Get quotes for a used or replacement Vauxhall Agila quarter panel. Genuine second hand parts from UK vehicle dismantlers - free request, breakers with stock reply direct.
Tell us what you need - breakers with matching stock quote you direct. Free, no obligation.
Start your part requestThe Agila ran across two distinct generations: the A (2000–2004) and the B (2004–2007), each built on a completely different platform and bodystyle pressing, so a quarter panel from an A will not fit a B. Always make sure you and the breaker are talking about the same generation before anything else. These are the primary fitment boundaries for this part.
A 2003 Agila is a first-generation Agila A, while a 2005 Agila is a second-generation Agila B — they are on entirely different platforms and body structures, so the quarter panels are not interchangeable. Stick to sourcing your panel from within the same generation. Confirm the exact year and platform with the breaker quoting against your registration to be certain.
Trim level — whether Club, Design, Expression, or any other — does not affect quarter panel fitment on the Agila; the pressing is the same across the range for a given generation. You may find that colour-coded versus unpainted finishes differ cosmetically between cars depending on original specification, but structurally the panel is identical. Focus on matching generation rather than trim when searching with a breaker.
Yes, door count absolutely matters for quarter panel fitment — the rear quarter pressings differ between 3-door and 5-door body variants because the aperture and surrounding metalwork are shaped differently. Always tell the breaker whether your car is a 3-door or 5-door alongside the generation, as a panel from the wrong door count will not fit correctly. Engine size and gearbox are irrelevant to this.
The Agila B ran from 2004 to 2007 and whether Vauxhall made any mid-generation pressing changes to the quarter panel during that run is something you should confirm directly with the breaker, quoting your exact registration, rather than assume. Within a single named generation the panels are generally consistent, but minor supplier or tooling changes can occasionally occur and a good breaker will check this against the specific donor car they have. Don't assume a late-B and early-B panel are identical without that confirmation.
Yes, NS (nearside, kerb side) and OS (offside, driver's side) quarter panels are handed and are not interchangeable with each other, so make sure you specify the correct side when contacting a breaker. Beyond that, the same generation and door-count rules apply regardless of which side you need. Getting the side wrong is one of the most common ordering mistakes on body panels, so double-check before confirming your quote.
Fitment guidance is general and mistakes can happen - vehicle specifications vary and manufacturers make mid-production changes. Always confirm the exact part against your registration with the supplying breaker before buying.