DIY vs Garage Servicing — What Can You Do Yourself?

Quick DIY Jobs (No Experience Needed)

Replace Wiper Blades

Difficulty: Dead simple. Time: 5 minutes. Cost: £10-20. Tools: None.

Every fitting type is tool-free. This is your starter DIY job. You cannot damage your car.

Replace Bulbs

Difficulty: Easy. Time: 2-5 minutes per bulb. Cost: £2-10 per bulb. Tools: None (or small screwdriver for some cars).

Interior lights twist out or pop out. Some headlights require removing the headlight surround, which is done with clips, not screws. Avoid touching the new bulb glass — oils can shorten its life.

Replace Cabin Air Filter

Difficulty: Easy. Time: 5 minutes. Cost: £15-30 for the filter. Tools: None.

Usually behind the glove box. Open 2-4 clips, slide old filter out, slide new one in. Note the airflow arrow direction on the frame — the new filter should match it.

Top Up Engine Oil (Not Full Change)

Difficulty: Very easy. Time: 3 minutes. Cost: £5-10. Tools: None.

Pull the dipstick, wipe clean, reinsert it fully, pull out again, check the level. If below the min line, unscrew the oil cap on top of the engine, pour in a little oil, wait 30 seconds, check dipstick again. Repeat until level is correct. Don’t overfill.

Top Up Windscreen Washer Fluid

Difficulty: Trivial. Time: 30 seconds. Cost: £2-4. Tools: None.

Find the washer fluid reservoir (large translucent plastic tank), open the cap, pour in fluid. Done.

Check Tyre Pressure

Difficulty: Trivial. Time: 2 minutes per tyre. Cost: £0 (use a garage pump). Tools: Tyre gauge (optional, garages have them).

Correct pressure is in your handbook or on a door frame sticker. Under-inflated tyres reduce fuel economy and handling. Over-inflated can cause blowouts. Get it right.

Moderate DIY Jobs (Some Experience Needed)

Full Engine Oil and Filter Change

Difficulty: Moderate. Time: 30-45 minutes. Cost: £20-40 for oil and filter. Tools: Oil filter wrench, jack, drain pan, wrench set.

Requires draining old oil safely, unscrewing the old filter, installing a new one, and refilling. You need to safely jack the car. Most people let a garage do this (£50-100 labour).

Replace Engine Air Filter

Difficulty: Easy. Time: 5 minutes. Cost: £15-30. Tools: Screwdriver (maybe).

Open the engine air box (2-4 clips), replace the filter, close the box. Some cars need a screwdriver for one clip. Otherwise tool-free.

Replace a Fuse

Difficulty: Very easy. Time: 1 minute. Cost: £0.50 for a fuse. Tools: None.

If a light or electrical component fails, it’s probably a blown fuse. The handbook shows which fuse controls what. Pull out the old fuse (usually a small plastic cartridge), push in a new one of the same amperage. If it blows again immediately, something is wrong — see a mechanic.

Jobs Requiring a Mechanic

Brake Work

Why: Brakes are safety-critical. Worn brake pads can fail suddenly, and incorrectly installed brakes can cause accidents. Cost: £150-300 for a full brake pad replacement.

Never DIY brake work. This is one place where professional skill is essential.

Detailed Comparison Table

Task DIY? Time Cost (DIY) Cost (Garage) Difficulty
Wiper blades Yes 5 min £10-20 £20-40 Trivial
Replace bulbs Yes 2-5 min £2-10 £10-30 Easy
Cabin filter Yes 5 min £15-30 £40-80 Easy
Oil top-up Yes 3 min £5-10 N/A Trivial
Engine air filter Yes 5 min £15-30 £40-80 Easy
Washer fluid Yes 1 min £2-4 N/A Trivial
Tyre pressure check Yes 5 min Free N/A Trivial
Full oil change Maybe 45 min £20-40 £80-150 Moderate
Spark plugs No 1-2 hrs £30-80 £150-300 Hard
Brakes No N/A N/A £150-300 Safety-critical
Suspension No N/A N/A £200-500+ Safety-critical
Engine electrical No N/A N/A £100-400 Requires tools

The Cost-Benefit Analysis

Full Service at Garage (Annual)

Garage cost: £150-300

What’s included: Oil change, filter replacement, fluid checks, component inspections, diagnostic scan.

Worth it? Yes. You get professional expertise and warranty. One missed problem could cost thousands.

DIY Wiper/Bulb/Filter Replacements (Annual)

DIY cost: £50-80 total

Garage cost: £100-200

Worth DIY? Yes. You’ll save £50 and gain confidence. These tasks are truly fool-proof.

DIY Oil Changes

DIY cost: £20-40 per change (×2 per year = £40-80)

Garage cost: £160-300 per year

Worth DIY? Saves money but requires a safe workspace, disposal plan for old oil, and tools. Many people prefer letting a garage handle this.

Tools You’ll Need for Basic DIY

  • Screwdriver set (Phillips and flat-head)
  • Adjustable wrench
  • Oil filter wrench (if doing oil changes)
  • Car jack (usually comes with car)
  • Wheel brace (usually comes with car)
  • Flashlight
  • Tyre gauge (optional, garages have them)

Total cost for a basic set: £20-50. Worth investing if you plan to maintain your own car.

Safety First — When to Stop and Call Help

If you’re not sure, stop. Call a garage. It’s better to spend £50-100 on a mechanic than risk damaging your car or your safety.

Warning signs to stop:

  • You’re working on something that controls braking or steering
  • You don’t understand what you’re doing
  • The task requires special tools or equipment
  • It’s taking much longer than expected
  • You feel unsafe or unsure

Recommended Products

Car Maintenance Tool Kit

Car Maintenance Tool Kit

Essential tools for DIY car care

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Car Care Cleaning Kit

Car Care Cleaning Kit

Complete car wash and detail kit

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is it cheaper to service my car myself?

DIY servicing can save 50-70% on labour costs. Oil and filter changes cost around 30-50 in parts vs 150-250 at a garage.

Will DIY servicing void my car warranty?

No, under UK consumer law your warranty cannot be voided for using non-dealer servicing as long as the work is done to manufacturer standards with approved parts.

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