The Brake fluid change is a bit of gimmick. Its to do with how much water is in the system. had mine checked by a local indy and the moisture content wasnt out of spec, so no need to renew. Every two years seems resoanble if theres a leak or whatever. But if you do a moisture check, no need to do it every two years... but id replace it after 4/5 regardless.
Im dubious about the new timing belt interval. when i got my velle it was every 60/80k or 4 years ( which i thought was a bit too frequent). now its 130k ( which i think is a bit too much). thats quite a massive change. Im doing it at 5 years. because i wont do 100k...
again, checked, looks fine. im not doing any heavy pulling, other than the weight of a large man, tank of fuel and a nearly fully specced executive. plus about 100kg. was replaced at 4 years old, so, 4 years ago... regulary running 2.45-2.65tonne
I have a flexi plan. in for my last on current schedule ( i had one done by a VW indy in between because VW com is crap if your an Ultra busy one man band with a 60 miles round trip) at the end of the month. But i am... 'naughty'.... and dump the oil when the service thing says around 9k. and fill it with some mmmm Longlife castrol of the correct vintage. with a filter. and i wont buy another bosch one. Not as good as the mann!
I replace my pollen filter every year or so. But thas because im a 'pollenphobe' - and the motorway just makes then black in 10k miles or so. Id rather have a free flowing filter. i breath that air. it keeps the fan under less stress as well.
Air filter - i just replace it when i think she deserves it. its had 2 or 3 in 70k :) lol
Fuel filter definitely every 60. i was told mine was relatively full for 60k... again, id rather there was diesel in my engine rather than water!
DSG is every 40. Now, call me skeptical, but i do wonder if it should be replaced more frequently, say, every 30/35k miles. Just because im a cynical luddite.
36 - 74 have been the replcements on that one so far. im thinking about doing it next at 110 - most likely when i decide to get the timing belt next done.

The end story with servicing is this - if you need it, dont be a cheap skate. renew a bit more frequently. a serviced part that doesnt break or break something else is a lot cheaper than replacing what it supplis.
if you not bothered or dont care - buy a beer and just follow what your told by the van centre.

My opinion is (and it is opinion :P )
Brake Fluid - Over 2.5 percent water (or is it 2 percent.. i cant remember right now)
Coolant - 60-80k (yes, 'Forever filled' my ass...) - At least check your specific gravity at 80k then every year/18months and gauge it on that. (i wouldve changed mine by now.. but.. it was mostly refilled after the egr cooler going 'bye bye' while under warranty)
Cambelt/water pump - 5 years. or 100k. less if you are pulling loads. say if at maximum train (5t) halve the miles.
Oil and oil filter - 10k. regardless of whatever it is your using. unless its really cheap oil. Which is like cheap wine. Shame on you!
Fuel filter - 60k.
Air filter - 40k. Or when it gets stuffed with leaves, sand and otherworldly goods from use. such as bees. and mosquitoes. Check it every 6-12 months/15k miles, hold it to the sun and if you cant see the sun, replace it early
Pollen filter - Just replace it when it smells funny - or every 10k? Follow the Filter manufacturer advice, not VW! (mine has had 5 so far - each time, black. from soot and stuff. Ew) - Follow the sunlight rule as well!
DSG + Filter - Anal - Every 25k or so. Cynical - 30-35k - normal person 40-45k. Id avoid being normal though and go with cynical...
DSG - Check the grease on the splines at every DSG service. A golden forgotten nugget of thinking. and check the drives shafts while your at it.
Drivtrian - just check your boots are greased up every 30/40k or so if the mot (miraculously) never comes back with 'split boots' and the like.
Wipers - replace when they need to be. If you want. Because its obvious. Apparently.
Air con - get the oile replaced every 3/4 years. It does leak. Ac systems do. they designed to leak a little. and no one talks about it... Do it. Your evaporator might die from corrosion but at least you wont need a new ac pump any time soon. try and get it done on a hot day as well.
Vent cleaning/ducts - do this each time you change your pollen filter (the sterlising car bomb things)
The rest can fail and be abused and left and still function as a vehicle while the above will keep it running (aside from tyres and brake - that always depends on how much of a maniac you are) while keeping your lungs safe from the old PD's with a black smoke map... Or that old range rover. Or older Merc G class diesels. You know youve been stuck behind one of them at some point!



ALWAYS REMEMBER WITH COMMERCIAL VEHICLES - The service plan is deisgned for the fleet customer in mind. each 300 quid on servicing saved on a van every five years over a flett of a hundred is £30k. Jsut on servicing. Thats a very nice holiday for the service manager... the fleet buyer... or... an upgraded van for the boss. and a nice holiday.

Rant over.

or was it a help? and hopefully not too blashpemous.

'Oils cheap, engines arent'

Cheerio

Edit - Dont use anything cheap with whats said above. Either OEM or BETTER. such as a frecious plus pollen filter is certainly better than the oem filter chucked in with a service plan...
 
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The Brake fluid change is a bit of gimmick.
Perhaps. Nevertheless, VW won't honour warranty claims for brake related faults if it hasn't been done every 24 months, be it the manufafturers warranty or the extended mechanical breakdown insurance.

Certain VW models in recent years have suffered ABS pump faults, and the few quid saved skipping the brake fluid cost owners the thick end of two-large to get it fixed.

You correctly state oil is cheap, engines aren't.

It's fair to say brake fluid is even cheaper. A lot cheaper, in fact.
 
Perhaps. Nevertheless, VW won't honour warranty claims for brake related faults if it hasn't been done every 24 months, be it the manufafturers warranty or the extended mechanical breakdown insurance.

Certain VW models in recent years have suffered ABS pump faults, and the few quid saved skipping the brake fluid cost owners the thick end of two-large to get it fixed.

You correctly state oil is cheap, engines aren't.

It's fair to say brake fluid is even cheaper. A lot cheaper, in fact

In regards to brake fluid.
Do it every two years
Or
Use a garage that has means of checking the water content and has access to the data for 'in spec' level of moisture content in the fluid.
Just because mine was in spec outside the 2 years doesn't mean someone else wouldn't be.

I agree though - but that's due to living in a world where the checkbox is more important than an actual analysis of cause... If in any sort of warranty package, yes, do stay within the manufacturer guidelines, stay o.e and keep everything as humanely possible stock! And fit good tyres. adds kudos!

I've gotten 50k out of my genuine discs and pads. Yes, 50. But they are pretty much gone. I'll be changing the fluid at that point regardless for obvious reasons :D (at 96k my17)
At 30k and 35 with tyres
It can be done....! (Half of it has been motorway I admit)
In a velle at 2.4ton, minimum.
 
Hello. Looking at all this talk about 12000 mile intervals, I have just looked at the service record printout I requested from the dealership that supplied the T6 and serviced it.

The first INSPECTION is shown as carried out at 28000 miles,and the first OIL CHANGE SERVICE carried out 11 months later at 58000 miles!!!°°

The van was a VWFS lease vehicle. Why would the dealer allow so long to pass before oil change?
 
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The Brake fluid change is a bit of gimmick. Its to do with how much water is in the system
Water content is part of it however there are some fine components in the ABS system.
I test for water content but I also siphon fluid out of the reservoir and find it is dirty, probably from the master cylinder seals.
When changing brake pads don’t push the fluid in the caliper back into the system, there will be dirt from the caliper seal. Clamp the hose and bleed the old fluid off via the nipple as the piston is pushed back.
As mentioned above, the VW warranty will no doubt be worthless if the prescribed service schedule is not followed.
 
Hello. Looking at all this talk about 12000 mile intervals, I have just looked at the service record printout I requested from the dealership that supplied the T6 and serviced it.

The first INSPECTION is shown as carried out at 28000 miles,and the first OIL CHANGE SERVICE carried out 11 months later at 58000 miles!!!°°

The van was a VWFS lease vehicle. Why would the dealer allow so long to pass before oil change?
An inspection service is the major one, and includes an oil change, so it 'should' have been changed at 28,000, and again at 58,000. But, in my opinion, that's too long. I do mine at 10,000.
 
Thanks bluezie. I am just reading from the printout. So if the dealer has called it 'inspection' then that would normally include oil change?
 
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Thanks bluezie. I am just reading from the printout. So if the dealer has called it 'inspection' then that would normally include oil change?
This 28k thing i have seen somewhere mentioned before in rental fleet terms... Ergregious. I guess theres a 3-5 year/60k breakclause in some agreements and whoeverbuys it at the other end is at the mercy of using due diligence...

They may, however, have their own service centres where they get interval changes and are pre authorised by VWCV to do so as part of the fleet agreement. The two pointinspection at a dealer is to make sure they are being 'a good boy' - perhaps. i dont know. its a wild thought, however true or not.

I would just get the engine flushed and keep on top of 5-10k oilchanges depending on your usage of the vehicle.
 
The end story with servicing is this - if you need it, dont be a cheap skate. renew a bit more frequently. a serviced part that doesnt break or break something else is a lot cheaper than replacing what it supplis.
if you not bothered or dont care - buy a beer and just follow what your told by the van centre.

Edit - Dont use anything cheap with whats said above. Either OEM or BETTER. such as a frecious plus pollen filter is certainly better than the oem filter chucked in with a service plan...
 
VW T6.1 CXHA – Standard Service Schedule (Germany, Bosnia & Herzegovina)

Just to add a bit more to the mix—while I was in Bosnia recently, I had a chat with a colleague who’s been a Service Manager for VW Commercial Vehicles for the past 12 years. We got onto the topic of servicing schedules, and he was genuinely surprised to hear that there are differences between what’s followed in the UK and what they go by in Bosnia, which comes directly from Germany.

He wasn’t aware that the UK recommends cambelt changes every 4 to 5 years, and sent me the schedule they’re required to follow over there. He found it odd that the UK intervals are shorter, especially since their guidance doesn’t reflect that.


VW T6.1 CXHA – Standardni servisni raspored (Bosna i Hercegovina)​

Interval (šta prije nastupi)Stavka servisa
Svake 1 godine / 15.000 kmMotorno ulje + filter ulja
Svake 2 godine / 30.000 kmFilter kabine (polen filter)
Svake 2 godine (samo vrijeme)Kočiona tečnost (prva zamjena nakon 3 godine, zatim svake 2 godine)
Svake 4–5 godina / 60.000 kmFilter zraka
Svake 4 godine / 60.000 kmFilter goriva
Svake 6 godina / 90.000 kmDSG ulje + filter (ako je DSG mjenjač ugrađen)
Svake 10 godina / 210.000 kmZupčasti remen + pumpa za vodu (prema VW Njemačka specifikaciji)
Svake 2 godine / 30.000 kmOpći pregled vozila (gume, kočnice, svjetla, upravljački mehanizam, itd.)

I have translated the above into English (below) for those who don't speak Croatian/Bosnian


Interval (whichever comes first)Service Item
Every 1 year / 15,000 kmEngine oil + filter
Every 2 years / 30,000 kmCabin (pollen) filter
Every 2 years (time only)Brake fluid (first at 3 years, then every 2 years)
Every 4–5 years / 60,000 kmAir filter
Every 4 years / 60,000 kmFuel filter
Every 6 years / 90,000 kmDSG oil + filter (if DSG gearbox fitted)
Every 10 years / 210,000 kmCambelt + water pump (per VW Germany)
Every 2 years / 30,000 kmGeneral inspection (tyres, brakes, lights, steering, etc.)
 
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Hi all,
I have a 2020 T6.1 with ~40k on the clock, dash is showing “Inspection Due”

Theres obviously a lot of information here, could someone advise me of what I should be expecting at this mileage.

Is it routine maintenance that any local garage should be capable of or more specialised to a VW dealer.

I do not have a service plan.

Thanks in advance.
 
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Hi all,
I have a 2020 T6.1 with ~40k on the clock, dash is showing “Inspection Due”

Theres obviously a lot of information here, could someone advise me of what I should be expecting at this mileage.

Is it routine maintenance that any local garage should be capable of or more specialised to a VW dealer.

I do not have a service plan.

Thanks in advance.
The Inspection service points are pretty much what is combined in a routine owner check over and a UK MOT.
Obviously an oil service at the same time.
You have more chance of a good independent workshop actually doing the checks than a VW dealership.

When I first bought my used van I had a pre-paid VW service schedule that came with the van. I put it in for service with defects that I knew about, VW dealership never mentioned them or rectified them.
I’m pretty sure it’s just a £ generator and in cases allows the tech’s to catch up on jobs that are running over the allotted time.
 
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@DXX knows way more about this mechanical voodoo than I do (ie. I know almost nil!) and is probably correct. Indeed, when I first had the message pop up about an 'inspection' on my van about 9 months after I got it, I phoned my then local VW service centre who basically told me not to bother about it if I thought the van was running OK and on the basis that it was going to be serviced 3 months later anyway, I took their advice. That said, I'm probably very naive in my expectations when a van does go into a VW Van Centre - I would have thought the first thing that they would always do is plug in the diagnostic tool to check if any faults were showing on the 'system' and either dismiss them or advice on a remedy but they don't.
 
Thanks for the replies. Some people were leading me to believe that 40k was specifically a DSG service? (Maybe i should have mentioned its a DSG)
 
Thanks for the replies. Some people were leading me to believe that 40k was specifically a DSG service? (Maybe i should have mentioned its a DSG)
That would have helped.
Post #2 on this discussion, helps to read it all.
 
New package..

The essentials service..... £129.


An oil service, and inspection, and the stamping your logbook,

For vehicles 7 years or older.

(Is 99 quid for cars)



.
 
So nothing your local indy hasn't been doing for decades...?
 
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I’m trying to work out what my new van will have had done at its last service, I specifically asked about its Cambelt and was told all servicing was up to date, but not a specific answer about the belt, I also don’t have a service book and was told it is all online and emailed a certificate of servicing instead which lists the following.

Service History


Date of Service Type of Service Vehicle Mileage


03/03/2026 Used Car MPC 64,358


27/01/2026 MOT (passed) 64,358


27/01/2026 Interval Service 64,358


16/01/2026 Used Car MPC 64,358


23/02/2024 Major/Full Service 15,500


23/02/2024 Brake Fluid Change 15,500


Is anyone able to help me work this out?
 
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