I’ve had my 2005 Mini Cooper S – an ‘R53’ for the chassis code fans – for almost six years now. I didn’t think it would be a keeper when I bought it, but despite quite a few life changes in that time, it still fits very well.
It’s gone from being my only car – a sort of combined daily driver and fun car – to being on standby for when I don’t have a test car, or simply for when I get tired of the assorted tech nonsense in modern cars.
In that time, it’s had the odd bit done to it, mainly on an ad-hoc basis of keeping a cheap car going. Compared with all the brand-new cars I’m exposed to, the 105,000-mile, 19-year-old Mini was starting to feel a bit baggy, so I booked it in to my trusted BMW/Mini specialist, TWG Automotive in Camberley, to go through it with a fine-tooth comb.

The result was an A4 sheet of recommendations, going from the obvious (milky headlights, tired suspension) to the unseen but unsurprising (various oil leaks, a torn intake pipe, rusty front subframe).
R53s are modern classics by now, but there are still too many around for them to be valuable. Any money invested in getting it up to scratch is, well, not an investment. But then I really like the car and would find its combination of smallness, driving fun and long-distance ability hard to replace. Also, I’m a sentimental sucker.
In it for the long haul
I’m rather fond of the Mini and don’t want to be that person who buys a car, runs it into the ground and then dumps it, so I decided to start addressing some of the issues. The garage suggested doing the chassis bits first, because the rusty springs and brake pipes would be needed for the MOT, rather than be just nice-to-haves.







Join the debate
Add your comment
I also have a 2005 Mini R53, same generation, bought five years ago before the price of this model began to rise here in Italy. The car had high mileage but had been treated with care by its previous owners: a bargain. I don't see it as an investment, but as a fun car that I intend to keep. Luckily, I work from home as a freelancer, so I don't drive every day and can afford to have a thirsty car that I can enjoy using on weekends. Since owning this Mini, I've installed a set of new tires, replaced all the rubber and plastic hoses and pipes, and had to replace the hydraulic power steering pump—a notoriously fragile part—with a remanufactured unit since it was no longer available from the BMW dealer. I also replaced some gaskets, but there are still some small oil leaks. Replacing the cracked air intake hose solved a sporadic problem that the OBD scanner misreported as being due to the accelerator sensor. My R53 also has a crashy ride, made even worse by the optional Plus setup and 17" wheels. I don't mind because it's a truly special and fun car to drive. It may seem contradictory, but the Mini R53 isn't exactly reliable, but it is incredibly durable. I've spent and will spend money on it again, but I don't regret it. A Mini Cooper S is chosen with the heart, not with rationality. For me, it's much better than a new car that would have cost me more and I would have liked it less.
Unless that's a private pavement perhaps you should be a bit more thoughtful to pedestrians, pavement parkers are one of my pet hates.