What is a V888 Form?
The V888 form is the DVLA’s official document titled “Request by an Individual for Information About a Vehicle.” It lets you ask the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency for details held on their vehicle register about a specific UK-registered car, van, or motorcycle.
There are two separate reasons people use it. The first is to find out the keeper history of a vehicle you own or previously owned. The second is to request the current registered keeper’s details for a vehicle that belongs to someone else, but only when you have a valid legal reason.
The form is free to download as a printable PDF from GOV.UK. The DVLA fee is £2.50 per vehicle enquiry, paid by cheque or postal order. You cannot apply online.
The form is free to download as a printable PDF from GOV.UK. The DVLA fee is £2.50 per vehicle enquiry, paid by cheque or postal order. You cannot apply online.The legal basis for DVLA releasing keeper information sits in Regulation 27 of the Road Vehicles (Registration and Licensing) Regulations 2002, which gives DVLA the power to share vehicle data with individuals who can show reasonable cause. This is confirmed in DVLA’s own guidance document INF266: Release of Information from DVLA’s Registers, published on GOV.UK.
What is the Purpose of the V888 Form?
The purpose of this form in vehicle registration is to give individuals a legal route to access keeper and vehicle data that DVLA holds but does not make publicly available. Without this form, that data is locked behind data protection rules.
🚗
Road traffic accidents
Someone hits your car and drives off. You have the plate. The V888 is how you get the registered keeper’s details to pursue a claim.
🏠
Property damage
A vehicle damages your fence, gate, or wall and leaves. Use the V888 to trace the keeper for a compensation claim.
🚫
Abandoned vehicle
A car has been left on your land without consent. You need the keeper’s details to start the removal process.
🅿️
Unauthorised parking
A vehicle is blocking your driveway repeatedly on private land. Reasonable cause exists to identify the keeper.
🏎️
Classic car history
You own a classic vehicle and want to trace its full keeper history, where it was based, and when each keeper registered it.
⚖️
Legal proceedings
You are pursuing a civil claim, debt recovery, or pre-action enquiries where vehicle keeper details are needed.
Per DVLA’s guidance document MIS546: Giving People Information from Our Vehicle Record (available at gov.uk/request-information-from-dvla), every application is assessed against the Data Protection Act 2018 before information is released.
Who Can Use the V888 Form?
The V888 is for individuals only. Any individual aged 18 or over can apply as long as they have a valid reason. You do not need a solicitor. Reporting to the police is not required, although a police incident number strengthens your case significantly.
Valid reasons DVLA accepts
Road traffic accident
You were involved and need to contact the other keeper or their insurer.
Hit and run or failure to stop
The other driver left the scene. You have the registration number.
Property or vehicle damage
A vehicle damaged your car or property and the driver left without giving details.
Abandoned or illegally parked vehicle
A vehicle is on your land or blocking access without permission.
Civil or legal claim
You need keeper details for court documentation, debt recovery, or pre-action enquiries.
Your own vehicle history
You want the full keeper history of a vehicle you currently own or previously owned.
Executor of a will
You need information about a vehicle in the estate of someone who has died.
Applications refused for these reasons
General curiosity about a vehicle’s owner, marketing or commercial purposes, personal tracking or harassment, or any reason that does not meet the Data Protection Act 2018 requirements. DVLA monitors all requests and can permanently refuse future applications if evidence of misuse is found.
Hit and run cases specifically
DVLA does release keeper details for hit and run incidents even without a police report. You need to describe the incident accurately: the date, the location, what happened, and what evidence you have. A witness statement or photographs alongside a police incident number significantly strengthens the application.
Option A or Option B: Which One Do You Need?
Option A is for your own vehicle’s history. Option B is for finding out who owns someone else’s vehicle. You can only choose one. You cannot tick both.
A
Your vehicle history
B
Someone else’s vehicle
|
Your situation |
Use this option |
|---|---|
|
Keeper history of your current car |
Option A |
|
History of a car you previously owned |
Option A |
|
Classic car keeper research (your car) |
Option A |
|
Hit and run — you have the plate |
Option B |
|
Accident claim — need other keeper’s details |
Option B |
|
Abandoned vehicle on your land |
Option B |
|
Property damaged by a vehicle that drove off |
Option B |
What DVLA Provides and Does NOT Provide
What you will receive
Current keeper name and address
Current keeper name and address For Option B requests, at the date DVLA processes your application.
Date the current keeper registered
When they became the registered keeper.
Vehicle details
Make, model, colour, year of manufacture, engine size, fuel type, and registration date.
Previous keeper information
Dates of acquisition and disposal, and the area where each keeper was registered.
Historical V5C logbook copies
For Option A requests. Personal details redacted under UK GDPR.
What V888 does NOT provide
Not available through V888
Phone numbers or email addresses of keepers. MOT history — use gov.uk/check-mot-history instead (free). Insurance details or insurance status. Finance agreements, outstanding loans, or hire purchase information. Accident history or write-off category. Driving history of the keeper. Full ownership chain back to manufacture.
For finance, write-off status, mileage records, and stolen flags, use a commercial vehicle history service such as HPI Check or an AA Vehicle Check. Those cost between £10 and £30 but cover everything V888 does not.
Documents Checklist
Get everything together before you print the form. A missing item means your entire application comes back unprocessed.
Required for all applications
Completed application form
Printed, filled in black ink, capital letters, signed by hand.
Proof of your current address
One of: gas, electricity, water, or landline phone bill issued in the last three months, or a bank or building society statement issued in the last three months. No exceptions.
£2.50 payment
Cheque or postal order payable to “DVLA Swansea” exactly.
For Option B — include where available
Photographs
Images showing vehicle damage or the incident scene.
Police incident reference
If you reported the incident to the police.
Insurance correspondence
Claim number or letters from your insurer.
Witness statement
If a witness was present and has written down what they saw.
From the official V888 guidance notes
“If you do not provide a copy of one of the documents from the list below we will not be able to deal with your application and will return it to you.” Proof of address is not optional. It is the most common reason applications come back.
How to Fill In the V888 Form
Use black ink and capital letters throughout. Copy details accurately from official documents. The reasonable cause section (Section 6, Option B) must be specific and factual — vague explanations are rejected without appeal.
Download and print
Print on plain white A4. Do not scale. Do not use an older version — outdated PDFs circulate online and DVLA rejects them.
Choose Option A or Option B
Read both descriptions on the form before marking anything. Put a cross in one box only. Use black ink. Do not tick both.
Your personal details and the vehicle registration
Full legal name, current address, postcode, phone number, and email. Use block capitals throughout. These must match your proof of address document exactly. Write the registration number in block capitals without spaces.
Your reasonable cause: the most important section
Be specific. Vague explanations are rejected. Include the registration number, the date, the location, and exactly what happened.
Strong example:
“Vehicle registration AB12 CDE struck my parked car on Church Street, Birmingham on 12 March 2026 at approximately 2pm, causing damage to the rear bumper. Police incident reference 1234/26. I need the registered keeper’s details to pursue an insurance claim for repairs estimated at £650.”
Sign the declaration and attach everything
Read the declaration before signing. By signing you confirm the information is true and you will only use the data for the stated purpose. Sign by hand — typed names are not accepted. Attach proof of address and payment. Keep a photocopy of everything.
V888 Form Fee and Payment (2026)
|
Application |
Fee |
Payment method |
|---|---|---|
|
Single vehicle enquiry |
£2.50 |
Cheque or postal order only |
|
Two vehicles (one envelope) |
£5.00 |
One combined cheque is fine |
|
Three vehicles (one envelope) |
£7.50 |
One combined cheque is fine |
|
Fee if rejected by DVLA |
Non-refundable |
No exceptions |
Make the cheque or postal order payable to “DVLA Swansea” exactly — not “DVLA” alone, not “Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency.” DVLA does not accept cash, debit cards, credit cards, bank transfers, or online payments for V888 applications.
Where to Send the V888 Form
Post your completed form, proof of address, and payment to:
DVLA
Swansea
SA99 1BN
Send by recorded delivery (around £3.95) so you have proof it arrived. Keep photocopies of everything before sealing the envelope.
Can I get a V888 form from the Post Office?
No. The Post Office does not stock it. You can pick up a V62 or V10 at Post Office branches that deal with vehicle tax, but not this form. Download the PDF free from GOV.UK or call DVLA on 0300 790 6802 to have one posted to you.
Processing Times and What to Expect
|
Stage |
Timeframe |
|---|---|
|
Postal delivery to DVLA |
1 to 3 days |
|
Application assessed and processed |
3 to 7 working days |
|
Response prepared and posted back |
1 to 3 days |
|
Total expected time |
Around 10 working days |
|
If DVLA needs further information |
Add 2 to 3 weeks |
|
Complex keeper histories (pre-2000 vehicles) |
Can take several months |
In practice, times vary. Applications for older vehicle histories — particularly classic cars where some records may be partially manual — can take considerably longer. Classic car enthusiasts who have used the form in real life describe waiting several months in some cases, though this is not typical for modern vehicles.
What the DVLA letter contains
Keeper information
Name and address for Option B, or dates and area information for keeper history.
Vehicle details
Make, model, colour, engine size, fuel type, and year of manufacture.
Data protection notice
Explains how you may and may not use the information received.
V5C copies (Option A)
Historical logbook copies with names and addresses redacted under UK GDPR.
V888 vs V888/2A: Individuals vs Companies
This is the most overlooked aspect of requesting keeper data from DVLA. Businesses using the individual form will have their application refused.
|
Details |
V888 |
V888/2A |
|---|---|---|
|
Who it is for |
Individuals only |
Companies and organisations |
|
Purpose |
Keeper and vehicle history |
Keeper at date of event |
|
Fee |
£2.50 per vehicle |
Set by DVLA (see form) |
|
Proof required |
Proof of current address |
Company details and ICO registration |
|
Police and parking enforcement |
Not applicable |
BPA or IPC membership required |
|
Guidance document |
MIS546 (GOV.UK) |
MIS546 (GOV.UK) |
Private parking companies, fleet operators, solicitors acting for companies, and debt recovery agencies must use V888/2A. Per GOV.UK guidance, parking companies must also be registered members of the British Parking Association or the International Parking Community to access DVLA keeper data.
Common Mistakes That Get Applications Rejected
These rejection reasons come directly from the official V888 guidance notes and real-world applicant experience. Most are avoidable with five minutes of preparation.
A Real Scenario: What a Good Application Looks Like
You come back to your car in a supermarket car park to find a dent in the rear door. No note. But another shopper saw what happened and writes down the plate for you.
You photograph the damage immediately. You note the date, time, and exact location. You fill in Option B on the form. In the reason section you write: “Vehicle registration AB12 CDE reversed into my parked car at [supermarket] car park, [town] on [date] at approximately 2pm, causing a dent to the rear driver door. Witness present — statement enclosed. Photograph of damage enclosed. I need the registered keeper’s details to pursue a claim for repairs.”
You enclose a three-month-old electricity bill, a cheque for £2.50 payable to “DVLA Swansea,” and post it by recorded delivery to DVLA, Swansea, SA99 1BN.
Around 10 working days later a letter arrives with the registered keeper’s name and address. You contact them or their insurer. The repair gets sorted without going through your own insurance and without your no-claims bonus being affected. That is exactly what the V888 is for.
Expert Tips
Expert tip — police incident numbers
Applications that include a police incident reference number tend to be assessed faster and more favourably. A police report independently verifies that the incident happened. It does not make your application guaranteed, but it removes ambiguity. If the incident is serious enough to warrant contacting DVLA, it is worth taking ten minutes to report it to police on 101 first and noting the reference.
Expert tip — classic car history requests
For Option A keeper history requests, being specific about what you are looking for helps. State in the form that you are the current registered keeper and are researching the vehicle’s history. Mention the approximate year range you are interested in. DVLA staff have more records than they can always search comprehensively — a focused request often gets a more useful response than a blanket one.
Important — will DVLA tell the keeper you asked?
Per the official V888 guidance notes: “If you have chosen Option B in Section 1, the registered keeper of the vehicle in Section 3 may be provided with a copy of this request if they ask for it.” DVLA will not proactively inform the keeper. But if the keeper asks DVLA whether anyone has requested their details, they are entitled to find out. This is part of their rights under UK GDPR. Bear this in mind when writing your reasonable cause explanation — it should be accurate and factual, not speculative.
Did you know — V888/3 also exists
Most guides only mention V888 and V888/2A. There is also a V888/3, which is the form used by companies that issue parking charge notices or trespass charge notices. This is separate from V888/2A. If you manage a private car park and issue charge notices, V888/3 is your form — and your company must be a registered member of the British Parking Association (BPA) or the International Parking Community (IPC) to qualify for DVLA keeper data access.
Top 5 reasons V888 applications are returned — based on user reports
|
Reason |
How to avoid it |
|---|---|
|
Missing proof of address |
Attach a utility bill or bank statement from the last 3 months |
|
Vague reasonable cause explanation |
Include registration, date, location, and exactly what happened |
|
Cheque made out incorrectly |
Must say “DVLA Swansea” exactly — not “DVLA” alone |
|
Unsigned declaration |
Sign by hand — typed names are not accepted |
|
Outdated PDF version |
Always download the updated version. |