Used buying checklist

Mercedes-Benz X reliability, common problems and used buying checks

A used Mercedes-Benz X looks better than average for reliability in UK MOT data: 14.5% of 4,595 tests failed, compared with 18.7% across all indexed models. A good example should have a clean MOT history for windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.

Is a used Mercedes-Benz X a good buy?

It can be, if the exact car has a clean history for windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.

What should I check first?

Start with windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust, then compare the car's mileage and recall record below.

Sources used: DVSA MOT tests (Apr 2026); vehicle recalls (Apr 2026); MOT fault wording (May 2025). MOT data does not capture every reliability issue, especially intermittent engine, gearbox or infotainment faults that do not appear during the test.

Before you view one

Focus on windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust

The model's recorded failure rate is 14.5%, -4.2 percentage points compared with the average across all models. Use the seller questions below to check whether repeat MOT notes have actually been repaired.

  • MOT tests analysed4,595 tests
  • Median tested mileage47,312 miles
  • Failed MOT tests668
Used buyer verdict

Should you buy a used Mercedes-Benz X?

85.5% of the MOT tests we analysed for this model passed. The model's recorded failure rate is 14.5%, -4.2 percentage points compared with the average across all models. This is a buying brief for the exact car in front of you: clean repeat history matters more than badge reputation.

Better than average in our MOT data
Green light if The car has a tidy MOT pattern, recent repairs for windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust, matching tyres, and paperwork for service or recall work.
Renegotiate if The latest MOT mentions windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust, consumables are due together, or the seller cannot show what was fixed after advisories.
Walk away if Dangerous defects, corrosion near structural areas, warning lights, or the same component family keep returning without clear repair evidence.
  • Repeat unresolved MOT notes for windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust
  • windscreen, wipers, and mirrors appearing across more than one MOT
  • Any dangerous MOT failure on the exact car, especially if the same area appears again later
  • A seller who cannot explain MOT wording such as "damaged but not adversely affecting driver's view"
Is a used Mercedes-Benz X a good buy?

It can be, if the exact car has a clean history for windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.

What should I check first?

Start with windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and emissions, engine, and exhaust, then compare the car's mileage and recall record below.

What usually fails on the Mercedes-Benz X?

Windscreen, wipers, and mirrors is the clearest named problem area in the MOT history (8.1 MOT notes per 100 tests). These counts are issue notes, not failure rates, because a single MOT can list several faults.

What starts showing up after high mileage on the Mercedes-Benz X?

Past 100k miles on the Mercedes-Benz X, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical, windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.

Is a Mercedes-Benz X fault normal for its age?

The MOT failure rate rises from 13.3% at 0-3 years to 50.0% at 15+ years. Compare the car with the nearest age range before treating a fault as normal wear or a warning sign. The average MOT failure rate across all models in the same dataset is 18.7%.

What should I inspect first on a used Mercedes-Benz X?

Start with windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, emissions, engine, and exhaust, and tyres and wheels. The checklist on this page explains why each area is being recommended, what to inspect, and what to ask the seller.

Are there Mercedes-Benz X safety recalls to know about?

No relevant recall notices are listed in this report, but recall completion is tied to the exact vehicle, so the seller should still be able to prove recall status.

What should I check first?

Start with windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, emissions, engine, and exhaust, and tyres and wheels. The checklist on this page explains why each area is being recommended, what to inspect, and what to ask the seller. Each item shows whether it comes from MOT results, recall notices, or a standard used-car check.

What changes with mileage?

Past 100k miles on the Mercedes-Benz X, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical, windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.

0-50k miles windscreen, wipers, and mirrors and lights and electrical. 2,481 tests in this mileage range
50-100k miles windscreen, wipers, and mirrors and lights and electrical. 1,801 tests in this mileage range
100-150k miles lights and electrical and windscreen, wipers, and mirrors. 221 tests in this mileage range
150-200k miles lights and electrical and emissions, engine, and exhaust. 38 tests in this mileage range
200k+ miles lights and electrical. 3 tests in this mileage range
Common MOT problem areas
4,595 MOT tests analysed for this model
3,776 Distinct vehicles represented
14.5% Recorded MOT test failure rate — -4.2 percentage points vs all models

Common faults: what usually fails on this model?

Windscreen, wipers, and mirrors is the clearest named problem area in the MOT history (8.1 MOT notes per 100 tests). These counts are issue notes, not failure rates, because a single MOT can list several faults.

Windscreen, wipers, and mirrors
  • damaged but not adversely affecting driver's view
  • does not clear the windscreen effectively
8.1 MOT notes per 100 tests
Lights and electrical
  • inoperative in the case of multiple lamps or light sources
  • warning lamp indicates a fault
7.6 MOT notes per 100 tests
Emissions, engine, and exhaust
  • has a major leak of exhaust gases
  • leaking excessively from engine
2.6 MOT notes per 100 tests
Tyres and wheels
  • Nail in tyre
  • on a single line braking system has inadequate effort at a wheel
2.5 MOT notes per 100 tests
Suspension and steering
  • ball joint excessively worn
  • ball joint dust cover severely deteriorated
1.2 MOT notes per 100 tests
Corrosion and structure
  • corroded so that its cross sectional area is reduced and seriously weakened
  • excessively corroded
0.6 MOT notes per 100 tests
Brakes
  • defective but brake still operating
0.0 MOT notes per 100 tests
Mileage and age checks

Mileage changes: what starts showing up after high mileage?

Past 100k miles on the Mercedes-Benz X, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical, windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, and emissions, engine, and exhaust. On lower-mileage cars, the most common named areas are windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, lights and electrical, and tyres and wheels.

Mileage range Tests Vehicles Failure rate (vs all models) Median mileage
0-50k 2,481 2,126 12.6%+1.8 percentage points vs all models 34,775 miles
50-100k 1,801 1,461 16.8%-4.0 percentage points vs all models 64,641 miles
100-150k 221 175 19.5%-6.7 percentage points vs all models 114,338 miles
150-200k 38 30 21.1%-6.2 percentage points vs all models 159,839 miles
200k+ 3 2 33.3%+6.8 percentage points vs all models 214,629 miles

Problem areas by mileage

Past 100k miles on the Mercedes-Benz X, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical, windscreen, wipers, and mirrors, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.

Mileage range Car areas most often recorded Specific MOT defect examples
0-50k
  • Windscreen, wipers, and mirrors (6.1 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Lights and electrical (5.0 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Tyres and wheels (2.5 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • No exact MOT wording is available for this mileage range.
50-100k
  • Windscreen, wipers, and mirrors (10.1 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Lights and electrical (9.9 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Emissions, engine, and exhaust (3.1 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • No exact MOT wording is available for this mileage range.
100-150k
  • Lights and electrical (18.1 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Windscreen, wipers, and mirrors (16.7 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Emissions, engine, and exhaust (7.2 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • No exact MOT wording is available for this mileage range.
150-200k
  • Lights and electrical (18.4 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Emissions, engine, and exhaust (13.2 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • Windscreen, wipers, and mirrors (10.5 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • No exact MOT wording is available for this mileage range.
200k+
  • Lights and electrical (33.3 MOT notes per 100 tests)
  • No exact MOT wording is available for this mileage range.

Fair comparisons: is this problem normal for its age?

The MOT failure rate rises from 13.3% at 0-3 years to 50.0% at 15+ years. Compare the car with the nearest age range before treating a fault as normal wear or a warning sign. The average MOT failure rate across all models in the same dataset is 18.7%. The highest failure rate by age is 50.0% for 15+ years cars, based on 2 tests.

Age range Tests Vehicles Failure rate (vs all models) Median age
0-3 years
2023–2026 reg.
460 407 13.3%+4.8 percentage points vs all models 3.0 years
3-6 years
2020–2023 reg.
4,116 3,373 14.7%+4.1 percentage points vs all models 4.2 years
6-10 years
2016–2020 reg.
17 16 11.8%-4.9 percentage points vs all models 6.0 years
15+ years
pre-2011 reg.
2 1 50.0%+24.1 percentage points vs all models 38.3 years
Recall records and data freshness

Recall context: are there safety notices to know about?

No relevant recall notices are listed in this report, but recall completion is tied to the exact vehicle, so the seller should still be able to prove recall status.

No relevant recall notices are listed here. Recall completion is still vehicle-specific, so check the exact car with the manufacturer or DVSA.

Related searches

Common ways people look up the Mercedes-Benz X. Each link runs the search and lands on the relevant section of this report.

Related reliability guides

Compare Mercedes-Benz models

See where this model sits against other Mercedes-Benz reports by MOT failure rate and common problem area.

Used car reliability rankings

Compare high-confidence model reports across all makes.

High-mileage reliability

Use the fleet mileage baseline before checking this model's own mileage table.

MOT failures by age

Compare this model's age pattern with the wider MOT baseline.

Sources used: DVSA MOT tests (Apr 2026); vehicle recalls (Apr 2026); MOT fault wording (May 2025). These are patterns from many MOT tests and recall notices. They help you decide what to inspect and what to ask; they do not certify the condition of one specific car.

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