Get quotes for a used or replacement Vauxhall Combo door. Genuine second hand parts from UK vehicle dismantlers - free request, breakers with stock reply direct.
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Start your part requestUsed doors vary between vehicles - and whether you call it used, second hand or a replacement, matching the right one matters. These are the details breakers need to match the right part to your car - our request form asks them so you only hear from suppliers with the correct part:
The Combo has run across several distinct generations, so the year range matters a great deal. The B generation covered roughly 1993–2001, the C generation ran 2001–2011, and the current D generation (also sold as the Combo Cargo) arrived in 2018. Doors from one generation will not cross over to another, so always match the generation first, then confirm the specific year range with the breaker against your registration.
Both years sit within the Combo C generation (2001–2011), so the door shell itself is generally from the same body family. However, you still need to confirm the exact body configuration — passenger car versus panel van, and whether it is the NS (nearside, passenger side) or OS (offside, driver side) door you need. Confirm the full spec with the breaker against your registration before purchasing.
Yes, this applies to Combo models offered in both three-door and five-door car-derived body styles — the front door on a three-door version is longer than on a five-door because it must cover the full passenger access area, so they are not interchangeable. Always tell the breaker your exact door count as well as NS or OS. Confirm against your registration to be sure.
Yes, for sliding side doors on Combo vans the wheelbase is a key fitment factor — a short-wheelbase and long-wheelbase van will have different aperture sizes and door dimensions. Make sure you tell the breaker both your wheelbase variant and your exact model year so they can match the correct door. Never assume a sliding door from a different wheelbase variant will fit, even within the same generation.
Trim level does not affect the door shell or its fitment — the same door frame is used across trim grades within the same generation and body configuration. What can differ between trims is equipment such as mirror type or window regulator style, so the door you source may look slightly different to your original on those details. Confirm any feature differences you are concerned about with the breaker against your registration.
No — the Combo C (2001–2011) and the Combo D (2018 onwards) are entirely different generations with different body structures, so their doors are not interchangeable. There is also a gap in mainstream Combo production between these two generations, and the D generation is built on a different platform entirely. Always confirm the exact generation with the breaker against your registration before ordering.
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.