Honda Civic will hold its value the best.
#1
In need of a new commuter, looking at Cruze/Mazda3/Focus/Etc, the normal ones and just curious if there are any estimates on which vehicles will hold the value the best?
Budget is as little as possible. Sub 17k if possible.
Thanks
Last edited by BAM6I4; 10-04-2012 at 11:41 PM.
#4
Definitely possible. However 2 issues with that. 1) I don't like the styling, and 2) its $2-$3k more initial cost.
Personally I'm thinking Mazda3. These things are selling for nearly what a new one goes for when 2-3 years old and 30-50k miles. Crazy.
My thoughts are buy for $15k new, sell in 3 years w/ 40k miles for $13k.
#5
How do you figure you are going to get one for $15k new? Do you really think ANY dealer near you even has a base model 3? And the base model is 16,700, and doesn't even have the skyactive engine, so they won't hold there value as well as you might think.
2013 MAZDA3 i SV 4-Door
Total MSRP: $17,495*
* Total MSRP includes $795 destination charge and additional costs for vehicles equipped with available packages, options or accessories. Destination charge $840 in Alaska. Vehicles displayed may contain optional equipment at additional costs. Actual dealer price may vary.
good luck with that $15k number
#6
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#7
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#8
Honda Fit.
They only go up in value.
There are no old Porsches - just new owners.
#10
Buy your little enthusiast a Ferrari bike from me.
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#11
In Canada the top small cars for residuals are: Mazda 3, Golf TDI (probably Jetta TDI too), Subaru Impreza, Honda Civic, Toyota Corolla.
Everything else is a joke. Fords and Chevy's are a dime a dozen, same with any Hyundai/Kia. Dodge has always been cheap resale too, but who knows what the Dart might do. The one big sticking point with going with these brands is resale... great cars, but worth very little in three years. If you don't like the car you're pretty much stuck. Meanwhile, I'm bored with my Golf after 2.5 years, and I can get a good enough trade in value to break even on a balloon-payout 4-year loan... I paid essentially what a lease payment would have been, except I doubled the maximum mileage. Not financial lounge approved, but whatever.
#12
#13
#14
Yup. I know quite a few very satisfied Focus and Cobalt owners. Not to mention Charger and Fusion. All paid less then half the original value for a low km, decent car. Some even with a warranty still on it.
We're talking late-model here... You can clean up any older banger and market it better then the person who sold it to you and make $500. My buddy used to buy ignored GM's all the time. He made $4000 profit on a Bonneville just because he replaced all the burnt out dash lights, polished it properly, vacuumed the interior, and made the power seat work again.
Last edited by Live-Wire; 10-05-2012 at 01:31 AM.
#15
#16
#17
Looking for a Brand new car for 15K and want a great resale value? Only on TCL![]()
"Your pants too tight,your wheels too bright"
#19
Said 15k new car....http://www.byersmazdasubaru.com/deta...chvkid=1214165
Adding factory cruise cost sub $200 after purchase. Win Win.
#20
Why are you buying new if you plan to sell in a few years?
You are the one taking the biggest hit on the price.
Buy a car that is a year or two old.![]()
#21
That's a great deal...I'd be all over that. FWIW the non-Skyactiv 2.0L 3 will still get an easy mid-30s MPG on the highway, so you're still going to have good fuel economy - just not 40 MPG.
If he is really interested in the Mazda...the 3 has pretty good resale value, so they are not always a good used buy, if you can snag a great price on a new one. Example:
http://www.byersmazdasubaru.com/deta...chvkid=1281345
Used '10 3 sedan, at the same dealer, nearly same spec as the brand-new one posted above except this one has a CD changer and cruise control. 39K miles. It's only $1,000 cheaper than a brand-new one. At that price differential, why not get the new one, with full B2B warranty?
It was the same situation I found when I bought my 3 a couple years ago. I paid ~$17K for mine brand new...meanwhile, identical used ones with 30K miles were sitting on the other side of the lot for...$16,500.
Last edited by retro_rocket; 10-06-2012 at 11:00 AM.
#22
#23
I know op says he needs compact car, but if resale is #1 priority seriously base model Toyota Tacoma reg cab, automatic in white. Will still be worth what you paid for it in four years.
But on topic, I vote for Honda Fit. Honda dealers can't get enough of them, used ones are selling for more than new etc....
third choice would be 2013 Impreza base, AWD, good mpg and good resale.
#24
Let's not let actual facts from the company that determines residual values for third-party lease rates stand in the way of a half-page of blind conjecture.
Oh, hi.
https://www.alg.com/residual-value-awards.html
Also, before the usual Bozo the Clowns jump in, notice the Honda Fit is ranked as Best Subcompact, and VW Golf TDI is best alt-fuel vehicle (a category that includes the Prius).
Originally Posted by alleghenyman
#25
I've recommended the fit to multiple people and two of them actually bought one. They love it.
That would be my first choice.
Another alternative is a toyota corolla. The resale on those things is just amazing. It is a boring car but would be a perfect commuter.
#26
There's also the fact that 4 to 6 years can be a surprisingly long time in the automotive world in terms of determining the residual value you actually end up getting - cars and entire automotive segments can come in and out of favor, drastically affecting the resale value.
For example, we only bought our new Forte because, surprise!, our old Sedona was worth more than we owed on it (I had it appraised on a whim); I thought for sure I'd be upside-down on the minivan for at least another year or two.
So while picking a specific vehicle may give you better odds of getting a good residual value, it's not a guarantee. And just because a car is expected to have poor residual does not mean that, with the right deal upfront, you can't come out ahead when the time comes to trade it in.
#27
How much of that is a result of the Hyundai Assurance Guaranteed Trade-In Value Program?
It looks like they have dialed it back a bit since launch, as it is now only offered on the Genesis coupe, Genesis and Equus.
https://www.hyundaiusa.com/assurance/trade-value.aspx
Improving the signal-to-noise ratio
#28
deals are to be had at end of year. look at my van, you saw the numbers, msrp was 36k ish, out the door for 30,080.00
im sure mazda dealers are willing to take the hit to move inventory....
but i don't see the Toyota Corolla or the Nissan Sentra listed. those will likely have an even larger discount than the others. good luck!
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#29
I would think the Cruze Eco model hold value really well. It wouldn't surprise me if gas hits 5/gallon and diesel even more. Those 40mpg cars are going to increase in value like the TDi.
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#30
Not sure about your area but Mazda 3 resale is rock bottom around here. Civics, TDIs, Corollas are the closest thing to an investment in that market.
Just open up an Auto Trader.
Last edited by WhistlerYOW; 10-06-2012 at 01:55 PM.
#31
When I will return the car after 48 months / 60000 miles, Honda Canada considers a trade-in residual of 52%. Awesome.
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#32
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#33
I bought my Honda Fit Sport 4 years ago for $15.5k and blue book is $14k now. That's amazing. I am considering selling it but will sell it for a bit less than that to give someone a good deal. But that it very little depreciation.
#34
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#35
just buy a used one so someone else takes the major hit then you can probably get a nicer car and loose less than buying new. Unless you want the skyactiv mazda....then your probably SOL because i doubt youll find any used ones much cheaper than new.
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