Online vehicle sourcing has matured well beyond passenger cars. In 2026, dealers across Europe are using digital platforms to source vans, HGVs and specialist commercial stock that would previously have required attendance at physical auction halls or direct relationships with fleet disposal teams. The infrastructure now exists to buy a 44-tonne articulated unit or a fleet of ex-lease vans entirely online — but the platforms doing this well are not always the ones with the loudest marketing presence.
For dealers who stock or trade commercial vehicles, the sourcing landscape looks quite different from the passenger car market. This article covers what that landscape looks like in practice, and what to consider before committing to a platform.
Commercial Stock Sits in a Separate Market
The B2B platforms that dominate European passenger car remarketing — ex-lease auction sites, fleet disposal networks, cross-border wholesale marketplaces — generally carry light commercial vehicles as a secondary category, not a primary one. Van and truck stock tends to come from different disposal routes: contractor exits, fleet downscaling, business closures, and leasing company returns that run on their own remarketing timetables.
This means dealers sourcing specifically in the commercial segment often need to work across multiple channels simultaneously. A platform that delivers strong ex-lease passenger car supply may offer only occasional commercial stock, and the reverse is true as well.
What Online Commercial Vehicle Platforms Typically Carry
The better online commercial vehicle channels carry stock across the full range — from car-derived vans and crew cabs at the light end through to rigids, tractor units and specialist bodies at the heavy end. Fleet-managed vehicles make up the most attractive supply for dealers, since they tend to come with service schedules, MOT history and tachograph downloads that support resale or re-registration.
In the UK market, for instance, dedicated commercial vehicle auctions run by operators like Universal Auctions Group list stock from named fleets, leasing companies and business closures across HGVs, vans, tippers, curtainsiders, recovery units and specialist conversion vehicles. Each lot is listed with mileage, MOT status, plating certificates where applicable, and condition notes covering both the base vehicle and any auxiliary equipment — which is exactly the documentation level that makes online bidding viable for trade buyers who cannot physically inspect before bidding.
This kind of specialist UK operator is also worth consideration for export buyers. Right-hand-drive HGVs, ex-MoD welfare units and specialist utility 4x4s move into African, Middle Eastern and EU markets at price points that do not exist domestically, and dedicated commercial channels tend to carry this stock more consistently than general automotive marketplaces.
Key Factors Before Registering on Any Platform
Not every online commercial vehicle platform suits every buying profile. Before registering or placing a first bid, dealers should work through these points:
Stock composition — Does the platform carry the vehicle types and weight classes you actually buy, or does commercial stock appear sporadically between passenger car listings?
Documentation standards — For commercial vehicles, regulatory paperwork matters more than in the passenger segment. Plating certificates, tachograph compliance, MOT class, and ADR certification status should be noted at lot level, not supplied on request after purchase.
Buyer eligibility — Most B2B platforms require proof of trade status before unlocking bidding. Some specialist operators are open to fleet buyers and owner-operators, not just registered dealers.
Payment and collection terms — Online commercial auctions typically require cleared payment before collection, with defined collection windows. For buyers arranging cross-border transport or port logistics, understanding the timeline matters before bidding.
Landed cost calculation — Platform fees, transport, import duty where applicable and re-registration costs need to be factored before the first bid, not after winning a lot.
Building a Sourcing Strategy Across Channels
The dealers doing this well in 2026 are not relying on a single platform. They are using general European remarketing networks for passenger and light commercial volume, while maintaining accounts on specialist channels for heavier stock and specific vehicle types. The goal is to match each platform to the inventory it carries reliably — and to avoid expecting a passenger car auction network to deliver consistent HGV supply.
Online sourcing in the commercial vehicle segment rewards dealers who do the groundwork upfront: understanding what each platform carries, what documentation comes with it, and what the true cost of each vehicle is before the hammer falls.






