Roughly a third of cars fail their MOT first time, and most fail on faults the owner could have spotted or fixed cheaply beforehand. If your test is coming up in Cardiff, a little preparation is the difference between a pass and a fail, a retest, and days when the car cannot legally be driven.
This guide runs through why cars fail, the checks you can do yourself in ten minutes, and what to do if the worst happens and you get a failure sheet.
Year after year, the same handful of items account for most failures, and the top ones are things you can check without any tools:
Notice how many of those are cheap or free to sort. A bulb, a splash of screen wash and a tyre check would keep a lot of cars out of the fail column.

You do not need to be a mechanic to catch the easy fails. Before your MOT, walk round the car and check:
None of that guarantees a pass, because plenty of faults sit underneath where you cannot see, which is exactly what a pre-MOT check is for. But it clears the silly fails that send a third of cars back for a retest.
The failures that catch people out are the hidden ones. Worn brake pads, tired suspension bushes, a corroded sill or an emissions problem will not show on a walk round the car. On Cardiff roads, suspension takes a particular beating from potholes off routes like Eastern Avenue and the A48, so knocks and clonks over bumps are worth taking seriously before the test. If your car has any of those symptoms, get it looked at rather than hoping.
You get a failure sheet listing every reason it failed, each marked as a Major or Dangerous fault. A Major means it must be repaired. A Dangerous means the car is not safe to drive and should stay off the road until it is fixed. If your previous MOT has expired, you cannot drive the car except to a pre-booked test or repair.
The good news is that a fail is usually cheaper to fix than people fear, and if the garage that tested the car also repairs it, the retest is often free within the allowed window. That is why having MOT repairs done at the test centre saves both money and a second trip across the city.

First-time passes come down to preparation. Do the ten-minute checks above, deal with any obvious niggles, and if you are unsure about the hidden items, book a pre-MOT check so the likely fails are found and fixed before the clock starts. Booking your MOT and service together helps too, because a service clears many of the wear items that would otherwise fail the test.
At CF3 MOT & Service Centre in Rumney, we test, we repair and we retest in one workshop, so a Cardiff driver can go from worried to passed without bouncing between garages. If your test is due, our MOT and testing page has the detail.
How often do cars fail their MOT?
Around a third of cars fail first time, and most fail on preventable items like lights, tyres and screen faults that an owner could check beforehand.
Can I check my own car before the MOT?
Yes, for the easy items. Lights, tyres, screen wash, wipers and the horn take ten minutes. Hidden items like brakes and suspension are better checked in a pre-MOT inspection.
Is the MOT retest free?
It often is, or reduced, when the same centre repairs the failed items and retests within the allowed period. We confirm this when you book the repairs.
Can I drive my car if it fails the MOT?
Only if your existing certificate is still valid and none of the faults are Dangerous. If the certificate has expired or a fault is Dangerous, the car should not be driven except to a booked test or repair.
Does a service help my car pass the MOT?
Yes. A service is not the same as an MOT, but it clears many of the wear items that cause failures, so booking both together improves your chances of a first-time pass.
Want to pass first time? Book a pre-MOT check or your MOT with CF3 in Rumney. Call 07400 454839 or book online.