Brake discs worn, pitted or scored MOT advisory guide

Brake discs worn, pitted or scored: what it means

If you have seen this MOT advisory on a used car, this page explains what it usually means, why buyers should care and what to check before you commit.

MOT section: 1. Brakes. Category: Brakes.

Check the exact car by registration

An MOT advisory is only useful in context. Enter the registration to see whether this issue appears once, repeatedly or alongside other warning signs.

Free preview • MOT history • Repair risk estimate • Market value

Continue your used car research

Use this advisory page as one step in the buying journey: understand the warning, compare model guides, then run a registration check on the exact car.

Why people land on this page

Most buyers search an MOT advisory after spotting it on a listing, an MOT history report or a seller screenshot. The real question is not just what the advisory means in theory, but whether the exact car you are considering looks like a maintenance risk.

The next sensible step is usually to compare this warning with other MOT advisory guides and then move on to a registration-based check on the specific vehicle.

Why this advisory appears

Disc lip, scoring or corrosion noted

Advisories matter because they often appear before a part reaches the point of failure. They can be early evidence of future cost, neglected maintenance or a pattern that should affect your buying decision.

What buyers should do next

  • Ask whether the brake parts mentioned have already been replaced.
  • Check whether the issue appeared on more than one MOT.
  • Factor likely brake work into your offer before buying.

Related model guides

These model guides help you see the broader ownership risks and buying warnings that often sit alongside this type of advisory.

Related advisory guides

Browse other advisory explainers to compare likely causes, buyer risk and what different MOT warning signs can mean in practice.

Found this advisory on a car already? Run the registration check.

A single advisory line does not tell the whole story. Enter the registration to see MOT history, repeat issues, pricing context and whether the car looks riskier than it first appears.

Buyer research path

A sensible used car buying journey is usually: understand the MOT warning, compare likely model-level risks, then run a registration check on the exact vehicle before relying on seller reassurance alone.

Related checks and guides

FAQ

Does an MOT advisory mean the car has failed?

No. An advisory flags something to watch, but the car can still pass the MOT. It can still be useful evidence of likely near-term maintenance.

Should I avoid a car with this advisory?

Not always. The key is understanding severity, likely repair cost and whether the same issue appears repeatedly in the car's history.

Why does this advisory matter to a buyer?

Because it can signal future cost, deferred maintenance or a reason to negotiate. Repeated advisories are often more concerning than a single isolated mention.

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