Porsche

Porsche 911 (2017)

2,061 real MOT outcomes analysed • 95.7% first-time pass rate

2017 Porsche 911

CarHunch analysed 2,061 real MOT records for the 2017 Porsche 911. Real test outcomes — pass rates, defect profiles, mileage data — from verified DVLA records. Updated as new MOTs are recorded.
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AI Analysis Reliability Overview Common Issues Check a Specific Reg Buyer's Checklist Pass Rate by Fuel Mileage Distribution Still on the Road MOT Averages Colour Breakdown Compare Models

The 2017 Porsche 911 is a standout performer, with a 95.4% first-time MOT pass rate that sits well ahead of the UK average of 80%—this is a genuinely reliable car. The dangerous defect rate of 9.6% is reassuringly low, suggesting structural and safety issues are uncommon in this cohort.

At just over 20,000 miles on average, these 911s have been relatively lightly driven for their age, which partly explains the stellar pass rates. With fewer than half a failure per vehicle and 2.4 advisories on average, most owners will encounter only minor maintenance issues at MOT time—but do get a pre-purchase inspection focused on the Porsche-specific drivetrain and cooling systems, as specialist labour can be expensive.

The 2017 Porsche 911 passes its MOT first time more often than most UK vehicles (95.7% vs ~80% average) — and when it does fail, it's usually something minor and cheap to fix.

⚠️ About 1 in 12 of these vehicles have had a dangerous MOT failure at some point — usually tyres or brakes, and often a one-off issue rather than a persistent problem. The group stats won't tell you which one you're looking at.
First-time pass
95.7%
UK average ~80%
Better than average
Dangerous (ever)
9.6%
At least once in MOT history
Check this vehicle
Avg failures / car
0.32
Over 6.1 tests on record
Low
Typical mileage
19k
Middle half: 12k–26k
For context
Good baseline reliability. A 95.7% first-time pass rate puts this well above the UK average — it's a well-sorted vehicle in this age bracket.
🔧 Expect consumable spend. An average of 2.4 advisories per vehicle tells you wear items (tyres, brakes) get flagged regularly. Budget for them — they're not surprises.
🔍 The dangerous defect figure is real. Most are one-off tyre failures or brake issues — not structural problems. But it's exactly why checking the individual vehicle's history is essential, not optional.

These stats describe 2,061 vehicles as a group. The specific vehicle you're looking at could be the one good example or the one outlier. Run its registration to find out.

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What tends to go wrong

Across 2,061 vehicles — figures show how many had each issue flagged at least once in their MOT history.

Tyre wear 22.6%
Nearside Rear Tyre worn close to legal limit/worn on edge · Offside Rear Tyre worn close to legal limit/worn on edge · Offside Front Tyre slightly damaged/cracking or perishing · …
Budget for a full set — on a vehicle this age, tyres are expected consumables. An inspection will confirm how much is left.
Other issues 14.6%
COVID-19 6 MONTH EXTENSION · Windscreen damaged but not adversely affecting driver's view · Front Registration plate does not conform to the specified requirements
Brake wear 3%
Rear Brake pad(s) wearing thin
Ask the seller when brakes were last serviced. If they don't know, factor in the cost.

Data covers a 3-year window centred on 2017.

See this vehicle's full MOT history & AI hunches

Spot recurring advisories, hidden issues, and how it compares to 2,061 Porsche 911 cars.

UK

Before you buy a 2017 Porsche 911

Based on MOT data from 2,061 vehicles — here's what to check.

  • 📋 Check the full MOT history. 9.6% of these vehicles have had a dangerous defect recorded - recurring advisories often signal problems years before they become failures.
    Search the reg on CarHunch for the full MOT history, reliability stats and a free AI-powered analysis of that exact vehicle.
  • 🔍 Brake pipes, sills and subframes are the key areas on a vehicle this age — structural rust is hard to spot without getting underneath. A mechanic will check all of this before you commit, and give you a concrete basis to negotiate on price. Inspection ClickMechanic
  • 📄 Outstanding finance, insurance write-offs and clocking won't appear in the MOT records — a dedicated history check covers all of this. Our link gets you 20% off automatically. History carVertical Get 20% off via CarHunch

Pass Rate by Fuel Type

Fuel type Vehicles Pass rate Avg failures
Petrol (100%) 2,060 95.7% 0.32

Colour Breakdown

Based on 73,233 Porsche 911 vehicles registered in the UK — across all years. From DVLA registration records.

Black 23.1%
16,927
Silver 20.9%
15,301
Blue 17.1%
12,523
Grey 13.4%
9,848
Red 9.7%
7,099
White 9.2%
6,724
Green 2.4%
1,790
Yellow 1.8%
1,343
Orange 1%
697
Purple 0.6%
412
Brown 0.5%
392
Gold 0.2%
177

Mileage Distribution

Most 2017 Porsche 911 vehicles sit in the blue band. If the vehicle you're looking at is outside it, it's either unusually low or high mileage for its age.

18,539
typical
12,206
low mileage
25,623
high mileage

Half of all 2017 Porsche 911 vehicles fall between 12,206 and 25,623 miles.

Is the mileage you're seeing normal?
Under 12,206 miles — lower than most. Could be great, or could be a vehicle that rarely moved. Check test frequency and mileage progression in the MOT history.
12,206–25,623 miles — normal for age. This is where most 2017 Porsche 911s sit.
Over 34,591 miles — higher than typical. Not necessarily a problem, but check service history and look out for advisory build-up on tyres and brakes.

2017 Porsche 911 — Still on the Road

Almost all 2017 Porsche 911s are still on the road.

Strong survival — 1,774 vehicles still getting MOTs in 2025, 94% of the peak.

1,884 1,774 2020 2025

Based on vehicles from this manufacture year that had at least one MOT test in each calendar year. Data from 2020–2025.
* The 2020 dip reflects the government's COVID-19 MOT exemption, which allowed certificates to be extended by six months — fewer tests were conducted that year.

MOT History Averages

6.1
Avg MOT tests per vehicle
0.32
Avg failures per vehicle
2.4
Avg advisories per vehicle
Other model years — Porsche 911: All 911 years → Which year to buy? →
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