Used silver cars for sale

Find the right second hand silver car for you through our network of trusted dealers across the UK

Sell your car for what it's really worth

The free, easy way to get 5,500+ dealers all over the UK bidding on your car

How buying a used silver car through Carwow works

Find a car

Use Carwow to browse and compare used vehicles, advertised by a network of trusted dealers. You can search by make and model, or apply filters to find the perfect car for you.

Contact the dealer

Once you’ve found a car you’d like to buy, you can contact the dealer to arrange the next steps, whether that’s asking a question or taking it for a test drive.

Buy the car

When you’re happy to buy, you can do so at a fixed price, safe in the knowledge all models sold through carwow are mechanically checked and come with a warranty.

What our customers loved

Looking to buy a used silver car? Get a full car history check

Silver cars FAQs

From a resale value point of view, silver is one of the best colours to choose. 

Yes, although there’s a bit of ‘it depends’ to that. According to the SMMT, in 2024, silver was the 6th most popular UK new car colour, but grey was the most popular, and obviously, there’s a slim barrier between silver and grey, so we suspect there’s a bit of crossover between the two figures. 

It’s a neutral colour, which many people prefer, and it’s often thought to be the colour that shows off the shape and styling of your car the best. Plus, it’s a relatively easy colour to keep clean, and is good at hiding some dirt.

No, as silver is usually an optional extra metallic colour. For the most part, and with a few exceptions, white is the cheapest colour. 

They shouldn’t be. In theory, the colour of your car should make no difference to your insurance quote, however, there is some actuarial data that shows silver and grey cars are more likely to be involved in an accident, so there may be some small effect.

That’s a good question. There is data which shows silver and grey cars are more likely to be involved in an accident, but it’s unclear if that’s actually a problem with silver as a colour, or (and this is the probable answer) there are just more silver and grey cars on the road, so of course they’re going to show up more in accident data.

Yes, a silver car will show dirt, but depending on the shade of silver, it can be quite a good colour for hiding lighter-coloured dirt.