Used buying checklist
Suzuki Sv1000 reliability, common problems and used buying checks
A used Suzuki Sv1000 looks better than average for reliability in UK MOT data: 9.9% of 1,272 tests failed, compared with 18.7% across all indexed models. A good example should have a clean MOT history for lights and electrical, brakes, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.
It can be, if the exact car has a clean history for lights and electrical, brakes, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.
Start with lights and electrical, brakes, 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.
- 9.9% MOT failure rate
- Median tested mileage 25,288 miles
- 126 failed MOT tests analysed
Lights and electrical is the clearest area to check
Lights and electrical is the clearest named problem area in this model's MOT history (4.5 MOT notes per 100 tests). Example MOT phrases from this area include does not illuminate simultaneously with the position lamp(s), inoperative in the case of a single lamp or all lamps, and light intensity severely reduced.
Example MOT phrases to search in the car's history:
- does not illuminate simultaneously with the position lamp(s)
- inoperative in the case of a single lamp or all lamps
- light intensity severely reduced
- slightly damaged
- remains on when the brakes are released
- indicates excessive fluctuation of brake effort
- The less effective brake control does not achieve an efficiency of 25%
- does not illuminate by the operation of both brake controls
- has a major leak of exhaust gases
- fouling on the fuel tank or bodywork on full lock
Focus on lights and electrical, brakes, and emissions, engine, and exhaust
The model's recorded failure rate is 9.9%, -8.8 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 analysed1,272 tests
- Median tested mileage25,288 miles
- Failed MOT tests126
Should you buy a used Suzuki Sv1000?
90.1% of the MOT tests we analysed for this model passed. The model's recorded failure rate is 9.9%, -8.8 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.
- Repeat unresolved MOT notes for lights and electrical, brakes, and emissions, engine, and exhaust
- lights and electrical 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 "does not illuminate simultaneously with the position lamp(s)"
It can be, if the exact car has a clean history for lights and electrical, brakes, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.
Start with lights and electrical, brakes, and emissions, engine, and exhaust, then compare the car's mileage and recall record below.
Lights and electrical is the clearest named problem area in the MOT history (4.5 MOT notes per 100 tests). These counts are issue notes, not failure rates, because a single MOT can list several faults.
Past 100k miles on the Suzuki Sv1000, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical.
The MOT failure rate rises from 6.7% at 10-15 years to 9.9% 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%.
Start with lights and electrical, brakes, emissions, engine, and exhaust, and corrosion and structure. The checklist on this page explains why each area is being recommended, what to inspect, and what to ask the seller.
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 lights and electrical, brakes, emissions, engine, and exhaust, and corrosion and structure. 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.
-
Lights and electrical Seen in MOT results
Lights and electrical is one of the most common MOT problem areas for this model (4.5 MOT notes per 100 tests).
What to check: Check every lamp, warning light, horn, battery condition, and dashboard messages.
-
Brakes Seen in MOT results
Brakes is one of the most common MOT problem areas for this model (4.3 MOT notes per 100 tests).
What to check: Check brake pipe condition, braking balance, handbrake hold, and recent brake work.
-
Emissions, engine, and exhaust Seen in MOT results
Emissions, engine, and exhaust is one of the most common MOT problem areas for this model (2.8 MOT notes per 100 tests).
What to check: Check warning lights, smoke, exhaust leaks, recent emissions failures, and service history.
-
Corrosion and structure Seen in MOT results
Corrosion and structure is one of the most common MOT problem areas for this model (0.6 MOT notes per 100 tests).
What to check: Inspect sills, subframes, mounting points, arches, and underside corrosion advisories.
-
Suspension and steering Seen in MOT results
Suspension and steering is one of the most common MOT problem areas for this model (0.2 MOT notes per 100 tests).
What to check: Listen for knocks, check uneven tyre wear, and inspect steering play.
-
Other MOT issues Seen in MOT results
Other MOT issues is one of the most common MOT problem areas for this model (84.8 MOT notes per 100 tests).
What to check: Read the MOT history closely and ask what has changed since the last test.
What changes with mileage?
Past 100k miles on the Suzuki Sv1000, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical.
Common MOT problem areas
Common faults: what usually fails on this model?
Lights and electrical is the clearest named problem area in the MOT history (4.5 MOT notes per 100 tests). These counts are issue notes, not failure rates, because a single MOT can list several faults.
Mileage and age checks
Mileage changes: what starts showing up after high mileage?
Past 100k miles on the Suzuki Sv1000, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical. On lower-mileage cars, the most common named areas are lights and electrical, brakes, and emissions, engine, and exhaust.
| Mileage range | Tests | Vehicles | Failure rate (vs all models) | Median mileage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0-50k | 1,184 | 1,064 | 9.9%-0.9 percentage points vs all models | 24,225 miles |
| 50-100k | 77 | 71 | 10.4%-10.3 percentage points vs all models | 57,295 miles |
| 100-150k | 3 | 2 | 33.3%+7.1 percentage points vs all models | 103,524 miles |
| 200k+ | 1 | 1 | 0.0%-26.6 percentage points vs all models | 239,264 miles |
Problem areas by mileage
Past 100k miles on the Suzuki Sv1000, MOT records most often point to lights and electrical.
| Mileage range | Car areas most often recorded | Specific MOT defect examples |
|---|---|---|
| 0-50k |
|
|
| 50-100k |
|
|
| 100-150k |
|
|
Fair comparisons: is this problem normal for its age?
The MOT failure rate rises from 6.7% at 10-15 years to 9.9% 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 9.9% for 15+ years cars, based on 1,257 tests.
| Age range | Tests | Vehicles | Failure rate (vs all models) | Median age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10-15 years 2011–2016 reg. |
15 | 14 | 6.7%-16.9 percentage points vs all models | 14.6 years |
| 15+ years pre-2011 reg. |
1,257 | 1,129 | 9.9%-16.0 percentage points vs all models | 19.1 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 Suzuki Sv1000. Each link runs the search and lands on the relevant section of this report.
Related reliability guides
See where this model sits against other Suzuki reports by MOT failure rate and common problem area.
Compare high-confidence model reports across all makes.
Use the fleet mileage baseline before checking this model's own mileage table.
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.