400 BR plate research

400 BR
Format
Reverse Dateless
Authority Issuer
Sunderland
Era
Unknown era
Status
In Private Ownership

Price History

£0£15k£30k£45k£60kFeb 2017Feb 2017

PWPlateworth estimate

Current estimate

£4,189

Estimate

REReghistory

February 2017

£4,189

Sale

DSDVLA Search

February 2017

£3,200

Sale
Approx value
£4,189

Plateworth estimate

Price Change
-23.6%

over full record

Last Price Change
-£989

February 2017

Dealer Listings
0 shown

price-change events

Listing Variance

single listing

Cheapest Listing

No listing

Plate History

400 BR is a Reverse Dateless registration. Plateworth's current estimate is £4,189 with a working range of £3,561 to £4,817, based on 2 comparable sales. The latest evidence is a sale from Reghistory at £4,189. 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 2017

    Public sale record used by the valuation context.

    £4,189

  2. DVLA Search sale recorded

    Date precision: day

    February 2017

    Public sale record used by the valuation context.

    £3,200

About 400 BR

Reverse dateless plates place the numbers before the original local index letters, so the registration carries local authority provenance without a year marker. The BR index mark traces back to Sunderland. This reverse sequence was issued from the 1950s onwards as earlier dateless runs became exhausted. At 5 characters, 400 BR is shorter than most registrations in this era.

Reverse datelessSunderlandAge-neutralShort format

Plate Speak

AOOBR

Most likely reading: "AOOBR"

Other possible readings

400 BRAOOBR400BRInitials

Price Guide for this Format

6 loaded same-format comparable prices shown until active listings are available.

£4,770

Lowest

£4,948

Average

£5,005

Highest

Distribution

<£2.5k0%
£2.5k-£10k100%
£10k+0%

Prices are based on loaded sale evidence and the Plateworth estimate. Latest evidence: February 2017.