2008 Land Rover Range Rover Sport inspection checklist
The 2008 Land Rover Range Rover Sport has 44 owner complaints with NHTSA across 5 component categories. Use this checklist before you put money down — every item below is grounded in the actual failure pattern on this vehicle, not generic advice.
1
Inspect the airbags
What to look for: Anything that looks, sounds, or smells different from peer vehicles of the same year and trim. (16 owner complaints on this vehicle
· typical repair $1,100 · failures cluster ~73,850 mi)
What to look for: Pulsing brake pedal, pulling to one side when braking, squealing or grinding, soft pedal that goes to the floor. (5 owner complaints on this vehicle
· typical repair $450 · failures cluster ~80,499 mi)
On the test drive: Hard brake from 40 mph in a safe spot — pedal should be firm, stop should be straight. A pulse means warped rotors ($300–$600).
What to look for: Bouncing after bumps, knocking over potholes, sagging on one corner, harsh ride with all the dampening gone. (5 owner complaints on this vehicle
· typical repair $900 · failures cluster ~57,333 mi)
On the test drive: Drive over a series of bumps or a railroad crossing — clunks point to worn end links, ball joints, or strut mounts.
What to look for: Hesitation on takeoff, harsh or delayed shifts, vibration at highway speed, fluid leaks on the driveway under the engine bay or transmission pan. (4 owner complaints on this vehicle
· typical repair $2,500 · failures cluster ~114,931 mi)
On the test drive: Drive 15+ minutes including a freeway on-ramp at full throttle, a steep hill, and stop-and-go traffic. Listen for clunks on shifts, flares between gears, and shudders during light acceleration at 30–50 mph (torque converter symptom).
The seller's transparency on these tells you what kind of seller you're dealing with.
Inspection items derived from 44 owner complaints and 1 active recall campaigns filed
with NHTSA on the 2008 Land Rover Range Rover Sport. Category-specific guidance is written by ProblemsByVin contributors with ASE-certified mechanic
review. This checklist is meant to surface known patterns — it doesn't replace a paid pre-purchase inspection by a
qualified shop, which we recommend for any used vehicle priced over a few thousand dollars.