VOLKSWAGEN · VOLKSWAGEN DERBY · Cars
Genuinely rare — only 70 left on UK roads.
Rarer than 63% of the 2,408 UK car models we track.
Disappearing at about 3 a year (4.0% of survivors). At that pace roughly 57 would remain in 5 years, and half the current fleet is gone by around ~2042.
Volkswagen Derby was the name first given by German automaker Volkswagen for the commercialization of the booted saloon (three-box) version of its Volkswagen Polo Mk1 supermini, between 1977 and 1981 in Europe. Later, the Derby name was used by the Mexican Volkswagen subsidiary for the Polo Classic Mk3 saloon on its domestic market in the mid-1990s.
As of 2025 Q4, 70 VOLKSWAGEN DERBY were still registered in the UK — 29 licensed and on the road, plus 41 declared SORN (off-road). The figures come from official DVLA vehicle licensing data.
The VOLKSWAGEN DERBY is genuinely rare, with only 70 left, making it rarer than 63% of the 2,408 UK car models we track.
Over the last year the number of VOLKSWAGEN DERBY on UK roads fell by 2 (2.8%). At the current rate of decline, roughly 57 would remain in 5 years.
Most VOLKSWAGEN DERBY run on petrol — about 97% of those still registered, with the rest split across diesel.
The VOLKSWAGEN DERBY peaked at 139 registered in 2014 Q3, and was first recorded in the data in 2014 Q3.