Motortrades Insight Magazine Online
Related Tags: British Medical Association, British Car Auctions, Passive Smoking, No Smoking, Finance, National No Smoking Day, Smoking In Cars, Car Values, Stop Smoking, Quit Smoking, Car Stains
Smokers lose £400 to £500 when selling used cars and are urged to stop smoking in effort to protect vehicle values
Stop smoking in cars. That is the message from the British Medical Association and has been for years, with toxins causing respiratory problems for non-smokers.Taxi drivers are some of the worst culprits of smoking in cars, with second-hand smoke passing on to passengers and potentially causing cancerous diseases later in life.
So as National No Smoking Day is well and truly under way today, vehicle remarketing specialist British Car Auctions has told Motortrades Insight that drivers who have smoked in their cars find it more difficult to sell their vehicles and almost always sell for a lower price - £400 to £500 to be precise.

“If you go to auction and you have a choice of two cars that are exactly the same but one has been owned by a smoker and one by a non smoker, chances are people will go for the car that has not been smoked in,” British Car Auction's Tim Naylor said.
“The British Medical Association has highlighted research showing the levels of toxins in a car can be up to 11 times higher than in a smoky bar,” he added. “But if drivers aren’t motivated by the health of their passengers, perhaps they will be by the diminishing health of their finances. Lighting up inside a car seriously devalues the vehicle for resale.”

His comments come as Sweden seriously considers extending its bans of smoking in public places to cars – a move that could save thousands of lives.
His research has discovered that presentation is one of the top priorities for buyers at car auctions as there is rarely any opportunity to test a car and any pre-conceptions of what a vehicle is like is based significantly on its aesthetics.
“It is one of the top factors influencing the price of used cars,” he explained. “So if a car is more like an ashtray on wheels, chances are buyers will move on to find one that looks and smells fresh as a daisy.”

While some smokers wishing to sell their car go to extreme lengths to get their car cleaned by a professional valeter, it is expensive and time-consuming and can often mean replacing interior upholstery which is irreparable from the damaging effects of smoking, with nicotine-stained headlinings a common problem.
Mr Naylor concluded: “Motorists should avoid having a cigarette in their car, especially if they intend to sell it in the near future. This will avoid the lingering smell of cigarettes in the interior, as well as eliminate the risk of scorch marks on the upholstery or dash. All of these things will put buyers off, even if they smoke themselves.”



