Your Range Rover SUV is a luxurious and highly-capable vehicle, but it can’t maintain that high level of excellence on its own. Fortunately, the team at Land Rover Birmingham knows what your Range Rover SUV needs to keep dominating the streets of Vestavia Hills for years to come.

Recommended Service Intervals for Your Range Rover

Remembering when you to bring your Range Rover in for service is easy. For normal driving, the recommended service interval for most Range Rover SUVs is one year or 10,000 miles, whichever comes first. And as always, the team at Land Rover Birmingham can recommend services based on your last appointment and estimated mileage, so you’re never too far behind schedule. The annual service interval covers things like your Range Rover oil change, as well as inspections of critical components within the engine, transmission, and suspension. And on every second appointment (2 years, or 20,000 miles), we’ll perform a brake service to ensure that your Range Rover has the stopping power you need to stay safe on the streets of Birmingham and beyond.

What Can Affect My Range Rover Service Interval?

While the one year, 10,000-mile recommended service interval covers normal driving conditions, other factors may require more frequent visits to our Birimingham Range Rover service center. Examples of driving conditions that shorten your recommended service window include:

  • Off-roading
  • Frequent Towing
  • Frequent drives up and down steep grades
  • Frequent drives in heavy stop and go traffic
  • High-performance driving

If any of these apply to you, the service window can shorten to anywhere from 5,000 to 7,500 miles per checkup.

Schedule Range Rover Service Today

If your Range Rover SUV is ready for its next service appointment, schedule service with our Range Rover dealership online today. Pick your service, choose a day and time that works for you, and our team of Range Rover, Defender, and Discovery service experts will be here to help your vehicle run its best.

Categories: Parts, Service