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26 juin 2026 MOTCall handlingCapacity planning

MOT season call surges: capacity planning and when AI receptionists pay

Practical steps for UK garages to handle MOT-season call spikes: diary setup, booking patterns, staffing, and how AI receptionists earn their keep fastest.

Illustration for "MOT season call surges: capacity planning and when AI receptionists pay"

Every spring and autumn, phones melt. March and September (and the weeks either side) bring MOT-heavy calendars and impatient callers who want while-you-wait slots, Saturdays, or next-day fixes. Here’s a practical playbook to keep the diary full, phones covered, and stress down — including where an AI receptionist returns value quickest for independent garages.

Know your MOT-season shape before it hits

  • Expect two peaks: March and September are the high-water marks thanks to registration cycles, with spill into February/April and August/October. Local variations matter — commuter towns see earlier morning demand; rural areas skew to mid-morning.
  • Booking windows tighten: callers often ring 7–10 days out for MOT-only and 10–21 days for service + MOT. Saturdays and late afternoons go first. If you discount MOTs, the window shortens further.
  • Call patterns are lumpy: Mondays, 8:00–10:00, and lunch hours are the heaviest. After-hours enquiries climb in peak weeks as customers remember at 8pm that their MOT is due.
  • Walk-ins and retests spike: plan for same-day checks after fails elsewhere and for DVSA retests within 10 working days.

Action this week:

  • Pull last two years of MOT due dates from your DMS and map them by week. If you don’t track due dates, sample last March/September job cards to estimate volume.
  • Note which days and times filled first. That tells you which slots to protect and which to price or message differently.

Build a diary that can take a pounding

MOTs are predictable work; the diary should reflect that predictability.

  • Fix the MOT cadence: a realistic tempo is one test per hour per tester, assuming a proper inspection plus admin. If you run faster, keep a small buffer every third slot for overrun or advisories that tip into quick fixes.
  • Ringfence retest capacity: hold back 10–20% of MOT tester time for retests and same-day retests from your own fails. Release the hold at 10:00 and 15:00 daily if unused.
  • Separate MOT-only from service + MOT: protect contiguous time for larger jobs so MOTs don’t fragment technician hours. Use named MOT lanes/bays in the diary, not generic time blocks.
  • Protect the peaks: reserve early mornings and Saturdays for MOT-only or while-you-wait, and push service + MOT to midweek middays where customers are more flexible.
  • Set minimum lead-times: during peak weeks, stop offering next-day service + MOT unless capacity exists — let the system offer the next sensible slot automatically.
  • Plan courtesy car and collection limits: cap them per day. Publish the cap on the phone and website to reduce negotiation on each call.
  • Keep a standby list: two lists work well — locals happy to come at short notice, and trade contacts who need tests turned fast. Message them when a cancellation lands.

Checklist to prep the team:

  • Agree the MOT test duration, buffer rules, and when to release held slots.
  • Script answers for “how long will it take?”, “can I wait?”, “any Saturday free?”, and “I’ve just failed elsewhere”.
  • Decide upsell rules (bulbs/wipers fitted while it’s there) and price signage so the front-of-house doesn’t pause.

Make the phone work for you, not against you

The goal is simple: every caller gets an answer first time, and the diary fills the way you planned.

  • Publish the rules: put MOT price, wait-while-you-wait policy, and first-available dates on Google Business Profile, your website, and call greeting. Clear info trims repeat questions.
  • Route calls by intent: “Press 1 to book an MOT” can drop straight into booking flow; parts and trade get their own path so retail lines stay free.
  • Set overflow logic: when two lines are busy or it rings more than 20 seconds, divert to a backup answer — a second site, a trusted remote receptionist, or an AI receptionist that can book live into your DMS.
  • Don’t invite voicemails: at peak, voicemails become a second job you’ll never catch up on. If you must, auto-text a booking link to anyone who hits voicemail.
  • Track missed and abandoned calls by hour. If 12:00–14:00 bleeds, stagger lunches or switch the phone to overflow during that window.

What a good booking flow captures every time:

  • VRM lookup, contact details, MOT due date, preferred time, while-you-wait yes/no, retest yes/no.
  • If bundling service: mileage, last service date, any faults noted.
  • Courtesy car/collection needs, and acceptance of your timing window (“arrive between 08:15–08:30”).

When an AI receptionist pays back fastest

AI receptionists answer every call, 24/7, follow your diary rules, and push bookings straight into systems like Garage Hive or Tyresoft. They don’t replace service advisors — they take the repetitive load so humans handle exceptions and customers at the counter. Payback is quickest in these scenarios:

  • Peak-season bottlenecks: if Mondays and lunchtimes regularly see callers hanging up, capturing even a handful of those turns into immediate revenue. Example logic: even at a discounted £40 MOT, four extra bookings from overflow/after-hours across a week is £160 revenue before any advisory work — and it repeats every week in peak months.
  • After-hours demand: many MOT bookings get attempted between 18:00–22:00. An AI receptionist that books live (not just “takes a message”) converts those. Two extra out-of-hours bookings per day during March/September quickly outweigh any subscription.
  • Single-advisor sites: when the only front-of-house person is on the phone, counter customers wait and technicians pause for keys and authorisations. Offloading routine MOT bookings keeps the counter moving and the ramp turning.
  • Multi-site groups: centralised overflow stops Site A drowning while Site B sits quiet. AI can be the safety net that fills whichever diary has capacity, using your rules.
  • Short-notice sickness or holidays: keep the line covered without a temp. The AI sticks to your slot lengths, courtesy car caps, and retest holds, so the plan survives staff gaps.
  • Seasonal marketing pushes: if you send MOT reminders by SMS/email, expect a call spike within two hours. Let the AI catch the rush and book directly from the link or call-back.

What to set up before switching it on:

  • Clean slot templates: MOT-only, service + MOT, retest holds, courtesy car caps, and while-you-wait flags.
  • Clear rules for edge cases: expired MOTs (no driving), class 4 vs 7, EVs/hybrids, and maximum daily while-you-wait count.
  • House style: how to greet, what to say when fully booked, and when to escalate to a human (warning lights, braking faults, or complaints).

Tradeoffs to be aware of:

  • Some customers still want a human. Keep an option to reach the desk.
  • Poor diary hygiene equals poor outcomes. If the DMS diary is messy, any receptionist — human or AI — will struggle.
  • Start with narrow permissions. Let the AI book MOTs and simple bundles first, then widen as confidence grows.

Put it together for the next peak

  • Forecast: map due dates and identify the three heaviest weeks.
  • Template: lock MOT cadence, buffers, and retest holds; publish rules.
  • Cover: set overflow and after-hours booking, ideally AI-backed.
  • Measure: watch missed calls by hour and slot fill by type; tweak daily.
  • Review: after week one, adjust buffers and release times; update scripts.

Handle MOT season once with a resilient diary and reliable call coverage, and the same setup will carry you through tyre-change weeks and winter breakdown spikes with far less effort.

Want to see how AI call coverage and live booking works in real UK garages? Read the case studies at /case-studies or start a quick pilot at /get-started.

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