White Mercedes Sprinter panel van parked on a red-brick city street
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How to Sell a Van in the UK: The Complete 2026 Seller Guide

Selling

Selling a van isn't quite selling a car. Your buyers are often tradespeople and businesses who care about payload and clean-air-zone compliance more than alloy wheels, the VAT position changes who'll buy it, and the van has usually done real work. Do it right and a private sale will beat any instant-buyer quote by a comfortable margin. This guide walks you through the whole process — from choosing how to sell, to handing over the keys safely.

Step 1: Choose How to Sell Your Van

There's no single best route — it depends on whether you want the most money or the least hassle. Here's how the main options compare.

Selling routeBest price?SpeedEffort
Private sale (e.g. car-spot)HighestDays to weeksSome
Instant van buyer (WeBuyAnyVan etc.)LowestSame dayMinimal
Dealer part-exchangeLowFastLeast
Online dealer auction (e.g. Motorway)Fair–goodA few daysLow
  • Private sale (e.g. car-spot)

    Best price?
    Highest
    Speed
    Days to weeks
    Effort
    Some
  • Instant van buyer (WeBuyAnyVan etc.)

    Best price?
    Lowest
    Speed
    Same day
    Effort
    Minimal
  • Dealer part-exchange

    Best price?
    Low
    Speed
    Fast
    Effort
    Least
  • Online dealer auction (e.g. Motorway)

    Best price?
    Fair–good
    Speed
    A few days
    Effort
    Low
Ways to sell a van in the UK

If your van is tidy, ULEZ compliant and desirable (a Transit, Sprinter, Vivaro or Transit Custom in good order), a private sale will almost always net you the most. If it's high-mileage, damaged or you simply need it gone this week, an instant buyer or auction trades money for speed.

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Step 2: Prepare the Van for Sale

Presentation matters more on a van than people think — a clean, empty load bay signals a van that's been looked after, while clutter and grime make buyers mentally knock money off for the clean-up job. Work through the basics before you photograph anything.

Before-you-list checklist

8 items

Step 3: Price It Right

Price too high and the van sits for weeks; too low and you leave money on the table. Start with a free instant valuation for an honest range, then cross-check against live listings for your exact model, wheelbase and roof height. Remember vans are priced differently to cars — Euro 6/ULEZ status and VAT can swing the figure by thousands, and high mileage is normal and far less punishing than it is on a car.

Be explicit about VAT in the price

A trade buyer's first question is almost always 'is that plus VAT?'. If your van is VAT-qualifying, state the price as 'plus VAT' so a VAT-registered buyer knows they can reclaim it — and so your advert isn't unfairly compared against a cheaper-looking VAT-inclusive one. If there's no VAT to add, say 'no VAT' clearly; it's a selling point to private buyers.

Step 4: Write an Advert Van Buyers Trust

Van buyers are practical. They scan for the figures that tell them whether the van fits the job and the clean-air zone — so lead with the specifics, not adjectives.

  • The essentials up top: make, model, year, mileage, wheelbase and roof height (e.g. L2 H2), payload, Euro standard / ULEZ status, VAT position, MOT expiry and service history.
  • Be honest about condition: note load-area wear, dents and any advisories. Buyers expect a working van to have marks — hiding them just wastes everyone's time at the viewing.
  • List the useful extras: air con, tow bar, tail-lift, parking sensors, Bluetooth, internal racking, twin side doors — these are the details that win one van over another.
  • Photos that cover the job: front three-quarter, both sides, rear doors open, the empty load area, the cab and dashboard, the odometer, and clear shots of any damage. Bright, daytime photos always beat a dark-yard snap.

Step 5: Handle Enquiries and Viewings Safely

Most buyers are genuine, but the same private-sale safety rules apply to vans as to cars.

  • Keep it on-platform: message through car-spot rather than handing out your personal number to every enquiry.
  • Meet in daylight at a sensible location and have someone with you. Let a buyer inspect the van and load area thoroughly.
  • Ride along on test drives and check the buyer holds a valid licence and is insured to drive the van.
  • Be wary of overpayment and courier scams — anyone offering to "arrange collection and pay extra" before seeing the van is a classic red flag.

Step 6: Take Payment and Complete the Paperwork

Get the money cleared before the van leaves, then square away the documents the same day.

  • Payment: a bank transfer you can confirm has landed in your account is safest. Be cautious with large cash sums and never release the van against a pending or "instant" payment you haven't seen clear.
  • Tell the DVLA: notify them of the sale online the moment it completes — it's free and immediate, and stops you being liable for the van.
  • Hand over: the green new-keeper slip (V5C/2), both sets of keys, the service history and MOT certificate.
  • If sold plus VAT: issue a proper VAT invoice showing the net price, the VAT and your VAT number — the buyer needs it to reclaim, and you need it for your records.
  • Cancel: your insurance and any road tax refund, and remove the van from any fleet or telematics account.

Why Sell Your Van on car-spot

car-spot puts your van in front of private buyers and trades looking for exactly your model — and you keep every penny of the sale price.

  • Free 30-day listings: list your van at no cost and reach buyers immediately. Extend for another 14 days at £6.50 or 30 days at £10.00 if you need longer. No commission, ever.
  • AI listing tools: photo sorting, a specification assistant and a description generator help you build a complete, trustworthy advert in minutes.
  • Feature-to-photo highlighting: tag a tow bar, tail-lift or ply-lined load area to the photo that proves it.
  • On-platform messaging: talk to buyers without handing out your personal number.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Sources & methodology

Published
· 15 days ago
Region
United Kingdom
Author

Figures and pricing are reviewed at least every six months. Read our full guide methodology for sources, freshness policy, and editorial principles.

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