Obtaining a year plate instead of personal plate - How??

Obtaining a year plate instead of personal plate - How??

Author
Discussion

sherbertdip

Original Poster:

1,110 posts

120 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
I bought a car earlier this year with a personalised plate which has been on the car since it was registered, this on the understanding that the previous owner could have it back if he wanted it, which he now does.

I've tried to make sense of the DVLA guidance notes, and understand I can put the plate on retention with him as the "owner", that bit is no problem.

I am however finding it difficult to ascertain how I then apply for another year related plate, has anybody done this and can advise which form I need, before I phone DVLA and spend hours on hold!

Cheers

Pothole

34,367 posts

283 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
Pop into your local LVLO...oh.

littleredrooster

5,538 posts

197 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
The DVLA will issue an appropriate plate as part of the retention process, AIUI. It would normally have been the original plate, but not in this case if the cherished plate is really the only one it has ever had.

caziques

2,575 posts

169 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
The car will have an original registration number allocated from new, which it will effectively get back when the personalised plate is put on retention.


sherbertdip

Original Poster:

1,110 posts

120 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
No, the car was registered from new with the cherished number, which the owner had on retention.

Stoofa

958 posts

169 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
Then it will be issued an age appropriate plate once the cherished one goes onto retention.

Robin Hood

703 posts

206 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
You get an "age related" plate, I've done it.

sherbertdip

Original Poster:

1,110 posts

120 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
Thank you for the responses.

Form filling time!

SV8Predator

2,102 posts

166 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
sherbertdip said:
on the understanding that the previous owner could have it back if he wanted it, which he now does.
Does the previous owner have this in writing? For example, did you (as now the owner of the car and the plate), sign a contract?

Do you like the private plate?



rs1952

5,247 posts

260 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
SV8Predator said:
sherbertdip said:
on the understanding that the previous owner could have it back if he wanted it, which he now does.
Does the previous owner have this in writing? For example, did you (as now the owner of the car and the plate), sign a contract?

Do you like the private plate?
Perhaps the OP's word is his bond.

Perhaps you don't play by such rules wink

sim16v

2,177 posts

202 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
SV8Predator said:
sherbertdip said:
on the understanding that the previous owner could have it back if he wanted it, which he now does.
Does the previous owner have this in writing? For example, did you (as now the owner of the car and the plate), sign a contract?

Do you like the private plate?
Maybe they just agreed that and are decent people where their word actually means something

sherbertdip

Original Poster:

1,110 posts

120 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
SV8Predator said:
Does the previous owner have this in writing? For example, did you (as now the owner of the car and the plate), sign a contract?

Do you like the private plate?
Er no, but we shook hands when I bought the car, with that verbal agreement in place.

Yes it's a nice plate, but it has emotional ties for previous owner, would you like me to explain in writing or will you take my word for it?

Pit Pony

8,612 posts

122 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
sherbertdip said:
Er no, but we shook hands when I bought the car, with that verbal agreement in place.

Yes it's a nice plate, but it has emotional ties for previous owner, would you like me to explain in writing or will you take my word for it?
A gentleman !

Roo

11,503 posts

208 months

Friday 22nd August 2014
quotequote all
sherbertdip said:
Er no, but we shook hands when I bought the car, with that verbal agreement in place.

Yes it's a nice plate, but it has emotional ties for previous owner, would you like me to explain in writing or will you take my word for it?
Then maybe he should have put it on retention before he sold the car.

As you're now the registered keeper the retention certificate will come back to you, even if you put him down as a nominee. If neither of you assign the registration to a car within the alloted time you will get a reminder to renew the retention, not him.

I assume he's paying for this, and the number plates and the admin fee at your insurers when you tell them of the change of registration.

sherbertdip

Original Poster:

1,110 posts

120 months

Saturday 23rd August 2014
quotequote all
Roo said:
sherbertdip said:
Er no, but we shook hands when I bought the car, with that verbal agreement in place.

Yes it's a nice plate, but it has emotional ties for previous owner, would you like me to explain in writing or will you take my word for it?
Then maybe he should have put it on retention before he sold the car.

As you're now the registered keeper the retention certificate will come back to you, even if you put him down as a nominee. If neither of you assign the registration to a car within the alloted time you will get a reminder to renew the retention, not him.

I assume he's paying for this, and the number plates and the admin fee at your insurers when you tell them of the change of registration.
Indeed he should, but selling was a "knee jerk response" and i bought the car within hrs of it being advertised.

Thank you for pointing out about the reminder, i didn't know that, i thought once I had put him as nominee then it would go to him.

He's covering ALL associated fees/costs, paying up front before I transfer the reg.

HenryJM

6,315 posts

130 months

Saturday 23rd August 2014
quotequote all
Wow, two normal people behaving reasonably, coming to an agreement and both sticking to it.

2 sMoKiN bArReLs

30,259 posts

236 months

Saturday 23rd August 2014
quotequote all
caziques said:
The car will have an original registration number allocated from new, which it will effectively get back when the personalised plate is put on retention.
Not necessarily

B'stard Child

28,428 posts

247 months

Saturday 23rd August 2014
quotequote all
2 sMoKiN bArReLs said:
caziques said:
The car will have an original registration number allocated from new, which it will effectively get back when the personalised plate is put on retention.
Not necessarily
Indeed ^ I know several cars that despite having the orginal reg plate etched on the glass DVLA allocated a different age related plate because they weren't made aware of the original reg....

2 sMoKiN bArReLs

30,259 posts

236 months

Saturday 23rd August 2014
quotequote all
B'stard Child said:
2 sMoKiN bArReLs said:
caziques said:
The car will have an original registration number allocated from new, which it will effectively get back when the personalised plate is put on retention.
Not necessarily
Indeed ^ I know several cars that despite having the orginal reg plate etched on the glass DVLA allocated a different age related plate because they weren't made aware of the original reg....
..and I've had brand new cars registered with a private plate too

AGK

1,601 posts

156 months

Saturday 23rd August 2014
quotequote all
Roo said:
Then maybe he should have put it on retention before he sold the car.

As you're now the registered keeper the retention certificate will come back to you, even if you put him down as a nominee. If neither of you assign the registration to a car within the alloted time you will get a reminder to renew the retention, not him.

I assume he's paying for this, and the number plates and the admin fee at your insurers when you tell them of the change of registration.
Or he could just put the previous owner down as the grantee when filling out the V317 form....