Cars That Can Last Over 200,000 Miles OR Even More
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- Опубликовано: 3 июн 2024
- Looking for a car that can go the distance? In this video, we'll explore the top 10 longest-lasting sedans you can buy brand new today, according to Consumer Reports and iSeeCars industry reports. Whether you're looking for reliability, efficiency, or just a dependable daily driver, these cars have got you covered. Let's dive in!
10. Toyota Prius Hybrid
MSRP: $29,945 - $36,060
Engine Size / Options: Hybrid
Drivetrain Options: FWD, AWD available
Transmission: eCVT
Combined/City/Highway: 52/52/52 mpg
The Prius, now with a sporty look, continues to excel in fuel efficiency with nearly 60 mpg. With AWD and a lifespan of over 250,000 miles, it's a reliable hybrid choice.
9. Subaru Legacy
MSRP: $26,015 - $39,285
Engine Size / Options: 2.5L NA boxer 4-cyl, 2.4L Turbo boxer 4-cyl
Drivetrain Options: AWD
Transmission: CVT
Combined/City/Highway: 27/24/32 mpg
The Legacy, with standard AWD, is twice as likely to reach 250,000 miles as the industry average. It’s a versatile sedan for all seasons.
8. Honda Accord Hybrid
MSRP: $33,990 - $39,985
Engine Size / Options: 2.0L Turbo 4-cylinder + 2 electric motors
Drivetrain Options: FWD
Transmission: CVT
Combined/City/Highway: 44/46/41 mpg
The Accord Hybrid offers comfort, reliability, and 44 mpg combined. With a 27% chance of surpassing 250,000 miles, it’s a top pick for long-distance driving.
7. Toyota Camry
MSRP: $27,515 - $35,390
Engine Size / Options: I4, I4 + two electric motors, V6
Drivetrain Options: FWD
Transmission: 8-Speed Auto
Combined/City/Highway: 25/22/31 mpg
The Camry offers solid fuel economy and reliability, with hybrid variants achieving up to 53 mpg highway. It’s known for its longevity and comfort.
6. Lexus ES
MSRP: $43,190 - $53,480
Engine Size / Options: 2.5L I4, 3.5L V6, hybrid
Drivetrain Options: FWD, AWD available
Transmission: CVT, 8-Speed Auto
Combined/City/Highway: 44/42/44 mpg (hybrid)
The Lexus ES combines Toyota’s reliability with luxury. Offering multiple powertrains and a plush ride, it’s a durable and comfortable choice.
5. Acura TLX
MSRP: $46,195 - $58,195
Engine Size / Options: 2.0L Turbo I4, 3.0L Turbo V6
Drivetrain Options: FWD, AWD available
Transmission: 10-speed automatic
Combined/City/Highway: 21/19/25 mpg
The TLX offers sporty driving dynamics and reliability, with a turbocharged V6 and AWD option. It’s a stylish and durable sedan.
4. Lexus IS
MSRP: $41,235 - $64,520
Engine Size / Options: 2.0L Turbo I4, V6, V8
Drivetrain Options: RWD or AWD
Transmission: 6-Speed Auto or 8-Speed Auto
Combined/City/Highway: 23/20/28 mpg
The Lexus IS offers a balance of luxury, performance, and reliability with various powerful engines and a refined driving experience.
3. Acura Integra
MSRP: $32,995 - $52,999
Engine Size / Options: 1.5L Turbo I4, 2.0L Turbo I4
Drivetrain Options: FWD
Transmission: CVT or 6-Speed Manual
Combined/City/Highway: 32/29/36 mpg
The Integra combines sporty handling with Honda’s reliable components, offering a manual transmission and a high-performance Type S model.
2. Honda Civic
MSRP: $25,045 - $32,545
Engine Size / Options: 2.0L N/A I4, 1.5L Turbo I4
Drivetrain Options: FWD
Transmission: CVT
Combined/City/Highway: 31/28/37 mpg
The Civic is renowned for its durability and variety, with models ranging from the efficient base to the high-performance Type R.
1. Toyota Corolla
MSRP: $23,145 - $28,345
Engine Size / Options: 2.0L I4, hybrid available
Drivetrain Options: FWD, AWD
Transmission: CVT
Combined/City/Highway: 36/32/42 mpg
The Corolla is the top choice for practicality, efficiency, and reliability with impressive fuel economy and a variety of powertrains.
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Sooooooo 9 Honda and Toyota and a Subaru. Not surprising.
Reliability is a luxury
My 2006 Accord gave me 380,000 hard miles of use….
My college car was a 78 Corolla,(I bought it from my sister as it was her college car. It had 70K miles when I bought it off of her in 83).
I drove the piss out of that 2dr.
It finally died in 02 with 488K miles.
I promptly bought a new Camry and drove it until 11 when my needs changed, so I bought a new Rav 4WD Limited with the 3.5L V6. I drove it until I bought my 23 TRD Off Road, double cab, 6’ bed with premium and technology pkgs.
I’ll drive my 23 Tacoma until I die.
@@Doc1855 My first car ever was a Toyota Carina I was handed down from my mom. I don't even remember how many miles I ended up racking up on that beast, but I did at one point replace a burnt valve in it and then drove it for a few more years.
@@chrissimmons9969 I’ve never heard of a Carina. You must not be in the USA.
No biggy. I’m glad you got so many miles out of your Toyota.
I’ve been driving them for 41 years now.
After Grad school my friends told me that I should get a car that reflects my PhD.
Nope, I just wanted to see how long it would last and I had a buttload of student loans to pay off.
It’s funny how people look at what you drive and how they perceive who you are.
I made some good investments when I was a “starving” college student and retired when I was 43.
Accord is the best sedan i have driven and i really enjoy the good efficiency of it
My Corolla is still going after 20 years despite previous owner not changing oil. Even the AC was perfect with no leaks. Sold it after failing emissions. I bought another used corolla afterward.
Cars now are too expensive. Cousin Eddie says about old cars: "keepin' her is cheaper."
I agree, we’re expected to pay more money for new cars that last half as long. The math ain’t mathing.
"Very Impressive!"
Completely agree. 2002 Chevy Suburban. That's a reliable vehicle.
That's a divorce reference.
I disagree, they are not any more expensive than 10, 20, 30, or 40 years ago.
@@jahmanborneo1343 yes and no.
The quote is a divorse reference, but the comment is a "project farm" yt channel reference.
V6 Camry gang reporting in.
The Acura TLX warranty is also phenomenal. I bought mine CPO, comes with a 7-year/100,000 limited powertrain warranty and 3-year/100,000 warranty for everything else! It's great.
Acura gives higher warranty than Honda ??
@@protectork9831 Guess so 🤷🏽♂️
@@protectork9831Yep Honda is 3/36 basic 5/60 powertrain, Acura is 4/50 basic and 6/70 powertrain. Certified Honda or Acura increases powertrain to 7/100k
My grandma has a 2008 Hyundai Sonata with 325k miles.. i dont know how the car still drives so well.
Those Hyundai sonatas, or its sister car Kia Optima’s last forever as long you change its oil on time, and proper maintenance schedule..
My 2008 Acura TL Type-S had
07 base right there with you
You dumb as hell for selling that
We recently got a new Lexus and the strategies were a great help for identifying the best dealer to work with in our area. Thanks!
I have a 2016 Mazda 3, 275,000 miles. The only thing I have had to replace are the tires, brakes, battery and recently the serpentine belt (at about 270,000). My goal is hit 300,000.
Yeah ... I would take a 2.5 Mazda 3 over a Honda or Toyota with a turbo and a CVT for durability.
I have a 2005 Nissan Altima with 274,000 miles. 😂😂
Of course you do with no insurance People with expensive car scare to drive next to😂😂
Here 2007 Nissan Altima 2.5 with 230,000 miles. Drive like a charm! Change CVT fluid every 30,000 miles! Normal wear and tear for the age. My wife 2022 Honda CRV 1.5 Turbo have MORE major problems. Leaking oil from gasket cover and oil dulition problems!
@@samsattar3456I got insurance guess you drive like that. Get the fuck outta here
@@kuzmanovskinikolcethat’s why they replaced the engines to 2.0 non turbo standard. 2.0 non turbo should last 200k
I've seen 500k and 700k BMWs
Japanese cars just excell at surviving against bad car owners
Cars are not any more expensive than 10, 20, 30, or 40 years ago (inflation adjusted) people just need to buy cars within their means like Civic or Corolla. What car inflation adjusted costs more now than in the past?
i think people are just used to buying cars they cant afford because of super low interest rates and killer lease deals in the past
The mazda 3 is definitely better than the civic now. In reliability.
@@LiquidSm0keI have a 18 1.5 turbo. 140k miles. No issues.
Trash.🤣🤭
@@thomasjohn6041 Do you do anything specific to maintain the engine? I have a 1.5T turbo on the 11th gen and I want to make sure it lasts as long or even longer
@@thomasjohn6041okay? i have a '12 mazda 3 with 230k w no issues 😭 TRASH
@@user-uv5ce8tr9rthis is a stupid easy and simple question to answer.
Go to your glovebox, open up that thick user manual, and go to the page that talks about the “maintenance schedule”.
From there, you’ll see a bunch of wonderful, easy to read text that tells you when each type of service should be done.
Mazda will never be better than honda. You know nothing about cars
I like that the list is all Toyota, couple Hondas, one Subaru... sounds about right.
It was 5 Toyotas and 4 Hondas and 1 Subaru. Not all Toyotas and a couple of Hondas
I would take a 2.5 Mazda 3 over a Honda, Toyota or Soobie with a turbo and/or a CVT for durability all day long.
I have three cars with over 200k and not a one has had any major repairs like a rebuilt engine or transmission. The first is a 1995 Honda Prelude, the second is a 2003 BMW 325XI and the third is a 1993 Mazda Miata. The latter two are totally unmodified. The Prelude was modded within an inch of it's life by someone else, it's very low, has aftermarket wheels, a hotter cam, full exhaust, the entire front end is carbon fiber with scoops and ducts that actually work and don't make car look ridiculous, of course it has a strut tower brace and all the little suspension bushings upgraded with bigger sway bars (I bought it that way). I've driven the crap out of all three and not a single issue outside of regular wear parts. If you just keep up with the maintenance on em a bunch of cars will do over 200k without major repairs.
Love it!
Surprised that the Corolla is #1 with its CVT but ig Toyota quality in a cvt made the difference
The only one making bad cvt is Mitsubishi and Nissan
Bro, go do a little research into CVTs. Nissan used janky JATCO CVTs; just because someone says something on Reddit doesn't mean it's the truth. This shit is so annoying, fucking information lemmings...
My 2019 Accord died at 80k miles. The headgasket blew and it would cost 30% of the cost of the car to fix. The 1.5 litre turbo accords have this as a known issue.
Engine is too small for a big sedan
Key word..turbo
Sorry I had a 23 accord hybrid and it was the biggest pos. Honda bought it back after 4,000 miles
Hi from Puerto Rico. The 1 most sale here in Puerto Rico is the Corolla
Small island makes sense.
Tje Toyota Corolla ia a good budget car, the only thing I dislike about the corolla is that my back hurts a lot after sitting in the car for more than 30 minutes. However, a Lexus LS has the same reliability and the seats are super comfortable.
I’m curious to know how well this list will age! 🤣
Anything with hybrid or cvt is very unlikely to last over 200k without needing major parts replacement.
The only thing that I don’t like about the Acura is that they ALL look like Big Honda’s.
Whereas the Lexus, other than the ES, look like their own brand.
Well boo hoo
@@NERDLYFE-es9ef That was rude and uncalled for. You must be a Liberal Leftist
Except, the new TLX has nothing to do with any other Honda. It was designed and built here in the USA.
21 and newer Acura TLX has its own chassis design that does not share with any current Honda models.
@@leilanibritanico341 They still look like Big Honda’s.
Whereas a Lexus, (other than the ES) look like they’re their own company.
Only high points I can see: tons of rear seat legroom, large trunk, excellent fuel economy and good sound system. Other than those things (some of which can be found in competitors as well) it falls well behind the Accord, Camry and Sonata...unless you can get a great deal. ($3k+ less than the others comparably equipped)
Teslas are all hitting the high numbers too. Mazda has great reliability too.
How can you say that these cars will last that long when they're the 2024 model.
Used to own a fully loaded 2016 Lexus IS350 F-sport. Crazy fun to drive and maintenance was easy to do for DIY mechanic like myself. However, I was just disappointed at how inefficient it was with fuel economy. That old 2GR-FSE was bulletproof, but definitely not up to snuff when it came to saving on fuel.
Now I own a 2024 BMW M340i, which makes loads of power over my previous car (311hp vs 382hp) and gets as good as 37mpg on the highway and 24-27mpg in city if you're careful with the throttle and drive on eco pro mode. The B58 engine has proven reliable over the years its been released and I'm sure I can get it to 200k or over easily with regular maintenance. To start off right, I already had the oil change after its break-in period.
05:20 they also have the turbo V6 if you get the Type S
I’m on the hunt! Let’s Goo!!!
Lets go!
How about m2 should I get one . Looking for sports car with reliability and manual
100!
I like the Prius.
and yes, you do save money at the gas pump.
But when that $4,000. dollar battery goes out there goes all your savings 😮
Also ,fuel mileage is nice, but I would rather spend a extra dollar here and there , then to get hit with a $4,k battery bill
The turbos on that accord are gonna run the engine in the ground prematurely
Correction: Camry is available AWD, just not in V6
With the inflation economy, it's smart to go with car that have good reputation.
Maybe luxury cars that can last as well next?
no, we are poor
The Honda accord Carrie’s the1.5 engine which barely will last till 100000
Looking for suvs
Add BMW E46 to the list. My 2000 328ci is running strong @ 207,000mi
1998 grand prix gt 355000
New car + reliability score = video fail
Reliability is based upon evidence and proof, not conjecture.
Rating a new car on reliability is like rating a steak while its cooking.
Cheers.
The ES is more closely related to the Avalon, not the Camry.
Is the Mazda cx-5 reliable, too?
Shit yeah.
Better than some of the cars in this video. Engine is a workhorse 2.5 with no problematic turbo. Tranny is a 6-speed with gears and a torque converter and not an iffy CVT like the cars in the video.
most audi, bmw, mercedes and škoda I seen can easy reach 200 000 miles, even most renaults do it when maintained
talking about diesels
Nissan Altima also
2013 dodge dart with 240k on the clock.
2.0l limited auto
Nice! I have a 2013 Dart same engine at 100k. Changed thermostat,camshaft position sensor. Changed trans fluid too + spark plugs.
These car look to new to even hit 200,000 miles. Not saying there is none out there. But how many of these care actually hit 200,000 miles. Like if there were 200,000 car made, how many of those are over 200,000 mile. Kinda curious where these people got there number at amd where are these car at on miles.
Can tell you the Camry definitely is one of those cars that can hit 200k miles. It’s basically been the same car since 2018!
This is based on predicted reliability and the history of the majority of these models making it over 250k miles over the years. Not necessarily the brand new 2024 or 2025 model years since they most likely won’t have that many miles as of yet. Some may have 50k on the clock if someone drives a ton of miles a year.
is500 doesnt have awd
Civic gang skibidi
So did everyone forget how reliable the Lexus LS is?
.y 2014 Chevy Malibu 2LT 295,000 as of June 2024
Honda Accord Hybrid is unlikely to last 200K. Many reports of headgasket failures at around ~100K miles. There are too many Hondas on this list.
The head gasket issue does not transfer to the hybrid engines
Wait…. where are the BMWs in this list? I thought it was top 3 reliable, then it should be able to cross the 200,000 miles easily.
I'd take a newer Mazda over the newer Toyota's or Honda's
Yeah, their 2.5 engines are proven workhorses as are the REAL automatic transmissions as opposed to the CVTs in the vehicles in the video.
For some reason NOBODY buys the Legacy.
Cause it’s very ugly
Where mazda 3?!?!
Yeah I know ... vid was a bit sad and shortsighted. ☹
I’m curious why y’all didn’t mention the GR carolla as a trim variant; especially after the Type R mention.. anyway Focus RS is still king 🤴 - cheers 🍻
The GR is having a lot of engine issues right now. Google it.
Because this video is based on reliability, not performance. No way did you just imply that the Ford would be more reliable! 🤦🏻♂️
@@jknockout3414 but they mentioned the Type R when going through the civics trim levels.. my RS has 130,000 miles and over 30 track days and it still runs super 💪🏽
@@MarkFritscher you must take really good care of it! Nice!
I got a GMC Yukon with 379k on it😂
All GM and no yotas
Good luck trying to the v6 Camry…. They are gone gone gone
That legacy is full of nothing but problems and is disappointing for a flagship vehicle
If you follow maint book all will last maybe 120.000 OIL CHANGES WILL KILL CAR
AS RECOMMENDED BY COMPANYS .10000 Miles UGH
TLDR: Japanese cars
No need to use German cars as clickbait
2016 vw jetta 1.4t gas, 276,200 and counting.
That’s a miracle. The average life span of a VW is around 100K mi
just buy a volvo they last forever
Not ones after the 90s.
Not anymore. We had a C70 and didn't even reach 80k miles with all the maintenance.
My Dad has a 2020 S90 and it’s nothing but electrical trouble and terrible gas mileage. The new ones aren’t lasting forever and he regrets it
Um, time to update that outdated take on modern cars. Volvos have been junk since they've been bought out and passed around like a cheap whore.