RE: PistonHeads Auctions: now featuring number plates!
RE: PistonHeads Auctions: now featuring number plates!
Friday 22nd May

PistonHeads Auctions: now featuring number plates!

By popular demand, we're expanding PH Auctions to include cherished registrations


It’s been just under three years since we kicked off PistonHeads Auctions to complement the classifieds and give you even more ways to buy and sell. In that time, we’ve sold over 700 cars with our digital gavel, from immaculate modern classics to supercars.

But as anyone who has spent too long browsing our marketplace knows, a truly special car often deserves the perfect final touch. Which is why, due to genuine demand, we are officially adding cherished number plates to the PH Auctions lineup.

Whether you’re looking to unlock the value of a great registration that’s currently sitting on a retention certificate, or you're hunting for that elusive, definitive combination of letters to complete your pride and joy, we’re now open for business.

Because managing two fee structures sounds like a needless complication for everyone involved, we’re keeping things straightforward. The rules for plates are exactly the same as they are for cars:

  • Zero seller fees: listing and selling costs you absolutely nothing. You keep 100% of the hammer price
  • Buyer’s premium: a transparent 6 per cent + VAT, subject to a minimum fee of £695 + VAT.

Let’s face it, there is quite literally no better place in the UK to showcase a premium registration than in front of our massive, highly knowledgeable audience. 

Our first batch of plates is live right now, which you can browse here. If you’ve got one to sell, drop us a line at auctions@pistonheads.com to get a free valuation today.


Browse all cars and plates on PistonHeads Auctions

Photo credit: Chaydon Ford

Author
Discussion

Globulus Rift

Original Poster:

2 posts

86 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Last week a mate of mine told me that while in his first job, a work colleague's mother bought herself a private plate.

Her birthday was 24th July and her surname was Cox, so the plate read COX 247.

He ended up being fired for mercilessly repeating how the guy's mother liked COX 24 7.



Noe

102 posts

309 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Excellent. I’ve several on retention I want sell and as mostly overseas and have a hatred of .coms like cherished plates etc as all bought from original dvla auctions

Good improvement!

drmike37

600 posts

82 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.

LRDefender

633 posts

34 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
I bought a private number plate and it changed my life..!!! cloud9

nismo48

6,587 posts

233 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Any chance of "AMG1" coming up scratchchin

Slowlygettingit

905 posts

67 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
drmike37 said:
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.
That is a nice subtle understatement

Although those first few will be a little more

ex-devonpaul

1,684 posts

163 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
drmike37 said:
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.
Probably cheaper to change my name by deed poll to match the car.

p4cks

7,410 posts

225 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
drmike37 said:
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.
Wild. This will sink like a stone unless the buyer's fee is revised to something more in line with reality

Gingerjust28

2 posts

98 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
p4cks said:
drmike37 said:
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.
Wild. This will sink like a stone unless the buyer's fee is revised to something more in line with reality
Have to Agree with them statements. DVLA only £250 up gonna be hard to swallow that cost..

Nobody13

719 posts

228 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Buyer’s fee seems more like daylight robbery.

Dr G

15,880 posts

268 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Indeed, that fee is silly.

6%? OK, whatever. You charge what you charge, but give it a minimum of £100 or something.

iphonedyou

10,220 posts

183 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Surely that buyer's premium is a mistake.

Shaoxter

4,565 posts

150 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
drmike37 said:
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.
Guessing the target market won't be £500 plates, but still a crazy minimum fee.
TBF for higher value plates the fee is significantly lower than CC which is 10%+VAT. Still a lot considering there is next to zero due diligence/photography/descriptive writing required as is the case with cars.

RichardHMorris

711 posts

116 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Shaoxter said:
Guessing the target market won't be £500 plates, but still a crazy minimum fee.
TBF for higher value plates the fee is significantly lower than CC which is 10%+VAT. Still a lot considering there is next to zero due diligence/photography/descriptive writing required as is the case with cars.
Yes, the hammer price will need to be £11.600 for that to work.

RichardHMorris

711 posts

116 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
I'm selling a plate at the moment, for which I'd accept £266 ... plus a buyer's fee of £834 (the same as £695 plus VAT).

LotusOmega375D

9,174 posts

179 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
The registration on the featured car is woeful.

Ben Lowden

7,289 posts

203 months

PH Marketing Bloke

PH TEAM

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
drmike37 said:
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.
We completely understand that our minimum fee doesn't suit lower-value plates. Our platform is built for premium and dateless registrations that carry a higher value and will be more desirable at auction.

Because we charge 6% (+ VAT) compared to the industry standard of 10% to 15%, a buyer purchasing a £20,000 plate on PistonHeads will save nearly £1,000 in fees compared to our main competitors.

We get that this won't be for everyone and if you want to set your own price and sell a plate on your own terms, you're very welcome to do this in our Parts & Plates forum here.

Nickp82

3,854 posts

119 months

Friday 22nd May
quotequote all
Globulus Rift said:
Last week a mate of mine told me that while in his first job, a work colleague's mother bought herself a private plate.

Her birthday was 24th July and her surname was Cox, so the plate read COX 247.

He ended up being fired for mercilessly repeating how the guy's mother liked COX 24 7.
rofl


newbie101

53 posts

136 months

Saturday 23rd May
quotequote all
4.5 cars a week sounds like a very small number to me. Not like the site is packed full of 7 figure Hypercars either. Can't see £800 per plate is going to boost the sales figures by much but I hope I'm wrong as someone has to fund the maintenance on Shed's Amstrad.

Geertsen

1,788 posts

85 months

Saturday 23rd May
quotequote all
Ben Lowden said:
drmike37 said:
A buyer's fee of £695+VAT is pretty punchy on a £500 plate.
We completely understand that our minimum fee doesn't suit lower-value plates. Our platform is built for premium and dateless registrations that carry a higher value and will be more desirable at auction.

Because we charge 6% (+ VAT) compared to the industry standard of 10% to 15%, a buyer purchasing a £20,000 plate on PistonHeads will save nearly £1,000 in fees compared to our main competitors.

We get that this won't be for everyone and if you want to set your own price and sell a plate on your own terms, you're very welcome to do this in our Parts & Plates forum here.
The same thing happens over on CollectingWatches. It feels like an intentional ploy to weed out the chaff and deter lower value items being listed. Not very inclusive, especially as PistonHeads is a community where members intermingle and connect regardless of wealth. It’s a welcome addition and one which I will enjoy but a very elitist execution.