Car Parts

Car parts in this category cover the replacement components that keep vehicles running, from service items through to braking and suspension pieces. Sizes, versions and sub-model differences move in and out quickly, because partner retailers refresh fitment data and stock files at different times. The grid shows current listings from multiple partner retailers inside the Discount Promo Codes shopping channel, so you can compare how parts are described, packaged and matched to a vehicle. You will see filters that steer browsing by system (brakes, filters, ignition), engine type and fitment notes, alongside product types such as pads and discs, oil and air filters, spark plugs and sensors. Variants can appear as separate product cards or as selectable options under one listing, depending on the feed.

Read on for fitment, specs and listing differences

Main part groupings across the grid

The grid commonly includes braking components (pads, discs, wear sensors), service items (oil, air and cabin filters), ignition items (spark plugs, coils) and steering/suspension parts (arms, links, bushes). Some partners publish a separate card per axle or engine code, while others group multiple fitments under a single listing with notes. Fitment is the difference. Halfords often surfaces service parts with clearer vehicle-matching prompts and pack contents like “single filter” versus “service kit”. In listings that include car parts, check whether you’re viewing front/rear variants or a multi-fit listing.

Service kits, sets and alternative formats

Parts appear as singles, paired sets and service bundles. Brake pads may be sold as an axle set, while discs can appear as single discs or a pair, with separate SKUs for different diameters. Service items can be bundled as a kit with oil and multiple filters, or split into individual items. Pack format matters. CarParts4Less is a frequent anchor where kits and singles are both common, and the listing fields can differ between them. For replacement car parts, compare quantity (single vs set) and fitment notes before brand names.

Fit, sizing and specification differences

Size and spec data is published unevenly across feeds. Discs may list diameter in millimetres and vented/solid type, while another listing leads with an OEM reference and hides measurements. Filters can be described by thread size, height and seal type, yet some feeds only show a vehicle match. Sensors can vary by connector pins and cable length. When comparing brake pads, check axle position, disc type compatibility and whether fitting clips are included.

Materials, build and functional details

Build differences show up in friction compound types, coated versus uncoated discs, rubber bush hardness, and whether components are supplied with nuts, bolts or clips. Suspension arms may list ball joint inclusion, while others require separate joints. Details matter. Euro Car Parts often publishes separate listings for “with fittings” versus “without fittings”, which changes what arrives in the box. In service parts listings, look for included seals, washers and whether the part is a direct-fit replacement.

Common checks people make before choosing parts

Users check registration or model-year fitment notes, confirm axle position, then verify quantity and key measurements where provided. They also check whether the listing includes fixings, seals or clips, and whether the part is supplied as a set. Small differences matter. Another common check is whether there are multiple engine codes under the same model name.

How Discount Codes Can Help Save on Car Parts

Retailer cards may show discount code availability beside the merchant name as a neutral listing detail, while the comparison focus stays on fitment, measurements and what is included in the box. Discount Promo Codes donates 20% of profits each month to charity, stated once as a factual platform commitment. With vehicle spare parts, comparing spec fields and pack contents across partner feeds reduces the risk of ordering the wrong variant.