NISSAN · NISSAN VANETTE · Cars
Genuinely rare — only 11 left on UK roads.
Rarer than 78% of the 2,408 UK car models we track.
Disappearing at about 0 a year (2.2% of survivors). At that pace roughly 10 would remain in 5 years, and half the current fleet is gone by around ~2057.
The Nissan Vanette (Japanese: 日産・バネット, Hepburn: Nissan Banetto) is a cabover van and pickup truck produced by the Japanese automaker Nissan from 1978 until 2011. The first two generations were engineered by Nissan's Aichi Manufacturing Division for private, personal ownership, with the last two generations built by Mazda, rebadged as Nissans and refocused as commercial vehicles, based on the Mazda Bongo. The van has also been sold as the Nissan Sunny-Vanette or Nissan Van. The private purchase passenger platform was replaced by the Nissan Serena in 1991, renamed Vanette in various international...
As of 2025 Q4, 11 NISSAN VANETTE were still registered in the UK — 4 licensed and on the road, plus 7 declared SORN (off-road). The figures come from official DVLA vehicle licensing data.
The NISSAN VANETTE is genuinely rare, with only 11 left, making it rarer than 78% of the 2,408 UK car models we track.
Over the last year the number of NISSAN VANETTE on UK roads held steady. At the current rate of decline, roughly 10 would remain in 5 years.
Most NISSAN VANETTE run on diesel — about 55% of those still registered, with the rest split across petrol.
The NISSAN VANETTE peaked at 27 registered in 2014 Q3, and was first recorded in the data in 2014 Q3.