VAUXHALL MOKKA Car Parts & Spares

Browse catalogue-backed car parts for the VAUXHALL MOKKA across 2 recorded body series.

Choose the exact body generation, production period and engine before ordering. A shared MOKKA badge is not final proof that one component fits every derivative.

The category links below retain the VAUXHALL MOKKA hierarchy and appear only where matching product-level fitment exists.

VAUXHALL MOKKA Car Parts & Spares

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VAUXHALL MOKKA Models and Body Styles

Choose the exact body style and generation. Production dates are shown where catalogue data is available.

Vauxhall Car Parts

MOKKA / MOKKA X (J13)

manufactured from 06/2012

Vauxhall Car Parts

MOKKA

manufactured from 06/2020

VAUXHALL MOKKA Parts Catalogue

Browse catalogue-backed parts by vehicle system.

Vehicle Parts and Compatibility Guide

Catalogue-backed identification, maintenance and safety guidance.

Identify the exact VAUXHALL MOKKA before selecting parts

The VAUXHALL MOKKA name covers 2 catalogue-recorded body series. Body style, build date, engine, transmission, driven wheels and factory equipment can all change the required component. Start with the registration or VIN, then confirm those details against the vehicle and the replacement part specification.

Body seriesFromToFitment-backed catalogue matches
MOKKA / MOKKA X (J13)06/2012Current/varies477
MOKKA06/2020Current/varies151

Catalogue-Backed VAUXHALL MOKKA Part Systems

  • Brake Pads — 40 catalogue matches
  • Brake Discs — 31 catalogue matches
  • Oil Filters — 23 catalogue matches
  • Thermostat — 21 catalogue matches
  • Timing Chain Kit — 17 catalogue matches
  • Cabin Filter — 13 catalogue matches
  • Lambda Sensor — 13 catalogue matches
  • Air Filter — 12 catalogue matches
  • Clutch Kit — 12 catalogue matches
  • Starter Motors — 12 catalogue matches
  • Suspension Arms — 11 catalogue matches
  • Coil Springs — 10 catalogue matches
  • Water Pump — 10 catalogue matches
  • Glow Plugs — 9 catalogue matches
  • Tie Rod End — 9 catalogue matches
  • Crankshaft Sensor — 8 catalogue matches
  • Exhaust Gas Temperature Sensor — 8 catalogue matches
  • Fuel filter — 8 catalogue matches
  • MAF Sensor — 8 catalogue matches
  • Brake Caliper — 7 catalogue matches

Compatibility checks

  1. Select the exact body series and production period.
  2. Confirm the complete engine and transmission identifiers.
  3. Check axle, side, body style, steering side and equipment restrictions.
  4. Compare the complete supplier reference, dimensions, connectors and technical notes.
  5. Inspect related parts and diagnose the cause of the original fault before fitting.

What correct fitment and service life depend on

EvidenceWhat it controlsWeak substitute to avoid
VIN, production month and marketRunning changes, steering side and factory build specificationRegistration year alone
Complete engine and gearbox codesFilters, cooling, ignition, emissions, clutch and driveline componentsEngine capacity or model badge
Body series and axleSuspension loads, braking equipment, lamps, glazing and body fittingsA photograph of a similar vehicle
Factory options and installed hardwarePerformance brakes, adaptive suspension, assistance systems and electrical equipmentTrim level or wheel style
Complete replacement specificationDimensions, material, connectors, position, quantity and supersessionsA shortened cross-reference

Core vehicle systems and related parts

Brakes, steering and suspension

Brake discs, pads, calipers and wear sensors must match axle position, dimensions and installed braking equipment. Steering and suspension parts depend on body style, driven wheels, axle load and any sport, adaptive or self-levelling system. Inspect tyres, wheel bearings, bushes, joints, mountings and hydraulic or electrical connections before replacing one part. After relevant work, complete alignment and any required steering-angle, ride-height or driver-assistance calibration.

Engine, filtration, cooling and emissions

Air, oil, fuel and cabin filters differ by housing, dimensions, sealing arrangement and service specification. Cooling parts depend on engine code, transmission, air-conditioning and the installed circuit. Diagnose overheating, pressure loss or repeated contamination before fitting a new pump, thermostat, radiator or hose. Required catalysts, particulate filters, EGR and SCR equipment must remain present and functional; replace parts only after checking sensors, hoses, wiring and the fault conditions that caused the warning.

Electrical, ignition and starting systems

Battery condition, charging voltage, earth paths, connectors and wiring can create several related faults. Test the circuit before replacing a starter motor, alternator, sensor or control component. Later vehicles may require battery registration, coding or system initialisation. Save diagnostic codes and freeze-frame information before clearing them, because the stored context can distinguish a primary fault from low-voltage secondary warnings.

Transmission and driveline

Manual, automatic and dual-clutch assemblies use unit-specific clutches, mounts, filters, seals and fluids. Driven-axle layout also affects shafts, joints, hubs and differentials. Identify the gearbox and final-drive assemblies separately and follow their temperature, filling and adaptation procedures. Vibration should be diagnosed across tyres, wheels, mountings, joints and shafts rather than attributed to one visible component.

Wear, operating conditions and inspection

SymptomAreas to inspectResponse
Grinding, severe vibration or pulling under brakingFriction parts, calipers, hoses, wheel bearings and tyresStop if braking is materially impaired and arrange inspection.
Overheating, coolant loss or red temperature warningLeaks, pump, thermostat, radiator, fan, pressure cap and engine conditionStop safely; continuing can cause major engine damage.
Steering warning, looseness or sudden heavy steeringPower supply, assistance system, rack, joints, sensors and tyresAvoid driving if directional control is compromised.
Engine or emissions warning with poor runningStored data, intake, fuel, ignition, sensors and emissions hardwareDiagnose promptly; do not replace a sensor from the code description alone.
Knock, uneven tyre wear or unstable handlingSprings, dampers, bushes, joints, alignment and wheel conditionInspect soon and correct looseness before alignment.

Materials, fluids and approvals

Material and construction choices are application-specific. A rubber bush can prioritise isolation while a hydraulic or stiffer design controls movement differently; a coated steel disc, aluminium housing or reinforced polymer duct has its own installation and corrosion requirements. Do not substitute solely by appearance. Use new seals and single-use fasteners where specified, clean mating surfaces and apply the stated torque method.

Select engine oil by the required manufacturer approval as well as viscosity. Coolant chemistry, brake-fluid grade, gearbox oil, differential lubricant and power-steering fluid must match the exact assembly. Colour and broad “universal” wording do not prove compatibility. Record the specification, quantity, date and mileage after service, and follow the correct level-check or bleeding conditions.

Maintenance and repair process

  1. Record the vehicle identity, symptoms, fault data and existing part reference.
  2. Confirm the exact catalogue application and any production split or equipment note.
  3. Inspect connected components and establish why the original part failed.
  4. Use suitable tools, support and personal protection; isolate electrical or high-voltage systems correctly.
  5. Renew specified seals, fluids and single-use hardware and follow the torque sequence.
  6. Complete bleeding, alignment, coding, adaptation or calibration where required.
  7. Check for leaks, warnings, noise and safe operation before normal road use.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Ordering from the badge, year or engine capacity without the exact body and production data.
  • Using a similar photograph as final proof of dimensions or connections.
  • Ignoring axle, side, steering-side, gearbox or driven-wheel restrictions.
  • Replacing one damaged component without correcting contamination, leakage, misalignment or electrical causes.
  • Mixing fluids by colour or viscosity instead of the required approval.
  • Clearing fault codes before saving diagnostic evidence.
  • Returning a vehicle to use before required alignment, coding or calibration.

Maintenance, repair and UK safety guidance

Use current vehicle and component-manufacturer procedures, especially for braking, steering, suspension, fuel, emissions, refrigerant, restraint and high-voltage systems. Complete required tightening, bleeding, alignment, coding or calibration before returning the vehicle to normal use. An MOT pass is not a complete compatibility or maintenance check, and the vehicle must remain roadworthy between tests.

Modifications must preserve wheel clearance, axle loads, suspension travel, braking balance, tyre compatibility, lighting approval and driver-assistance operation. Engine or emissions changes may affect road legality, insurance and component life. Removing required catalyst, particulate-filter or SCR equipment is not an acceptable repair.

VAUXHALL MOKKA parts FAQs

Can the model badge confirm a part?

No. Use the exact body series, engine, production date and equipment.

Are photographs enough to confirm fitment?

No. Match the catalogue application and complete technical specification.

Why do production dates matter?

Manufacturers can revise components within one model generation.

Should warning lights be cleared before diagnosis?

No. Save fault codes and context first, then test the affected system.

Can registration data replace the VIN?

Use registration lookup as a starting point, then confirm the VIN and build details where fitment is sensitive.

Why can two engines with the same capacity need different parts?

Engine family, output, emissions equipment, ancillaries and production revisions can differ.

Should brake and suspension parts be renewed in axle pairs?

Many friction, spring and damping parts are serviced as balanced axle sets; follow the component and vehicle instructions.

Does an MOT pass confirm the maintenance history?

No. It is a roadworthiness and emissions inspection, not a complete service or compatibility audit.

When is professional fitting advisable?

Use a suitably competent technician for safety-critical, high-voltage, refrigerant, restraint, coding or calibration work.

Can I use a universal fluid?

Only when it explicitly carries the specification required for the exact assembly; broad compatibility claims are not enough.