HILLMAN · HILLMAN GT · Cars
Genuinely rare — only 1 left on UK roads.
Rarer than 93% of the 2,408 UK car models we track.
Disappearing at about 0 a year (30.8% of survivors). At that pace roughly 0 would remain in 5 years, and half the current fleet is gone by around ~2027.
Rootes Arrow was the manufacturer's name for a range of cars produced under several badge-engineered marques by the Rootes Group (later Chrysler Europe) from 1966 to 1979 in Europe, and continuing on until 2005 in Iran. It is amongst the last Rootes designs, developed with no influence from future owner Chrysler. The range is almost always referred to by the name of the most prolific model, the Hillman Hunter. A substantial number of separate marque and model names were applied to this single car platform. Some were given different model names to justify trim differences (Hillman GT, Hillman Estate...
As of 2025 Q4, 1 HILLMAN GT were still registered in the UK — 0 licensed and on the road, plus 1 declared SORN (off-road). The figures come from official DVLA vehicle licensing data.
The HILLMAN GT is genuinely rare, with only 1 left, making it rarer than 93% of the 2,408 UK car models we track.
Over the last year the number of HILLMAN GT on UK roads fell by 1 (50.0%). At the current rate of decline, roughly 0 would remain in 5 years.
Most HILLMAN GT run on petrol — about 100% of those still registered.
The HILLMAN GT peaked at 3 registered in 2015 Q1, and was first recorded in the data in 2014 Q3.