Seat Arona 2019: reliability & common MOT faults

On the 2019 Seat Arona, MOT failures for Track rod end (front) and Service brake performance (rear) show up more often than on similar cars of the same age and mileage. Figures come from UK DVSA open data for tests in 2025 (2,373 failed first-attempt tests). Figures are among first-attempt failed MOT tests, not among all tests.

2,373 failed first-attempt tests · 14,176 first tests (test year 2025)

Track rod end (front) — about 6.7× more often than on similar cars.

  • Track rod end (front) — about 6.7× more often than similar cars
  • Service brake performance (rear) — about 2.9× more often than similar cars
  • Seat belts — Condition (rear) — about 2.6× more often than similar cars

Common faults

Failure patterns that show up more often on this registration year than on similar cars.

These MOT failure patterns show up more often on this registration year than on similar cars of the same class, age, and mileage.

Based on 2,373 failed first-attempt tests in 2025.

Track rod end (front)

This failure pattern appears about 6.7× more often than on similar cars — recorded on 351 failed first-attempt tests; 14.8% of failed tests for this model year.

Front 351 failures ×6.7 14.8% of failed first tests Strong

# Fault pattern Location Failures vs similar cars Share of fails Confidence
1 Track rod end (front)
Steering > Steering linkage components > Track rod end
Front 351 ×6.7 14.8% Strong
2 Service brake performance (rear)
Brakes > Brake performance > Service brake performance > Rbt > Service brake performance
Rear 65 ×2.9 2.7% Possible
3 Seat belts — Condition (rear)
Seat belts and supplementary restraint systems > Seat belts > Condition
Rear 56 ×2.6 2.4% Possible
4 Coil spring (rear)
Suspension > Springs > Coil springs > Coil spring
Rear 123 ×2.4 5.2% Possible

Only patterns that clear minimum sample and elevation thresholds are shown (at least 20 failures and about 2.0× more often than similar cars).

Note: Rates and comparisons are among first-attempt failed tests, not all MOTs. Patterns come from MOT defect codes — not manufacturer service bulletins, recalls, or a diagnosis of any individual car. Failures and advisories are listed separately.

Wear patterns

Usage and mileage effects that often track road use rather than model design.

These patterns look like wear or usage effects rather than model-specific design faults. Tyres, brake friction material, and alignment-related defects often track mileage and road use.

# Pattern Location Failures vs similar cars Share of fails Confidence
1 Brake discs (rear)
Brakes > Mechanical brake components > Brake discs and drums > Brake discs
Rear 119 ×3.6 5.0% Wear
Note: These patterns are not treated as a model design fault in our common-faults ranking.

FAQs

Short answers about how to read this model-year guide.

We do not show a single reliability score for the 2019 Seat Arona on this page. Among 2,373 failed first-attempt MOT tests (test year 2025), Track rod end (front) appears more often than on similar cars (about 6.7× more often than similar cars; 351 observed failures; 14.8% of failed tests). Treat this as a pre-purchase checklist from DVSA open data — not a guarantee for any individual car.
Among failed first-attempt tests we highlight patterns that appear more often than on similar cars. Top example: Track rod end (front) (about 6.7× more often than similar cars; 351 observed failures; 14.8% of failed tests). These are statistical signals, not a diagnosis of any individual car.
Track rod end (front) shows up more often than on similar cars (about 6.7× more often than similar cars; 351 observed failures; 14.8% of failed tests). That does not prove a design fault — age, mileage, and how the car was used still matter. Treat it as a pre-purchase check point, not a manufacturer service bulletin.
Common MOT problem areas for the 2019 Seat Arona include Track rod end (front), Service brake performance (rear), Seat belts — Condition (rear). These patterns show up more often than on similar cars after we filter out sparse noise — not a full list of every possible fault on an individual car.
This page highlights MOT failure patterns for the 2019 Seat Arona (registration year) using UK DVSA open data for the selected test year. Patterns are compared with cars of a similar age and mileage. It is a buyer checklist from MOT defect statistics — not a full service history or manufacturer service-bulletin list.
No. MOT tests do not cover engine internals, gearboxes, or many electronic modules. Patterns here come from MOT defect statistics only and should not be read as engine or gearbox reliability scores.
PRS means the car failed items that were fixed at the test station and then passed the same day. We count PRS as a first-attempt fail in headline rates so same-day repairs do not hide problems.
We count how often each MOT defect pattern appears among failed first-attempt tests for this model year, then compare that with similar cars. We compare this model year with other Class 4 cars of similar age and mileage in the same test year. This model family is left out of the peer group so the car is not measured against itself. A higher multiple means the pattern shows up more often than expected for similar car…

About this data

How this page is built and what it can (and can't) say.

These figures come from UK MOT open data for this model year. We surface common failure patterns against similar cars — not a full reliability score, and not a pass/fail verdict on any individual vehicle.

2024 2025

What we include

UK Class 4 cars only. Normal MOT tests (not retests); first test per vehicle per calendar year; results pass, PRS, or fail.

Same-day repairs

PRS means the car failed items that were fixed at the test station and then passed the same day. We count PRS as a first-attempt fail in headline rates so same-day repairs do not hide problems.

How we compare

We compare this model year with other Class 4 cars of similar age and mileage in the same test year. This model family is left out of the peer group so the car is not measured against itself.

What this does not cover

  • MOTs do not cover engine internals, gearboxes, or many electronics — this is not a full reliability score.
  • Common faults come from MOT defect stats, not manufacturer TSBs or recalls.
  • Age and mileage matching reduces — but does not remove — differences in how cars were used and maintained.
  • We never invent pass rates, star scores, or ranks when those data marts are missing.

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

Most reliable Seat models

See brand-wide MOT rankings and year guidance for Seat (separate from this model-year report).