Volkswagen ID.4 service & repair costs in the UK
Honest 2026 prices for everything from a basic oil change to a full clutch replacement on a Volkswagen ID.4, based on what UK independent garages are actually charging right now.
Got 30 seconds? Check your reg →The Volkswagen ID.4 is one of the UK's most popular electric cars, and EV servicing is a big point of confusion for owners. The good news: there's significantly less to maintain than on a combustion car. The flip side: when something does need fixing, specialist EV diagnostic equipment can mean fewer garages can do the work.
This guide breaks down what you should actually be paying for Volkswagen ID.4 services and repairs at a UK independent garage in 2026 — including what doesn't apply (no oil changes, no spark plugs, no timing belts), and what does (12V battery, brake fluid, tyres, suspension).
Volkswagen ID.4 repair prices at a glance
| Service | Independent garage |
|---|---|
| MOT test | £55 |
| Full service | £255–£375 |
| Interim service | £160–£230 |
| Oil + filter only | £80–£160 |
| Front brake pads | £170–£270 |
| Front brake discs + pads | £305–£545 |
| Rear brake pads | £145–£240 |
| Rear brake discs + pads | £270–£475 |
| Brake fluid change | £45–£85 |
| Wheel alignment | £35–£70 |
| Drop links (pair) | £125–£255 |
| Shock absorbers (pair) | £340–£680 |
| Battery replacement | £160–£305 |
| Air-con regas | £120–£150 |
Prices reflect typical UK independent garages. Main dealer pricing on a Volkswagen ID.4 typically adds 30–50%. EV-specific diagnostic work may carry a £20-40 premium at non-specialist garages.
How much does an EV "service" cost on a Volkswagen ID.4?
EV servicing is fundamentally different from combustion cars. There's no engine oil, no oil filter, no spark plugs, no timing belt, and no exhaust system. What's left to inspect:
- Brake system (fluid, pads, discs, calipers)
- Suspension and steering components
- Tyres and wheel alignment
- Cabin filter
- Wipers and washer fluid
- Battery cooling system (coolant level)
- 12V auxiliary battery
- HV battery diagnostic scan
An "EV health check" or full EV inspection costs around £255–£375 at a UK independent. Some garages call this an "annual EV service" — they all mean roughly the same thing. Don't pay combustion-car service prices for EV work, since there's significantly less to do.
Volkswagen ID.4 brake replacement costs
Front brake pads on a Volkswagen ID.4 should cost £170–£270 fitted at an independent garage. If the discs need doing too — usually because they're scored, warped, or below minimum thickness — budget £305–£545 for both pads and discs together.
Rear brakes are typically a bit cheaper: £145–£240 for pads only, or £270–£475 for rear discs and pads together. EVs typically wear brake pads slower than combustion cars because regenerative braking does most of the deceleration work — but discs can develop surface rust from underuse, so they sometimes need replacing earlier than expected.
You should also factor in a brake fluid change every two years (around £45–£85) — old fluid absorbs moisture and reduces braking performance, and EVs are particularly sensitive to this since the brake fluid system also handles the regenerative-to-friction handoff.
Volkswagen ID.4 EV-specific repairs
EVs have far fewer mechanical wear items than combustion cars — no clutch, no timing belt, no exhaust, no spark plugs, no fuel system. Main repair items on the ID.4:
- 12V auxiliary battery: £160–£305 — this is the small lead-acid battery that runs the car's electronics, totally separate from the high-voltage traction battery. Lifespan is similar to a combustion car battery (4–6 years).
- Brake fluid change: £45–£85 every 2 years
- Coolant flush (battery cooling): typically every 4 years on most modern EVs
- Cabin air filter: usually replaced as part of an annual service
- Wipers and tyres: standard wear items, no different from combustion cars
The big-money concern with EVs is the high-voltage traction battery, but warranties typically run 7-8 years or 100,000 miles, and real-world degradation has proven much slower than initially feared. Out-of-warranty traction battery replacement is a £5,000+ job — but it's exceptionally rare.
Volkswagen ID.4 suspension and steering
The most common suspension job on a Volkswagen ID.4 is replacing the drop links — those small connecting rods between the anti-roll bar and suspension. They typically wear out at 50,000–80,000 miles and cost around £125–£255 to replace as a pair fitted.
If the ride has gone bouncy or you fail an MOT on suspension, you might need shock absorbers. A pair (front or rear) costs £340–£680 fitted. Always replace them in pairs — fitting one new shock alongside an old one creates uneven handling.
Wheel alignment (tracking) costs the same regardless of car: around £35–£70 for a 4-wheel laser alignment. Worth doing whenever you fit new tyres or after hitting a kerb hard.
Volkswagen ID.4 air-con regas costs
The price of an air-con regas depends on which gas your ID.4 uses, not the make or model. EVs almost always use the newer R1234yf refrigerant, which is significantly more expensive than older R134a.
Typical regas prices:
- Pre-2011 (R134a): £60–£90
- 2011–2015 (could be either): £70–£150
- 2016+ (R1234yf): £120–£150
Manufacturers recommend a regas every two years to maintain cooling efficiency. If your air-con isn't blowing cold, a regas usually fixes it — but if it stops cooling again within a few months, you've got a leak, not just a low charge.
How to avoid being overcharged on your Volkswagen ID.4
A few rules that apply to almost every job on this car:
- Always get the work itemised in writing. "Brakes — £350" tells you nothing. You want parts and labour broken out, with the brand of parts specified.
- Get at least two quotes for anything over £200. Prices on bigger jobs vary massively between garages — sometimes 50% or more for the exact same work.
- Ask which parts they're using. OEM Volkswagen parts are most expensive; quality aftermarket (Bosch, Brembo, ATE, Lemförder) is the sweet spot; budget unbranded parts are risky on a premium car.
- Decline upsells until you can verify them. If a garage adds discovered work to your bill mid-job, ask to see the worn part before agreeing.
- Use specialist independents where possible. Volkswagen specialists (not main dealers) usually charge 30–40% less than franchise garages while using equivalent parts and expertise.
Frequently asked questions
How often should I service my Volkswagen ID.4?
Volkswagen typically recommends an annual EV health check, regardless of mileage. There's less to do than a combustion service, but it's still worth doing for warranty compliance and safety inspection.
Can I service my Volkswagen ID.4 at any garage without voiding the warranty?
Yes — under EU Block Exemption rules (which the UK still follows), any independent garage can service your car without voiding the manufacturer warranty, as long as they use parts of equivalent quality and follow the manufacturer's service schedule. They just need to stamp the service book.
What's the most common Volkswagen ID.4 repair?
EVs have far fewer wear items than combustion cars. The most common repairs are tyres (wear faster due to instant torque and heavier weight), brake fluid changes, 12V battery replacement, and the occasional cabin filter.
Is the Volkswagen ID.4 expensive to maintain?
Maintenance on a ID.4 runs higher than mainstream cars due to OEM parts costs and longer labour times. Expect to pay 30–50% more than equivalent mainstream alternatives. EVs in general are roughly 30-40% cheaper to maintain than combustion equivalents over a 5-year ownership period, since most of the wear items don't exist.
Should I use a main dealer or an independent garage?
For most Volkswagen ID.4 owners, an independent garage is the better choice. Specialist independents that focus on Volkswagen use the same diagnostic equipment as the dealer but charge 30–40% less. Main dealers make sense for warranty work, recalls, or particularly complex electronic faults that need manufacturer-specific diagnostic tools.
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