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Automotive > Cars

Motorists no longer have to pay to find out if the used car or motorbike they are about to purchase is one of more than 300,000 cars and motorbikes stolen each year in the UK.

Checkmyfile.com has launched the UK's first free, online Police Stolen Vehicle Check, sanctioned by The Police Information Technology Organisation a government agency that provides information technology, communications systems and services to the Police.

Barry Stamp, Joint Managing Director of checkmyfile.com, the UK's leading online credit reporting agency, says, When a consumer buys a used car, there is always the enormous fear it may have been stolen. Because of the way our laws work, many have lost both their new car and their money because they didn't check if the car they were about to purchase was stolen.

Now a quick, free check of the police lost or stolen database, on checkmyfile.com, will assist to cut the number of individuals who fall victim to buying stolen cars. If a member of the public has bought a car recently they can also gain peace of mind by checking it isn't stolen.

The latest car theft index, produced by the Home Office, states that 282,816 cars and 50,591 motorbikes were stolen, in England, Scotland and Wales in the latest recorded year.

Government statistics display small saloon cars were the most likely type of car to be targeted by thieves, with around 12 in every thousand registered being stolen. People carriers and 4x4s had half that risk with 6 in every thousand being stolen.

Cars registered more than 13 years ago were the most likely to be stolen, according to Home Office figures, with a theft rate of 31 per 1000 registered. Vehicles registered between 1997 and 2002 were at the least risk of being stolen, with just 5 in every 1000 being stolen.

Scooters and mopeds were the most targeted motorbikes, with low powered motorbikes under-5-years-old having a theft rate of 85 per 1000, making up 60 per cent of motorbike thefts in the UK. Motorbikes were much more likely to be stolen than cars, with 37 per 1000 being stolen, in comparison to 10 per 1000 for cars.

Checkmyfile.com's free online service can also be used to check the number plates of cars that have been parked unattended in residential streets for unduly long periods or any suspicious vehicle. If required, prospective purchasers can also go on to purchase further vehicle checks to ensure that the car is as recorded at the DVLA, is not an insurance write-off and has no HP or finance outstanding against it.

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Richard Goedegebuur is press relations officer for checkmyfile.com the Uk's leading supplier of credit files to the UK consumer. Checkmyfile.com offers consumer credit advice, and post code relevant information. Richard Goedegebuur can be contacted on 0870 240 2613

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