- Replacing a VW badge and radar in the UK can cost upwards of $2,600.
- VW in the UK offers a support package in the UK to reduce repair costs.
- The radars used must be coded to a specific VW car before they can work.
Radar thieves have made a habit of targeting Honda, Hyundai, Mazda, and Mercedes-Benz, but several VW models deserve a spot on that same watchlist. The expensive radar units tucked behind their front emblems have long been a soft target, and they keep drawing attention from criminals who know exactly what sits under the badge and how quickly they can get to it.
For more than a decade, VW models with easy-to-access radar sensors have been frequent targets for thieves, and it’s proving to be a particularly pressing concern in the UK. The reports stretch back to 2016, when owners of the Mk7 Golf and similar models started noticing that thieves were prying off the front badges to get at the radar hardware underneath.
Read: Thieves Are Popping Car Emblems To Grab This One Expensive Part
As recently as two years ago, the British media reported that more than 50 residents in a single London borough had had their VW’s front badge and radar unit stolen. In 2026, it appears that very little has been done to clamp down on these thefts.
Stolen In Broad Daylight
According to Autocar, the badge and radar unit from VW Passat 2.0 TDI owner Claire Coleman were recently stolen while the car was parked outside her home in Brixton. Coleman told the magazine the badge was “there one day and gone the next,” and her neighbors quickly came forward with matching stories, one of them having been hit twice. She reported the theft to police, though that rarely changes the outcome in cases like these.
Once the radar is gone, the car loses a stack of driver aids. Adaptive cruise control, the speed limiter, and lane assistance all stop working, and the dashboard lights up with a “Front Assist not available” warning. The one small mercy is that the fault will not cause the car to fail its MOT, so the vehicle remains legal to drive even with a hole where the sensor should be.
A replacement can also be very expensive. Coleman was quoted almost £2,000 ($2,600) for a new badge and radar unit. Fortunately, VW in the UK offers a support package to local buyers due to the spate of thefts, which eventually lowered her repair bill to £539 ($710), but that’s still a big chunk of money.
The report adds that owners get different amounts of help depending on their situation. A former VW technician told the magazine that a car’s dealer service history can affect how much support the company is willing to offer.
Can VW Do More?
It appears there’s very little reason for individuals to keep stealing these badges and radars. The magazine notes that the radar units can only be re-used if they are electronically coded to the vehicle by VW and correctly calibrated. With this in mind, Coleman believes VW should do a better job of promoting this fact, as it may help deter would-be thieves.
“The cost is one thing, but it’s the fact that VW has not publicized the fact that these radar units are single-use devices that cannot simply be fitted to another VW that frustrates me,” she said. “If they did, it might put off the thieves.”
Coleman has since repaired her Passat and now keeps the front badge covered whenever she parks. Volkswagen puts the number at only a few hundred badge thefts, most of them in pockets of London. The company admits it has stayed quiet about the radar units being unusable once removed, worried that saying so out loud would only invite more thieves.
Not Just A British Problem
Of course, this issue extends far beyond Britain. As we recently reported, a growing number of cars from different brands are being hit by thieves as they also house radar units behind the front badges. These thefts are proving to be a growing headache across New York City. It’s become such a serious concern that some companies now sell protective covers that can be placed over the sensors, locking them in place.
The thefts have also prompted a Change.org petition calling on Volkswagen to investigate the problem, warn owners of affected models, tighten theft prevention, and ease the financial hit on victims. As of writing, it had gathered hundreds of signatures from owners who say the issue has dragged on for years.
