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Used Mercedes-Benz GLB cars for sale

Find the right second hand Mercedes-Benz GLB for you through our network of trusted dealers across the UK

See our range of used Mercedes GLB cars for sale

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How buying a used car through Carwow works

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Use Carwow to browse and compare used vehicles, advertised by a network of trusted dealers. You can search by make and model, or apply filters to find the perfect car for you.

Contact the dealer

Once you’ve found a car you’d like to buy, you can contact the dealer to arrange the next steps, whether that’s asking a question or taking it for a test drive.

Buy the car

When you’re happy to buy, you can do so at a fixed price, safe in the knowledge all models sold through carwow are mechanically checked and come with a warranty.

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Used Mercedes-Benz GLB pros and cons

  • Boxy styling looks superb

  • Entry-level cars lack kit

  • Comfortable to drive

  • Engine choice isn't huge

  • Plush cabin and great infotainment

  • Alternatives have bigger boots and rear seats

Is a used Mercedes-Benz GLB a good car?

The Mercedes GLB is a middle-sized family SUV, with optional seats for seven, and boxy styling that makes it feel like buying a set of chunky Timberland boots just for walking to the shops. 

The GLB manages to look quite imposing, thanks to that boxy styling and the massive grille at the front. Inside, the GLB’s cabin is as posh as the exterior, with a big digital dashboard and mostly decent materials.

There’s lots of space, and tonnes of storage in the centre console, but the extra seats in the boot — and they were optional, not standard — aren’t very big. 

The GLB really stars when you drive it around town, where it’s easy to fit into tight spaces. The excellent ride comfort easily deals with the worst in-town bumps and lumps too. 

There are alternatives that are cheaper and more spacious inside, but little else in the seven-seat family SUV market that has quite the premium-class clout of the Mercedes badge. 

What to look for when buying a used Mercedes-Benz GLB

The Mercedes GLB didn’t place in the 2024 Driver Power Top 50 Cars To Own survey, but Mercedes as a brand finished in a pretty poor 25th place out of 32 brands in the customer satisfaction survey, with a high 26% of owners reporting problems, and a very poor mark for reliability and quality. 

The GLB is generally thought to be a solidly built car though, with few reported reliability issues, but Mercedes still has some work to do to convince that it’s back to its imperious best in quality terms. 

Mercedes-Benz GLB FAQs

It seems so — the GLB doesn’t have any major reliability red flags, but as with any Mercedes make sure you buy one with a full service history as it’s a complex car under the skin. 

While we wouldn’t say the GLB is ‘so cheap’ it is at least a bit more affordable than you might think, and that’s because it’s built on the same underpinnings as the A-Class, so it’s more affordable to make. 

The GLB is 4,634mm long, 1,834mm wide, and 1,697mm tall. 

As standard, the GLB comes with five seats, but adding two extra fold-down seats in the boot was available as an option.

Yes, the GLB is worth buying if you want a practical family SUV with that Mercedes-Benz sense of classiness and comfort. Just remember that the (optional) third row seats are strictly for kids. 

Most GLB versions are front-wheel drive, but 4MATIC four-wheel drive was available as an option with most of the engine choices. 

GLB isn’t an acronym, so it doesn’t stand for anything particular. The G bit is how Mercedes identifies its SUV models, while the L part indicates, more or less, large (at least compared to the A-Class hatchback on which it’s based) and B indicates the general part of the Mercedes lineup in which the GLB sits — above A-badged models in terms of size and price, but below C-badged models. 

The Mercedes GLB was first put on sale in 2019. 

 There are two factories for the GLB — Aguascalientes in Mexico, and Beijing in China. 

The GLA and GLB are actually very similar cars, built on the same NGCC (New Generation Compact Class) chassis which was also used for the A-Class, B-Class, and CLA. The GLA is the smaller of the two models, and while it’s still an SUV, it gets a more compact, hatchback-like shape. The GLB is larger, more square-shaped, has more interior space, and has the option of seven seats. The GLC is a larger, much more expensive model, which shares no parts with the GLA or GLB, and is actually based on the same chassis as the C-Class saloon.

* In line with the Consumer Rights Act 2015