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WOF

What Happens During a WOF Inspection?

A Warrant of Fitness check is more than a tick-box exercise - inspectors are checking critical safety systems. Here's exactly what they look at, and why it matters.
WOF vehicle inspection
spotonusr
spotonusr Spot On Panel Beaters  ·  Published April 2026  ·  1 min read

WOF Basics

A Warrant of Fitness (WOF) is a periodic vehicle safety inspection required for all New Zealand vehicles. It checks that your car meets minimum safety standards before it can be driven on public roads.

What Inspectors Check

  • Brakes – pad thickness, disc condition, handbrake
  • Tyres – tread depth, condition, correct size
  • Lights – all operational including brake, reverse, indicators
  • Steering and suspension – play, wear, fluid leaks
  • Windscreen and wipers – cracks, wiper blade condition
  • Seatbelts – all locking correctly
  • Body and chassis – rust, structural damage

Common Failure Points

The most common WOF failures are tyre tread depth below 1.5mm, brake pad wear, and cracked or chipped windscreens. These are straightforward to fix – the key is catching them before your inspection date.

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