A TREASURE hunter has unearthed a 100-year-old car tax disc and it’s worth a fair bit of money.
Chris Langston, 50, found the hand-sized circular metal case while scouring an old Victorian bottle tip in Oswestry, Shropshire.
His metal detector buzzed and after digging around a foot down into the earth, Chris pulled out the rusty holder.
Chris cleaned the broken glass front which revealed the paper disc with the date it expired and the official stamp showing the place where it was issued.
Amazingly, despite having faded over the decades, the stamp revealed the tax expired on December 31, 1924.
It would have been issued a year earlier on December 31, 1923, and would have cost the motorist £1 for every horsepower their car engine produced.
Read More on Treasure Finds
After his discovery on Sunday Chris, from Oswestry, researched the history of the disc and discovered it was probably for a Model T Ford.
He said: “I was out detecting near an old Victorian bottle dump and my detector pinged so I dug down and pulled out this metal lump.
“It was covered in mud but when I carefully brushed away the dirt I could see a broken glass circle.
“I realised it was obviously a very old tax disc but I was desperate to know what car it was for.
Most read in Money
“I basically went down a complete rabbit hole of tax discs and discovered it was one of the first ever issued.
“I could see a letter F in the vehicle description box. I’ve checked, and the only F vehicles around in 1923 were Model T Fords.
“I could just about make out the horsepower which was 20.
“My research revealed that back in 1923 drivers were charged at £1 per horsepower according to an RAC calculation.
“It means this disc was likely to have cost about £20 at the time which was certainly not cheap and would be over a £1,000 in today’s money.
“How it turned up here is anyone’s guess but it is an old dump so the car may have been scrapped or the disc lost but it’s incredible to find it almost exactly a century after it was issued.”
The UK tax disc system was launched in 1921 and the government stopped issuing them in 2014.
Chris is planning to display the disc in his local museum before selling it for possibly hundreds of pounds.
He said: “They are worth quite a bit and I think I could get a few hundred pounds for it.”
The highest amount paid for a single tax disc was £1,087.80, according to money making advice website MoneyMagpie.
Your stash could be scooped by a “velologist” – someone who buys and trades car discs – on the hunt for a new collection.
Discs issued in Northern Ireland and Wales are less commonly found, so they are worth keeping an eye out for.
If you have one that is un-perforated, it appears to be more attractive to buyers.
Read more on The Sun
That’s because the DVLA ran out of so-called perforated paper as the tax discs came to the end, so they are harder to find, making them more valuable in the long run as they’re technically “limited edition”.
Versions with typos and printing errors are also seen as more valuable, much in the same way that rare coins with printing errors can fetch a pretty penny of their own.