101 NFT plate research

101 NFT
Format
Reverse Dateless
Authority Issuer
Tynemouth
Era
Unknown era
Status
Sold

Price History

£0£15k£30k£45k£60kFeb 2023Feb 2023

PWPlateworth estimate

Current estimate

£4,060

Estimate

REReghistory

February 2023

£4,060

Sale

DSDVLA Search

February 2023

£3,100

Sale
Approx value
£4,060

Plateworth estimate

Price Change
-23.6%

over full record

Last Price Change
-£960

February 2023

Dealer Listings
0 shown

price-change events

Listing Variance

single listing

Cheapest Listing

No listing

Plate History

101 NFT is a Reverse Dateless registration. Plateworth's current estimate is £4,060 with a working range of £3,451 to £4,669, based on 2 comparable sales. The latest evidence is a sale from Reghistory at £4,060. No active dealer listing is shown, so the page separates the Plateworth estimate from public sale evidence. This page currently shows 2 timeline events from the loaded registration record.

  1. Reghistory sale recorded

    Date precision: month

    February 2023

    Public sale record used by the valuation context.

    £4,060

  2. DVLA Search sale recorded

    Date precision: day

    February 2023

    Public sale record used by the valuation context.

    £3,100

About 101 NFT

Reverse dateless plates place the numbers before the original local index letters, so the registration carries local authority provenance without a year marker. The FT index mark traces back to Tynemouth, now associated with Tyne and Wear. This reverse sequence was issued from the 1950s onwards as earlier dateless runs became exhausted. At 6 characters, 101 NFT is a standard-length registration for this era.

Reverse datelessTynemouthTyne and WearAge-neutralStandard length

Plate Speak

IOINFT

Most likely reading: "IOINFT"

Other possible readings

101 NFTIOINFT101NFTInitials

Price Guide for this Format

£3,100

Lowest

£3,580

Average

£4,060

Highest

Distribution (loaded evidence)

<£2.5k0%
£2.5k-£10k100%
£10k+0%

Prices are based on loaded sale evidence and the Plateworth estimate. Latest evidence: February 2023.