Where Is the Valtra PIN Plate?
Last updated · 6 min read
Quick answer
On most modern Valtra tractors, the factory PIN plate is on the right-hand side of the chassis near the cab step, and the same PIN is also stamped into the chassis frame casting nearby. The engine carries its own separate serial. Always cross-check the riveted plate against the engraved frame stamp — a mismatch is the single strongest stolen-equipment signal at the inspection stage.
Modern (post-2000) Valtra PIN format
Modern Valtra tractors (an AGCO brand) carry a 17-character ISO 3779 PIN on the chassis plate. Valtra assembly is concentrated at Suolahti, Finland (the historic Valmet / Valtra plant) and at Mogi das Cruzes, Brazil for the South American market. The 17-character PIN follows the standard ISO field layout.
Legacy Valtra serial format
Pre-2000 Valtra (and earlier Valmet-branded) tractors carry a shorter Valmet/Valtra-internal serial — typically a 6-to-7-digit sequence printed on the factory data plate. Year requires the published model-year break tables for the specific Valmet or Valtra family.
Where to find the PIN plate on a Valtra
- Factory PIN / data plate (the riveted plate). On modern Valtra tractors (A / G / N / T / S / Q series) the factory data plate is on the right-hand side of the chassis near the cab step, or on the right-hand A-pillar inside the cab. It carries the full 17-character PIN plus the Valtra internal serial.
- Chassis engraving (the same PIN, stamped). Valtra stamps the chassis serial into the frame casting near the plate, on the right-hand front frame rail on most current-production models.
- Engine serial (separate identifier). Valtra tractors run AGCO Power (formerly Sisu Diesel) engines built at Linnavuori, Finland — only a short distance from the Suolahti tractor plant. The engine serial follows the AGCO Power format and is stamped on the engine block.
- Operator's manual and dealer service file. The PIN appears on the title page of the manual delivered with the machine and in any authorised Valtra dealer service-history record. If the seller cannot produce the manual or a dealer service record, that is itself a flag worth pricing in.
Model-specific variations
Valtra plate-position conventions vary by model family. The following are the locations to expect on the most common current and recent product lines:
- A Series (compact / utility) — plate on the right-hand frame rail near the cab step.
- G / N Series mid-range — plate on the right-hand chassis rail under the cab step; secondary CE plate inside the cab.
- T Series row-crop — plate on the right-hand main frame between front axle and cab; engraving on the same frame.
- S Series large-frame and Q Series — plate on the right-hand chassis rail under the cab step; secondary emissions / homologation plate inside the cab on the A-pillar.
- Brazil-built Mogi das Cruzes Valtras (BH, BM lines) — plate location follows the same right-hand frame convention; WMI in the PIN identifies the Mogi das Cruzes plant.
How to verify the PIN is genuine
A correct PIN is one that decodes structurally and appears in three consistent places on the machine. Walk the machine and check, in order:
- Plate vs engraving match. The 17-character PIN on the riveted plate must match the engraved chassis stamp character-for-character. Mismatched, partially mismatched, or "the plate fell off" stories are walk-away signals.
- Rivet condition. Factory plates have factory rivets — uniform heads, consistent corrosion, no fresh tool marks. Fresh non-original rivets, missing rivets, or screws where there should be rivets are signals.
- Paint and surface match. The area immediately around a factory plate should weather and corrode at the same rate as the surrounding metal. Fresh paint, polished metal, or chemical residue around the plate are signals.
- Font and spacing. Compare the plate's font, character spacing and plate-edge profile against other Valtra machines of the same era. Counterfeit plates are usually recognisable by font or spacing differences from the factory original.
- Engine serial recorded. The engine serial is its own identifier; record it separately and check that it appears in the maintenance history. A new engine is normal on a high-hour machine, but it should be documented.
- Cross-check against a registry. Even a perfectly-formed PIN can be stolen. A registry cross-check (Machinetrail covers 14 European registries plus a stolen-equipment dataset in one lookup) is the last line of defence.
What to do after finding the PIN
With the PIN written down (all three places — plate, engraving, engine serial), the pre-purchase value comes from cross-checking that PIN against three failure-mode databases before money changes hands:
- Stolen-equipment registries. A stolen Valtra will be reclaimed by police regardless of how clean the paperwork looks. Machinetrail queries 14 European registries plus TER-Europe-style and NER-style stolen-equipment data in a single lookup keyed to the PIN.
- Open safety recalls. EU Safety Gate, member-state agencies (Bundesnetzagentur, RDW, Traficom) and OEM recall feeds. Open recalls on hydraulic, brake, or PTO systems are a measurable safety risk and a re-sale-value problem.
- Auction comparables and market value. What did similar Valtra machines actually sell for in the last 12 months? Decoded PIN plus model plus year plus hours plus region returns the range of recent sale prices.
Paste the PIN into the Machinetrail homepage lookup for a structural decode plus the cross-checks above.
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