - albeit 15 years ago.

Draxindustries1

1,657 posts

24 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Booking an mot is fine.
However, don't infringe any traffic laws coming back through France as the Gendarmerie Nationale will be very keen to impound the car if you cannot show a valid mot...

Griffith4ever

4,298 posts

36 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Draxindustries1 said:
Booking an mot is fine.
However, don't infringe any traffic laws coming back through France as the Gendarmerie Nationale will be very keen to impound the car if you cannot show a valid mot...
When I drive to Italy I skip almost all of France.

ferrarino

Original Poster:

42 posts

120 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Thanks i didn't think of it checking insurance terms...

or do you know any short term insurance that would cover me otherwise?

Thanks
[

quote=Desiderata]Just book an MOT in the UK and as long as you drive it straight there it will be legal . No limits on the distance you can travel to a test as long as you go directly to the MOT station. Most insurances will cover you, it's a fallacy that your insurance won't cover without an MOT. Most require that the cari is roadworthy, but don't specifically mention the MOT. Just check the policy for exclusions.

Edited by Desiderata on Sunday 2nd October 06:58

[/quote]

Pitre

4,607 posts

235 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Draxindustries1 said:
Booking an mot is fine.
However, don't infringe any traffic laws coming back through France as the Gendarmerie Nationale will be very keen to impound the car if you cannot show a valid mot...
With respect, the gendarmes don't care about a UK MOT. All they would ever ask for is proof of ownership, insurance and driving licence.

sixor8

6,311 posts

269 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
I would suggest that driving a car through Europe declared SORN in the UK (if European forces can even check this) may be considered a greater infringement than driving a car with an expired MoT. If you declare it SORN, you won't have valid VED either. Once in the UK, any ANPR would pick this up, but unlikely an expired MoT, which is a minor infringement in the scheme of things; it's why you don't get official notification of an impending expiry, unlike VED and insurance. If it is booked in for a test, as mentioned above, you can drive it there. Do they have ANPR at the ports?

Another thread recently suggested that insurance is invalid with an expired MoT but this seems unenforceable to me. Some policies may state this but you are legally allowed to drive to a test without a current MoT. You are likely 3rd party only in Europe anyway (unless you have extended Fully Comp cover). You need valid MoT to buy VED but otherwise your insurance is fine, IMHO of course. smile

I drove a car all the way back from Spain safely with an expired MoT (I stupidly thought the ITV in Spain was also valid for UK plate cars rolleyes) but this was 15 years ago.

Edited by sixor8 on Sunday 2nd October 10:41

Collectingbrass

2,222 posts

196 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Speak to your current insurance provider or broker. It is insured isn't it?

ferrarino

Original Poster:

42 posts

120 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Yes it is insured , just mot and tax expired . I will speak with insurance tomorrow and if they are ok with me driving I will take it straight to the Mot center

Monkeylegend

26,479 posts

232 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
ferrarino said:
Yes it is insured , just mot and tax expired . I will speak with insurance tomorrow and if they are ok with me driving I will take it straight to the Mot center
Scroll down to the bit about bringing your vehicle back into the UK without tax.

Not sure if that applies in your case but worth checking.

https://www.gov.uk/taking-vehicles-out-of-uk/for-l...

Super Sonic

4,960 posts

55 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
sixor8 said:
ANPR would pick this up, but unlikely an expired MoT
Edited by sixor8 on Sunday 2nd October 10:41
ANPR does pick up no mot.

ferrarino

Original Poster:

42 posts

120 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
It’s a jungle to navigate within all these laws

Monkeylegend said:
Scroll down to the bit about bringing your vehicle back into the UK without tax.

Not sure if that applies in your case but worth checking.

https://www.gov.uk/taking-vehicles-out-of-uk/for-l...

monthou

4,589 posts

51 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Draxindustries1 said:
Booking an mot is fine.
However, don't infringe any traffic laws coming back through France as the Gendarmerie Nationale will be very keen to impound the car if you cannot show a valid mot...
Is that based on experience?

pherlopolus

2,088 posts

159 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
ferrarino said:
It’s a jungle to navigate within all these laws

Monkeylegend said:
Scroll down to the bit about bringing your vehicle back into the UK without tax.

Not sure if that applies in your case but worth checking.

https://www.gov.uk/taking-vehicles-out-of-uk/for-l...
That looks fairly straightforward, if not taxed or Mot’d you can’t drive it back into the country, you will need to transport it in on lorry/trailer, make it sorn, and not drive it until MOT/TAX updated (except to take for mot)

MonkeyBusiness

3,940 posts

188 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Isnt there some sort of 'fair play mileage' when driving to an MOT station?

Surely driving half way across Europe or even greater than say 50 miles in the UK would be frowned upon.

monthou

4,589 posts

51 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
MonkeyBusiness said:
Isnt there some sort of 'fair play mileage' when driving to an MOT station?

Surely driving half way across Europe or even greater than say 50 miles in the UK would be frowned upon.
No idea about driving across Europe but as I understand it the law is black and white - if you're driving from London to Aberdeen for a pre-booked MOT you're legal - as long as the car is roadworthy, obviously.
IANAL.

catso

14,794 posts

268 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
Pitre said:
Draxindustries1 said:
Booking an mot is fine.
However, don't infringe any traffic laws coming back through France as the Gendarmerie Nationale will be very keen to impound the car if you cannot show a valid mot...
With respect, the gendarmes don't care about a UK MOT. All they would ever ask for is proof of ownership, insurance and driving licence.
Indeed, I highly doubt French Police would know (or care) what an MOT is...

catso

14,794 posts

268 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
MonkeyBusiness said:
Isnt there some sort of 'fair play mileage' when driving to an MOT station?

Surely driving half way across Europe or even greater than say 50 miles in the UK would be frowned upon.
In which case what is the OP to do as he can't get a UK MOT in Italy?

monthou

4,589 posts

51 months

Sunday 2nd October 2022
quotequote all
catso said:
MonkeyBusiness said:
Isnt there some sort of 'fair play mileage' when driving to an MOT station?

Surely driving half way across Europe or even greater than say 50 miles in the UK would be frowned upon.
In which case what is the OP to do as he can't get a UK MOT in Italy?
Trailer it.
Or take his chances.

edit: driving without an MOT is a fairly minor offence in the uk - just a fine.
Same in France for no CT (135 euro fine, just looked), so I can't imagine anyone being too interested as long as it's roadworthy.

Edited by monthou on Sunday 2nd October 14:23