New Skoda Key
Author
Discussion

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
Hi,

I dont know if anyone can help but I bought a 2023 Superb and it only came with 1 key. Ive contacted 5 auto locksmith types and only 2 got back to me. The first said I might aswell go to Skoda and the other said £410.
Ive not got a price from Skoda yet but does anyone know anywhere in (south) yorkshire that can do me a second key for less than £410?
It doesnt have remote sensing entry (you still have to press the buttong to open the car) but it does have keyless start.

Cheers

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,818 posts

69 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
Do you have key cover with your insurance?

sherman

15,048 posts

241 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
£410 is probably about right.
£200 for key
£50 for blade
£160 labour , key cutting and coding

TooLateForAName

4,916 posts

210 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
I think vw moved to a system where you need to be connected to their servers to generate the key. a decent auto locksmith ought to be able to do that (and remove the lost key from the car ecu)

You might find that a cheap fix is to duplicate the existing key but then you wont have the ability to set personalities

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
LightweightLouisDanvers said:
Do you have key cover with your insurance?
That feels fraudy to me. Ive not even insured it yet.

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
sherman said:
£410 is probably about right.
£200 for key
£50 for blade
£160 labour , key cutting and coding
Theres plenty of "used" keys for £30, obviously have the wrong blade so will need a new one but I dont know if they are possible to reprogram to a different car..

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
TooLateForAName said:
I think vw moved to a system where you need to be connected to their servers to generate the key. a decent auto locksmith ought to be able to do that (and remove the lost key from the car ecu)

You might find that a cheap fix is to duplicate the existing key but then you wont have the ability to set personalities
At the minute the main reason I want a second key is the fact its impossible for me to set myself as the primary user with one key and therefore cant use the app. Along with it being handy to have a spare etc.
Found out who the previous owner was (as it was a Copart buy). But I probably won't have much luck finding a Jake Smith haha.

Mr Tidy

30,253 posts

153 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
I'd be amazed if there wasn't someone who could cut and code a VAG key, it's just a matter of finding them. Maybe worth trawling some VAG specific forums.

I got a new key cut and coded for my BMW in 2016 for £80.

When I first read the heading I thought Skoda had come up with another model name starting with a K. They must have been gutted when Hyundai made a Kona!

ninepoint2

3,982 posts

186 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
This guy is mobile and comes with a decent reputation from a few forums I frequent

https://www.autosolutions-autolocksmiths.co.uk/are...

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

Saturday 30th May
quotequote all
ninepoint2 said:
This guy is mobile and comes with a decent reputation from a few forums I frequent

https://www.autosolutions-autolocksmiths.co.uk/are...
Cheers, ive sent him a message. Also message another 3 or 4 this evening.



I managed to pick up the car for £7100 from Copart although it needed a bit of work. Front discs, front and rear lower arms, inner and outer track rod, 4 seatbelts, drivers seat and curtain airbags and a full service. Im at about £8300 now including buying VCDS to reset the crash data and actually get it started. No body work damage though.
I still need 2 wheels so prob end up about £8500 (plus a spare key) which i think is pretty good for a 39k mile 73 plate PHEV Superb Estate.
Annoyingly it has the expensive tax for the next 3 and a half years.

Sheepshanks

39,840 posts

145 months

RacingStripes said:
Found out who the previous owner was (as it was a Copart buy). But I probably won't have much luck finding a Jake Smith haha.
Do you know the area he lived in - maybe he'd be on Facebook /etc with the car? Especially if the way the damage was caused was interesting enough to post about.

We had a write off Golf taken to Copart and I still have the 2nd key, service book etc.

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

I think ive found the previous owners (it was a company car though).
Ive messaged him on LinkedIn but I dont know if he'll have had both keys being a company car. And it looks like he moved jobs 2 months ago.

silentbrown

10,653 posts

142 months

What kind of event sets off all the airbags and pretensioners, kills wheels and suspension, yet doesn't cause any bodywork damage???

MattyD803

2,340 posts

91 months

silentbrown said:
What kind of event sets off all the airbags and pretensioners, kills wheels and suspension, yet doesn't cause any bodywork damage???
A Duke of Hazzard's style jump?

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

Entering a roundabout at about 70mph and sliding it into a kerb.
Ive got the footage as there was a dashcam fitted but I cant be bothered to upload it.
The police also took the car as the memory card was in an evidence bag inside it.
Meant it sat from August last year until it was released and then sold on copart last month.

silentbrown

10,653 posts

142 months

RacingStripes said:
Entering a roundabout at about 70mph and sliding it into a kerb.
That'd do it. smile

Sheepshanks

39,840 posts

145 months

silentbrown said:
RacingStripes said:
Entering a roundabout at about 70mph and sliding it into a kerb.
That'd do it. smile
I suspect that might have caused at least some level of bodywork damage!

DrDeAtH

3,682 posts

258 months

That'll buff out..

RacingStripes

Original Poster:

861 posts

56 months

Haha definitely wasn't that bad.

Dr G

15,874 posts

268 months

Tuesday
quotequote all
Keys are ordered to chassis number from the factory, the chip in the remote will only then accept being coded to the car it is ordered for.

When coding the new key all keys that you have are re-coded together, and any old/lost/broken keys will no longer work.

The services who offer to come out on a mobile basis and clone an existing key are a bit bodgy. I would avoid doing this. There are legitimate locksmiths who can order a key for you and come out to you to code it. There's no reason ODIS (VW's workshop software) can't be used in this way.

£4-500 is normal for a replacement key.