13: Subaru Forester 12: Honda Ridgeline 11: Toyota Tundra 10: Nissan Versa 9: Lexus IS 8: Toyota RAV4 7: Ford Escape 6: Honda CRV 5: Toyota Prius 4: Toyota Tacoma 3: Toyota Highlander 2: Toyota Camry 1: Toyota Highlander Hybrid
My 2003 Honda CR-V with 236K miles is still going. I am not my 1997 Miata's original owner, but have had it for 20 years. Keep up the good work, Shari.
I've been a taxi driver for nearly 20 years. When I started , the fleet of 100 cars was fully comprised of domestic vehicles, Impala,Malibu, Crown Vic, Caravan, all the GM mini vans,Lumina,etc. Shortly thereafter owners started switching to Toyota and Honda and quickly noticed maintenance costs were cut by a full 50%. These days, we have a couple of Malibus and a dozen Caravans. The rest of the fleet is a mix of non big 3 vehicles. Even Kia and Hyundai can outlast any of the domestics.
I am always amused by the Japanese car brand haters comments on this channel. I was a loyal consumer of American brands for most of my adult life until I got tired of the frequency of repair bills and finally (and somewhat reluctantly) purchased my first Honda 17 years ago. That put a stop to the repair bills. I now have very little desire to consider any other brand as I have been very happy with the two Honda Ridgeline's I have purchased new over the past 17 years.
I bought my 2000 Honda Accord EX with the V- 6 engine in November of 1999 and it still looks good and runs like new. I love the way it drives the car has been very reliable and I just can’t give it up for what’s out there today. Sure, it’s not like today’s cars with all the bells and whistles but the wife and I are very happy with our Accord. Other than the Accord which is our main cruiser I have a 2002 Honda Civic Si hatchback which is not as powerful as today’s Civic Si but I really enjoy it and then there’s my 1989 Toyota extended cab pickup with a four cylinder automatic and A/C, no power windows or doors just a basic reliable little pickup truck that’s been more than reliable and never let me down. Why should I buy a new car or truck today that are too damn expensive and I’m sure hard to work on, unlike my three vehicles. Probably for sure something will go wrong with the new Tundra or Tacoma and will cost a lot to fix once the warranty is up. No, I’ll just hold on to my vehicles for now. But I will say there is one new truck out there that I like and it still has a regular V-6 engine with no turbo and that’s the current Nissan Frontier King Cab. But for now I’ll probably just keep my old Toyota pickup.
2004 Tacoma, bought it new. 210000 miles. Still runs and drives like it did when I first bought it. Plan on keeping it another 10 yrs then one of the grandkids will get it
Had an 07 civic that had 255,550 miles when i was rearended on the highway. 2 door coupe withe a stick shift. No cracked engine on mine. Now i have a 22 accord 2.0 turbo. And my x wife's 97 avalon. We have had it since 2004. Best car value i think i will ever have. 252,000 and counting.
I've owned my 2008 Toyota SR5 RWD V6 4Runner for 16 years with no problems at all. Everything still looks and drives like new, not a squeak. Iowa winters are no problem. All I did was get normal dealer servicing and tires. I get 20.3 mpg in town and think it is the best vehicle I have ever owned. I think it will go for another 16 years.
I had a 1990 Nissan Kingcab for 20 years and it did not start having any real problems until its last two years. I replaced it with a four year old Toyota Tacoma which I have had for almost 15 years and I am now looking for a small Toyota car to replace it.
I have no plans to ever get rid of my 2012 Toyota RAV4 V6. Nothing has broken on it yet so the only costs have been normal maintenance (fluid changes), gas, and tires. I'm very happy with it.
We bought a new Ford Escape in 2016 before they messed up the engine. We have to 1.6 liter Ecoboost SE version with 4 wheel drive. I definitely recommend the Escapes with the 1.6 liter turbo. In 8 years we have had zero problems with the Escape and it's our go to vehicle for holiday trips.
I would add to this list Mazda 6. I am the original owner of mine that I bought brand new back in 2014 and I am planning to beat the all time record by driving it half a million miles!
2005 VW Jetta TDI 1.9 liter. Bought new in 2005; it now has 365,000 miles, original motor, trans, clutch, burns zero oil, still gets 45 mpg. Can't beat that!
22 years now on my 2003 GTI VR6 (6-speed manual)! This car has pleasantly surprised me in every way, and has been more reliable than a Toyota! It still has the original timing chains! I just can't kill it! I put LiquiMoly synthetic in it every 5000 to 7500 miles, and it keeps on going! Built like a German Panzer tank! Probably VW's best, most reliable engine ever!
I bought a new base model Toyota Pickup in 1993 and still own it. 31 years so far, still on the road with well over 300,000 miles. I also bought a new base model Nissan Versa in 2018. It has the 5 speed manual rather than the infamous CVT. Good reliable cheap car that cost $11,500 out the door.
I bought a new 23 Tacoma TRD Off Road, double cab, 6’ bed with the premium and technology pkgs. I’m almost 60 years old and plan on keeping it until I die. I’m quite sure that my wife will still be driving it until she passes away too. I drive only 8-10K miles per year, so I’m 20 years it’ll only have about 225K miles on it.
I'm never selling my Lexus GS 350 with 192k miles. It drives and looks like a new car back then . I bought it with 187k miles, and it drove like a new car. That's why I paid $13k a year ago. I also bought a 2010 Nissan Versa 1.8 hatchback with 151k miles with the regular automatic transmissions. No issues. If you change the CVT fluid after 30k miles, it will last long term. I wouldn't buy one of those with CVT unless it has 30k or less. Or brand new. I know people with the CVT transmission and they give it maintanace. No issues.
1998 Toyota 4Runner. 500,000 miles. Zero issues. That’s over 1/4 century with only regular maintenance. The money saved using compounding interest is colossal. 💰 Toyota. Topgun #1. 🏆 Shari, you forget to shave!! 🪒
I agree ☝️. I have 2007 Lexus is 250. I’m at not the original owner, but I absolutely love this car. 200k miles and still runs. I don’t see myself selling this anytime soon.
No way would I consider selling my 04 Lexus ES330. Maybe if someone offered stupid money for it. I will continue to enjoy it until it either rusts away, or stolen by a crash. I'm the second owner that had to sell it because of failing eyesight.
Currently for quite some time have only bought Toyota. Most recently a new 2020 RAV4 Hybrid in August of 2020, and then in September of this year sold my long time fav car (a 2011 Highlander SE) to my best friend and got a brand new 24 BZ4X Limited AWD. If I were to buy any other brand it would likely be something from Honda. But honestly we love the 2 Toyota we currently have.
Love the clips...I had a Toyota Venza, 2011, 370,000 V6 that seemed to have lots of life left . We sold it to our nephew. He has no way to plug in. It has started in minus thirties outside. Still no problems.. We traded it for a 4 cylinder Rat 4. I have a Lexus with a V6..We predict barring an accident they should both run a very long time.
The usual great information filled video. I am a happy Toyota driver for 20 years. Thanks for your repeated warnings about turbos. Know people who have taken a hit on them in the 50 to 60k mile range.
This probably sounds surprising, but I've held on to my 2011 Mustang V6 since 2011! The only problem I've had with it is the fuel efficiency has gone down. Otherwise, I've never had any problems with it whatsoever.
I think a lot of people keep their cars for 15 years or longer because the new ones have become so expensive. I know a lot of people who would love to trade their old clunker on a new car, but can't afford to do so.
I've owned my Smart ForTwo diesel for over 13 years, covered close to 160,000 miles, extremely economical, very cheap to maintain, it's ideal for me as someone who lives in the centre of town here in the UK
I have a 2005 Acura TSX. Have loved the vehicle from the start. Had an Accord for 12 yrs. before that. I am beginning to look around and want to check out the new ADX when it hits the market. Maybe???
I did my homework before buying a new Versa in 2018, a 5 speed manual. One rear wheel bearing was the only failure, fixed it myself for $30. Averages 41 mpg.
A local taxi fleet in OZ replaced their ford falcons with hybrid camrys. After 220000km they did their first disc pad replacement on a camry. It was every 20,000km for new disc pads on the ford falcon! Over the years I have had 17 Ford Falcon, Fairmont, Fairlanes but now have Rav4's instead!
I own a 2008 Honda Fit and a 2015 Subaru Forester, both great cars. Just bought wife a Porsche Macan for our 10-year anniversary, but that's for fun. The Macan is not on the list, hahahahh
We are the original owner of a 2007 Honda Fit. 5 spd manual and just turned 175,000 km. Only major repair was a clutch replacement in 2013. Going to drive it until it doesn't go any longer!!
This review is biased and isn't supported by statistical data... Many cars in your review aren't reliable at all due to new turbo engines and problematic CVT. As per my experience, there is a big difference between the new and old generations of Toyota/Lexus... Before I owned Lexus RX with 3.5L V6 for 10 years without any major issues, however, after getting a new RX with 2.4 turbo engine, I visited 3 times within 2 years my dealership to fix some engine related problems. So, after 2 years, I decided that enough was enough and purchased Acura MDX with reliable 3.5L V6 and "normal" automatic gearbox. I have been driving my MDX for 3 years and have no issues... Frankly, I don't understand all modern trends with replacing naturally aspirated engines with downsized small turbo engines, replacing "normal" automatic gearbox with unreliable quasi-automatic robots and CVT ones. In addition, hybrid technology is promising but so expensive due to the cost of the main battery (requires replacement after 5-8 years), and many car technicians aren't capable of fixing this type of car. My relative owned Toyota Camry hybrid; one day, he visited Toyota dealership for replacement of regular battery....but Toyota technicians didn't know that the regular battery for hybrid model isn't the same as for standard gasoline Toyota Camry. The hybrid cars aren't accelerating very well, and it can cost your life when you need rapid acceleration to avoid a potential collision. Saving money with a hybrid car is a myth... think twice before buying it.
Personally I think the new verses with the cvt aren’t that bad plus the previous gen kicks used the same engine an transmission plus the cvt an manual should be good, plus it’s cvt is probably less problematic since it is a smaller car an cvt are made for smaller vehicles not large vehicles
This top shouldn't contain other cars than those from the top Japanese brands: Lexus, Toyota, Mazda, Subaru, Honda, Acura, Suzuki, Mitsubishi. Ford Escape hybrid is bs, the Nissan Versa too. It's far more probable to have in the top Mazda Miata, Lexus LS, Toyota Corolla, Jonda Accord, Suzuki Jimny, Mitsubishi Outlander etc.
I would never consider any Hyundai or Kia products. Terrible company. Absolutely the worst cars on the road. Even the people who work for that company are horrible to deal with.
13: Subaru Forester
12: Honda Ridgeline
11: Toyota Tundra
10: Nissan Versa
9: Lexus IS
8: Toyota RAV4
7: Ford Escape
6: Honda CRV
5: Toyota Prius
4: Toyota Tacoma
3: Toyota Highlander
2: Toyota Camry
1: Toyota Highlander Hybrid
26 yrs. with my Lexus LS400 and it's still a joy to own and drive.
Wow
What was the price when you bought it 26 years ago?
@@Gopinathk17 $61K as I recall.
What’s the most biggest/major repair you had to encounter with your LS??
@@lydellleopold5884 I replaced a leaking cam phaser
My 2003 Honda CR-V with 236K miles is still going. I am not my 1997 Miata's original owner, but have had it for 20 years.
Keep up the good work, Shari.
They don't make them like yours anymore, unfortunately.
My wife has had two Honda Accords that she kept for 15 years and when it came time to sell them she got a good price for them.
As so she should. Her husband is looking out for her too!
I've been a taxi driver for nearly 20 years. When I started , the fleet of 100 cars was fully comprised of domestic vehicles, Impala,Malibu, Crown Vic, Caravan, all the GM mini vans,Lumina,etc. Shortly thereafter owners started switching to Toyota and Honda and quickly noticed maintenance costs were cut by a full 50%. These days, we have a couple of Malibus and a dozen Caravans. The rest of the fleet is a mix of non big 3 vehicles. Even Kia and Hyundai can outlast any of the domestics.
For me, it's a 2014 Forester and 2008 Yaris. Very satisfied with both. 👍
That Yaris is also the 2004-2007 Scion xB motor 😊
I’m thinking about Forester too, so what mileage do you have on it so far?
@WilliamK-e1j Almost 74k.
@@steveziminsky583 Good for you 👍
I am always amused by the Japanese car brand haters comments on this channel. I was a loyal consumer of American brands for most of my adult life until I got tired of the frequency of repair bills and finally (and somewhat reluctantly) purchased my first Honda 17 years ago. That put a stop to the repair bills. I now have very little desire to consider any other brand as I have been very happy with the two Honda Ridgeline's I have purchased new over the past 17 years.
I bought my 2000 Honda Accord EX with the V- 6 engine in November of 1999 and it still looks good and runs like new. I love the way it drives the car has been very reliable and I just can’t give it up for what’s out there today. Sure, it’s not like today’s cars with all the bells and whistles but the wife and I are very happy with our Accord. Other than the Accord which is our main cruiser I have a 2002 Honda Civic Si hatchback which is not as powerful as today’s Civic Si but I really enjoy it and then there’s my 1989 Toyota extended cab pickup with a four cylinder automatic and A/C, no power windows or doors just a basic reliable little pickup truck that’s been more than reliable and never let me down. Why should I buy a new car or truck today that are too damn expensive and I’m sure hard to work on, unlike my three vehicles. Probably for sure something will go wrong with the new Tundra or Tacoma and will cost a lot to fix once the warranty is up. No, I’ll just hold on to my vehicles for now. But I will say there is one new truck out there that I like and it still has a regular V-6 engine with no turbo and that’s the current Nissan Frontier King Cab. But for now I’ll probably just keep my old Toyota pickup.
2004 Tacoma, bought it new. 210000 miles. Still runs and drives like it did when I first bought it. Plan on keeping it another 10 yrs then one of the grandkids will get it
I still own my very first car purchased. A 2001 Honda Accord, Sedan, V6. It will be 25 years old in May.
Had an 07 civic that had 255,550 miles when i was rearended on the highway. 2 door coupe withe a stick shift. No cracked engine on mine. Now i have a 22 accord 2.0 turbo. And my x wife's 97 avalon. We have had it since 2004. Best car value i think i will ever have. 252,000 and counting.
My parents still drive their 1999 Toyota Camry. Love it!
I've owned my 2008 Toyota SR5 RWD V6 4Runner for 16 years with no problems at all. Everything still looks and drives like new, not a squeak. Iowa winters are no problem. All I did was get normal dealer servicing and tires. I get 20.3 mpg in town and think it is the best vehicle I have ever owned. I think it will go for another 16 years.
I had a 1990 Nissan Kingcab for 20 years and it did not start having any real problems until its last two years. I replaced it with a four year old Toyota Tacoma which I have had for almost 15 years and I am now looking for a small Toyota car to replace it.
I have no plans to ever get rid of my 2012 Toyota RAV4 V6. Nothing has broken on it yet so the only costs have been normal maintenance (fluid changes), gas, and tires. I'm very happy with it.
We bought a new Ford Escape in 2016 before they messed up the engine. We have to 1.6 liter Ecoboost SE version with 4 wheel drive. I definitely recommend the Escapes with the 1.6 liter turbo.
In 8 years we have had zero problems with the Escape and it's our go to vehicle for holiday trips.
I would add to this list Mazda 6. I am the original owner of mine that I bought brand new back in 2014 and I am planning to beat the all time record by driving it half a million miles!
I knew the Prius would be on that list. Anything Toyota or Honda for the most part.
I inherited my family's 2014 Lexus ES 350 and I'm going to keep it. It had 79000mi 2 years ago and I put 6000mi on it. So far, so good.
2005 VW Jetta TDI 1.9 liter. Bought new in 2005; it now has 365,000 miles, original motor, trans, clutch, burns zero oil, still gets 45 mpg. Can't beat that!
My golf this lasted 60k.
In my case, Corolla and Yaris.
22 years now on my 2003 GTI VR6 (6-speed manual)! This car has pleasantly surprised me in every way, and has been more reliable than a Toyota! It still has the original timing chains! I just can't kill it! I put LiquiMoly synthetic in it every 5000 to 7500 miles, and it keeps on going! Built like a German Panzer tank! Probably VW's best, most reliable engine ever!
How many miles?
2004 Toyota Tacoma here. 260,000 miles
I bought a new base model Toyota Pickup in 1993 and still own it. 31 years so far, still on the road with well over 300,000 miles.
I also bought a new base model Nissan Versa in 2018. It has the 5 speed manual rather than the infamous CVT. Good reliable cheap car that cost $11,500 out the door.
I had one of those. My 1972 Javelin AMX, bought in 1972 and traded it in 1986 with just over 175,000 miles. Nothing serious failed on that car.
I bought a new 23 Tacoma TRD Off Road, double cab, 6’ bed with the premium and technology pkgs.
I’m almost 60 years old and plan on keeping it until I die.
I’m quite sure that my wife will still be driving it until she passes away too.
I drive only 8-10K miles per year, so I’m 20 years it’ll only have about 225K miles on it.
Great insight! Already have two RAV4s (his and hers) and love them.
I'm never selling my Lexus GS 350 with 192k miles. It drives and looks like a new car back then . I bought it with 187k miles, and it drove like a new car. That's why I paid $13k a year ago. I also bought a 2010 Nissan Versa 1.8 hatchback with 151k miles with the regular automatic transmissions. No issues. If you change the CVT fluid after 30k miles, it will last long term. I wouldn't buy one of those with CVT unless it has 30k or less. Or brand new. I know people with the CVT transmission and they give it maintanace. No issues.
1998 Toyota 4Runner. 500,000 miles. Zero issues. That’s over 1/4 century with only regular maintenance. The money saved using compounding interest is colossal. 💰
Toyota. Topgun #1. 🏆
Shari, you forget to shave!! 🪒
I agree ☝️. I have 2007 Lexus is 250. I’m at not the original owner, but I absolutely love this car. 200k miles and still runs. I don’t see myself selling this anytime soon.
No way would I consider selling my 04 Lexus ES330. Maybe if someone offered stupid money for it. I will continue to enjoy it until it either rusts away, or stolen by a crash. I'm the second owner that had to sell it because of failing eyesight.
We own a 2005 Toyota Rav4 with 149k miles. We have it as our around the twn car. No issues, of course!
Currently for quite some time have only bought Toyota. Most recently a new 2020 RAV4 Hybrid in August of 2020, and then in September of this year sold my long time fav car (a 2011 Highlander SE) to my best friend and got a brand new 24 BZ4X Limited AWD. If I were to buy any other brand it would likely be something from Honda. But honestly we love the 2 Toyota we currently have.
Love the clips...I had a Toyota Venza, 2011, 370,000 V6 that seemed to have lots of life left . We sold it to our nephew. He has no way to plug in. It has started in minus thirties outside. Still no problems.. We traded it for a 4 cylinder Rat 4. I have a Lexus with a V6..We predict barring an accident they should both run a very long time.
Viva la Rat4! Lol I have two of them, used to have 3 but one had to retire at over 500000km!
2010 Honda Civic Coupe Lx...bought with 52k miles ..i now have 277k miles...and going strong.
The usual great information filled video. I am a happy Toyota driver for 20 years. Thanks for your repeated warnings about turbos. Know people who have taken a hit on them in the 50 to 60k mile range.
This is good information for many years ago. Not so good for today when CVTs and bad engines are found in many formerly reliable models.
This probably sounds surprising, but I've held on to my 2011 Mustang V6 since 2011! The only problem I've had with it is the fuel efficiency has gone down. Otherwise, I've never had any problems with it whatsoever.
I think a lot of people keep their cars for 15 years or longer because the new ones have become so expensive. I know a lot of people who would love to trade their old clunker on a new car, but can't afford to do so.
Excellent infos on reliable cars
I've owned my Smart ForTwo diesel for over 13 years, covered close to 160,000 miles, extremely economical, very cheap to maintain, it's ideal for me as someone who lives in the centre of town here in the UK
My 2010 matrix, no problem, change brake twice, and tires, I'm going to run it to the ground 😀
My 2007 Toyota Matrix 1.8L 146,000kms still runs like new.
geez I hope so, you never drive it
I love my 2007 Matrix as well! I bought it 6 months ago. Great car!
I still have my 1995 Toyota MR2 which is coming up 30 years.
Mine. 1999 Chevy Silverado 1500. Original owner. 279 k mi. Still going.
I have a 2005 Acura TSX. Have loved the vehicle from the start. Had an Accord for 12 yrs. before that. I am beginning to look around and want to check out the new ADX when it hits the market. Maybe???
Where are Corolla and Mazda 3? 😮
Even the Civic!
I suspect that the cheaper the vehicle, the more likely it'll be affordable to update more often.
Yap
Still driving my 2005 Honda Pilot.
Inexpensive
Reliable
Fast
Pick two.
Not surprised the top 5 are all Toyotas!
If I got a Versa, it would have to be a manual.
I did my homework before buying a new Versa in 2018, a 5 speed manual. One rear wheel bearing was the only failure, fixed it myself for $30. Averages 41 mpg.
i have a 2009 toyota camry hybrid… still going strong at 155k miles with minimum $$$ for maintenance and/or repairs
A local taxi fleet in OZ replaced their ford falcons with hybrid camrys. After 220000km they did their first disc pad replacement on a camry. It was every 20,000km for new disc pads on the ford falcon! Over the years I have had 17 Ford Falcon, Fairmont, Fairlanes but now have Rav4's instead!
My nissan tiida 2008 still with me 😊
i keep my toyota fj cruiser till i found something better ...but nothing better till now
I own a 2008 Honda Fit and a 2015 Subaru Forester, both great cars. Just bought wife a Porsche Macan for our 10-year anniversary, but that's for fun. The Macan is not on the list, hahahahh
We are the original owner of a 2007 Honda Fit. 5 spd manual and just turned 175,000 km. Only major repair was a clutch replacement in 2013. Going to drive it until it doesn't go any longer!!
@@ronripley9197 My Fit is also manual, actually really fun to drive, has about 163,000 miles. We use miles in the States.
This review is biased and isn't supported by statistical data...
Many cars in your review aren't reliable at all due to new turbo engines and problematic CVT. As per my experience, there is a big difference between the new and old generations of Toyota/Lexus... Before I owned Lexus RX with 3.5L V6 for 10 years without any major issues, however, after getting a new RX with 2.4 turbo engine, I visited 3 times within 2 years my dealership to fix some engine related problems. So, after 2 years, I decided that enough was enough and purchased Acura MDX with reliable 3.5L V6 and "normal" automatic gearbox. I have been driving my MDX for 3 years and have no issues... Frankly, I don't understand all modern trends with replacing naturally aspirated engines with downsized small turbo engines, replacing "normal" automatic gearbox with unreliable quasi-automatic robots and CVT ones. In addition, hybrid technology is promising but so expensive due to the cost of the main battery (requires replacement after 5-8 years), and many car technicians aren't capable of fixing this type of car. My relative owned Toyota Camry hybrid; one day, he visited Toyota dealership for replacement of regular battery....but Toyota technicians didn't know that the regular battery for hybrid model isn't the same as for standard gasoline Toyota Camry. The hybrid cars aren't accelerating very well, and it can cost your life when you need rapid acceleration to avoid a potential collision. Saving money with a hybrid car is a myth... think twice before buying it.
Personally I think the new verses with the cvt aren’t that bad plus the previous gen kicks used the same engine an transmission plus the cvt an manual should be good, plus it’s cvt is probably less problematic since it is a smaller car an cvt are made for smaller vehicles not large vehicles
Is CPO hyundai/genesis worth buying? They have long warranty.
2002 Toyota Sienna 250.000 miles.
I wouldn't have thought Toyota had been selling the Highlander in Hybrid form for 15 years yet.
While all these cars are reliable, it's important to note that you really don't see older models of these models rusting out.
I literally see like 20 RAV4's at every intersection I come up to. I don[t see any other model of car more than the RAV4.
We keep our vehicles for 15-20 years or 250K to 300K miles.
Why get rid of a vehicle when they continue to stay reliable?
My 2009 matrix2.4 zero problems only tires brake and battery replaced that all
Hello sir can you recommend one car with good reliability and ground clearance
The IS keeps its standing from the 2006 IS 350. Otherwise, they haven't really updated that car much since.
Volvo XC60 D5 👍
Say no to any turbo, cvt, damaged vehicle, there I just saved you 70% of car problems!
I'm surprised that the Corolla isn't on the list.
People who buy these models usually see cars as appliances like washing machines or fridges.
Lol but I love my 1960's Toastermatics!
04 Toyota Highlander is still dependable.
Lexus, Toyotas are the best in my experience.
The old ones with naturally aspirated engines. It isn't applicable for the new ones, I owned the old and new RX, I see a big difference...
#1 would've been higher % if they did not keep getting stolen.
Lol gotta have a reliable getaway car . . .
This top shouldn't contain other cars than those from the top Japanese brands: Lexus, Toyota, Mazda, Subaru, Honda, Acura, Suzuki, Mitsubishi.
Ford Escape hybrid is bs, the Nissan Versa too. It's far more probable to have in the top Mazda Miata, Lexus LS, Toyota Corolla, Jonda Accord, Suzuki Jimny, Mitsubishi Outlander etc.
Honda crv 2.4 vtec lifer❤
What happened to the Toyota 4Runner ?
The Lexus RX 350.
Cars keep forever? You can't be effin seriously right now!!!!!
Forester, not with the CVT, not the new Tundra or Tacoma.
Honda Element.
no corollary?
Hybrid battery lasts 300k
what? no civic? no corolla?
Now do the same list without using Toyotas in 90% of it.
Everyone knows that Toyotas are reliable.
Seems like the ladies are really digging you. I was about to agree with one ladies comment until she mentioned beauty 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
they're bots
I would never consider any Hyundai or Kia products. Terrible company. Absolutely the worst cars on the road. Even the people who work for that company are horrible to deal with.
Ridgeline??? You gotta be kidding!!! There's more of them at junk yard than on the road!!
👍🦃
This channel needs to go to rehab.......this is absurd!!!
Why are you lying to people??
toyota took the whole list. Toyota still KING.
I'm still an owner of a 2007 Toyota Matrix and a 1986 Porsche 928 with both close to 200k miles, however I do my own maintenance.