Guides
VOR & car-part
couriers explained.
In the motor trade, a missing part means a vehicle stuck on a ramp — and a customer waiting.
What VOR means
VOR stands for vehicle-off-road: a vehicle that can't be returned to the customer until a part arrives. Like AOG in aviation, it's a clock that doesn't stop — every hour is a bay tied up and a customer kept waiting.
An automotive courier moves that part the moment it's available, garage-to-garage or factor-to-workshop, on a dedicated same-day run.
Garage-to-garage, line-to-line
Car-part couriers serve dealerships, independents, bodyshops, factors and production lines. The job is the same: collect the part and drive it straight there, with no depot delays, so the ramp clears or the line keeps running.
For manufacturing, the same urgency applies to production-critical and line-down components.
Why same-day dedicated wins
A shared network can't promise a time, and a stuck vehicle can't wait. A dedicated driver carrying only your part, tracked the whole way, is the difference between a customer collecting today and a job rolling into tomorrow.
Related
Need it moved?
Tell us the job and we'll come back with a fixed quote. Collection within the hour, 24/7.

