Giving you my utmost and honest opinion here, that car is seriously over priced.
Ok, I get it, the mileage has attracted you but 12.5k for a normal GTi, in a common colour, Just no.
- It is a very basic model with only having parking sensors as the optional extras and maybe the winter pack
- The bottle opener is missing which is shocking for such a "low mileage example"
- Rear cup holder looks broken or it could just be not closed (common issue on these)
- Boot has got more marks on the plasict black trim onit than I would expect to see from such a "low mileage example"
- Headliner is sagging - Look buy the sunglasses holder
- Add is only showing you one wheel, which likely means thats the best of the bunch and it has odd tyres and the tyre fitted was from week 40 in 2015 so is a 9 year old tyre
- Ad states, 33,500, Writeup says 34k and clocks show 33.519 Inconsistances like this are not hard to get right, minor detail but bugs the hell out of me.
- MOT History shows the car hasn't been kept up with keeping Tyres and discs in good order, shows you the type of owner.
- The Wear on the drivers seat bolster and lower bolster has me questioning if the mileage is genuine or if the owner was clocking it back between MOTs to keep the re-sale value high - Just a thought.
First bit of advice I will give you is step away from getting hung up on buying a low mileage example.
Take the one above as an example, for a car at this mileage, I would expect it to be close to showroom condition, my Ed35 is on 77K and knocks socks off it. It states it has FSH so I would expect it to have 14-15 Stamps in the book given the age of it and proof of the timing chain and water pump being replaced due to age.
I am speaking from experience. I am not saying go and buy a 200k+ example but low mileage cars are sometimes more hassle that they are worth;
- Cars that are not used and parked up break, lines, pipes get brittle etc.
- Sometimes you find people don't service them for years, leave them parked and think because they are not being used, you don't have to service them. This is wrong, oil have a shelve life and once oil is in the engine and has been upto temp, it will only last 12 months.
- Cars that have not been serviced correctly are not eligable for any warranty issues with the manufacturer
- Cars that are lower mileage are normally only used for short journeys which isn't great as you get alot of carbon build up, again this isn't always the case but its more towards this than not
As I said above, this car is 100% in my opinion not worth the 12.5k price tag in any way shape of form.
So coming from owning a MK7 GTD, and knowing many that have had the MK7 GTi, I can tell you at the MK6 platform, in my opinion is the better platform for reliability, for exterior looks, too althought I appreiate that is my opinion on the exterior, for Reliability however, the MK6 is only better than the MK7 if you get the Edition 35 GTi and not the normal GTi, short version, the normal GTi comes with a different engine that is chain driven not belt and is prone to failure. The Ed35 engine is a better more reliable engine, has the Ko4 Turbo and is belt driven.
The MK7 main issues include the blocked Heater matrix, I had this in my GTD and two people I know had this with their GTi, all mileage under 50k and between 65-68 plates, If not covered under Warranty, your looking at 1.3k + VAT - Thermosat housing and waterpump (comes as one unit I think in the MK7) £1000+ to replace and will break again, (design fault).
Only Downside to the MK6 platform and even finding a good ED35 is finding one that hasn't been remapped and messed with. I was lucky, I found mine at my local VW but I also paid 14k.
This Video explains it perfectly why I think the ED35 is the better option.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nl8-ZR532s&t=17sTo close, if you have the budget, I urge you to get a MK6 GTi Edtion 35, only downside is, only 671 came out in the UK, 335 of them were Manual and 336 were DSG so finding one won't be easy.
Hope this helps.