Suzuki An 400 AM2 Reliability, MOT Pass Rate & Common Faults
Free Suzuki An 400 AM2 car check
Is the Suzuki An 400 AM2 reliable? We analysed 298 real MOT tests across 207 vehicles to find out.
Got a specific Suzuki An 400 AM2? Enter the reg for a free check:
The Suzuki An 400 AM2 is above average for reliability based on real UK MOT data. Here's everything you need to know before buying a used Suzuki An 400 AM2.
Suzuki An 400 AM2 Number Plates
Number plates registered to a Suzuki An 400 AM2. Click on any registration for full vehicle details — including MOT history, mileage records, previous owners and damage history.
Suzuki An 400 AM2 MOT Pass Rate by Year
How likely is a Suzuki An 400 AM2 to pass its MOT? Here's the pass rate for each registration year, newest first.
Suzuki An 400 AM2 Common Faults & Problems
These are the most common serious faults found on Suzuki An 400 AM2 models during MOT testing — flagged as dangerous or major failures that need immediate attention.
Suzuki An 400 AM2 Mileage — What's Normal?
How many miles does a typical Suzuki An 400 AM2 owner drive per year? Use this to check if a car you're looking at has suspiciously low or high mileage.
Suzuki An 400 AM2 MOT Data by Registration Year
Full breakdown of pass rate and mileage for each year. Use this to compare the Suzuki An 400 AM2 year you're looking at.
| Year | Tests | Pass Rate | Low Mi. | Typical Mi. | High Mi. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 149 | 98.0% | 1,693 | 3,523 | 6,673 |
| 2021 | 104 | 97.1% | 2,300 | 3,776 | 5,760 |
How Long Does a Suzuki An 400 AM2 Last?
Based on 207 Suzuki An 400 AM2 vehicles on UK roads.
Suzuki An 400 AM2 Mileage Distribution
Total mileage recorded across all Suzuki An 400 AM2 MOT tests. If the car you're looking at is above the 75th percentile, it's done more miles than most.
Best Year to Buy a Used Suzuki An 400 AM2
Based on MOT pass rates across all registration years with sufficient test data.
98.0% MOT pass rate from 149 tests
97.1% MOT pass rate from 104 tests
The best year to buy a used Suzuki An 400 AM2 is 2022, which has the highest MOT pass rate at 98.0% across 149 tests. The 2021 model year has the lowest pass rate at 97.1% — if you're looking at one from that year, budget for potential repairs and get a thorough pre-purchase inspection.
How Does the Suzuki An 400 AM2 Compare?
MOT pass rates compared to similar models. Click any model for the full breakdown.
| Model | Pass Rate | Tests | Typical Mileage | Lifespan |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suzuki An 400 AM2 THIS CAR | 97.7% | 298 | 3,750 mi | — yrs |
| Suzuki Swift | 76.1% | 2,247,517 | 51,601 mi | 31 yrs |
| Suzuki Alto | 74% | 1,154,186 | 41,167 mi | 28 yrs |
| Suzuki Grand Vitara | 76.2% | 1,025,634 | 67,542 mi | 28 yrs |
| Triumph Daytona MOTO2 765 | 94.2% | 498 | 2,726 mi | — yrs |
Compared to the Suzuki Swift (76.1% pass rate) and the Suzuki Alto (74.0% pass rate), the Suzuki An 400 AM2 outperforms both on MOT reliability.
Found a Suzuki An 400 AM2 you like?
Run a full vehicle history check on the specific car. See finance, stolen, write-off, mileage and MOT data for that exact vehicle.
Check a specific Suzuki An 400 AM2Should you buy a used Suzuki An 400 AM2?
The Suzuki An 400 AM2 has an overall MOT pass rate of 97.7% across 298 real MOT tests — comfortably above the UK average, which puts it among the more reliable models on UK roads.
On the safety side, the most frequently flagged dangerous fault is brake pad(s) less than 1.0 mm thick. Dangerous faults cause an immediate MOT failure and mean the vehicle is not roadworthy until repaired. If you're viewing a Suzuki An 400 AM2 with an expired or recently passed MOT, ask the seller whether any dangerous faults were found and fixed during the last test.
A typical Suzuki An 400 AM2 owner drives around 832 miles per year. If the car you're looking at is significantly above this, expect more wear on suspension, brakes and tyres. If it's well below, the vehicle may have been sitting unused — check for perished rubber, corroded discs and stale fluids.
Before committing to a purchase, we recommend running a full vehicle history check on the specific car. This will reveal any outstanding finance, stolen markers, write-off history and mileage discrepancies that the seller may not disclose — and that the MOT data alone can't tell you.