37 000 euros (lowest trim) in Lithuania with shipping to Ireland. It still noticeably more expensive than Corolla Hybrid (29 000 €, lowest trim) and on par with Camry.
That's crazy! 50k Euro is about $70k my countries money! A few months ago I got myself a 2024 Civic Sedan Sport and it came out to right about $40k out-the-door. Our sports come with a sunroof, heated steering wheel, heated seats, remote start, all the safety nonsense (have turned off everything except blind spot and front collision braking), LED headlights, blah blah blah. That price also included Honda Extended warranty up to 6 years/100k km comprehensive and the all weather floor mats, trunk mat and rear mudflaps and I also got a 4 year rim and tire protection package.. The rim and tire I got because I was concerned those 18" rims will get some nicks on them but now that I got it, I could have some myself a few hundred bucks not getting it. Live and learn. We don't get the Hybrid Hatchback where I'm from (yet) so can't do a comparison between the gas and hybrid versions but we do get the 2025 Sedan in both gas and hybrid and the hybrid is only about $2k more so for most folks it would make sense to get the hybrid. The hybrid wasn't available here for 2024 but even if it was I'd still get the gas. Only drive about 1,000km (600 miles) a month, a bit less in the winter, so fuel costs really aren't a concern to me. Gas has been hovering about $1.60 a liter +/- for awhile now here in my parts.
Ireland has been breaking EU law for decades and getting away with it by applying the illegal Vehicle Registration Tax (VRT). The EU lets them away with it. Anybody thinking of emigrating to Ireland, I'd give it a miss as the taxes are among the highest for everything, in the world.
I’ve driven the civic hybrid and that blue colour. Honestly one of the best cars i’ve driven and i’ve owned VW golfs and a BMW, the interior quality is right up there.. But yes the price is pretty high for a Japanese car, Was shocked when he said $55k But if i could i’d buy one over the equivalent BMW or Audi.
And at that price too a shocker of a reversing camera in terms of clarity if you have tried it, and also not 360 degree periphery views, say compared to the golf’s rear camera quality. Lack of parking sensors on a car this size (on reversing in under duress you really need it in Aus), also inexcusable at this price..
Many will compare the prices of used hybrids vs nonhybrids, probably less than 8 thousand dollars. The hybrid big battery becomes much more reliable for the newer designs. Note that there is an air filter for the hybrid battery that needs to be maintained for most of them.
I learnt a lesson about trusting Factory Fuel Consumption figures. I did a return loop from Toowoomba to Brisbane and I averaged 6.4 L/100km and the factory figure is 7. 2021 Mitsubishi Outlander.
Not sure if it's just Japanese manufacturers in general going full dumb-ass, or just having a total toddler style meltdown over what's coming out of China, but the price for the "entry level" Civic being $47200 on road in Vic, is an absolute joke. It's like Honda just doesn't want to sell Civics anymore.
Currently, the Civic is the best selling compact car in the USA and Canada, it sells around 200-300 thousand units every year despite its higher price tag compared to its competition.
@@Mububban23 I'm going to buy one in EU in a few days. What other car would you suggest? I've test driven 10+ cars over last 6 months and I chose Civic.
you know why they that high right? you guys ask for to much technology in America plus government make them add a lot stuff in car as well now for example emission. ofcourse is not going be same, they put lot effort into car we cant have simple cars anymore. We just privilege in America we cant make these cars price that cheap anymore
So tired of seeing people whingeing on here about Honda’s pricing yet the same people aren’t whingeing about VW pricing. As an owner of both I can wholeheartedly say Honda’s product is superior for the same money. Also Honda’s cost of ownership over 5 years is comparable to 2-3 years for other brands. Toyota’s pricing is also practically the same when you factor in on-road costs, if not more (like the new C-HR?)… Time to move on.
In the United states, the 2024 Camry hybrid option is around $2k option and the car will pay for itself in a few years and Toyota warranty the battery for 150k. Forget Honda for hybrid. Toyota is king on this tech.
@@charliem432Then buy somewhere else for MRSP or less. If you do not see any reason to buy a hybrid, that gets its price differential (vs. the ICE alternative) covered from savings in a few years - battery change price included - then don't buy one. I covered the price difference in less than two years, so I am enjoying the savings I am making until the battery change (probably around 2K), after probably 14 total years of use.
The savings don't stop there by saving fuel!. Maintenance wise it's about the same but where you do save are these: no transmission, no starter, brakes last much longer and no alternator to worry about! So in the long run, less things to replace.
So the HYBRID doesn’t have a petrol motor, with all its bits and pieces? No one ever mentions that a hybrid is even more complicated, having BOTH drive systems.
@@mikequinn6206depends on the drivetrain. There's a lot of differences by make and model. In Toyota land at least, their Ecvts are dead reliable and I haven't heard much if any claims of motor or inverter problems. And often the battery packs are small so while replacement can be a few thousand, it doesn't total your car and is still pretty rare. I used to mock them but have become somewhat of a fanboy since owning my '13 Highlander (Kluger) hybrid. At 130k miles I still have over 50% of the factory front brake pads left and I regularly beat the fuel consumption rating in the spring summer and fall. I do A bit worse than rated in the winter, maybe by %10
There's more to it than that. In the case of the RAV4 and the Camry, the hybrids are simply better cars, quieter and faster. In the case of AWD models, they also have a simpler system, a rear electric motor, rather than the transfer case, prop shaft and rear diff. This is easier and cheaper to service.
Good work Chasing Cars! Another way to express this test result is that it will take more than 200,000 km to repay the additional up-front cost of the hybrid through fuel savings alone.
@@johnsanford3596 True... but you *have to* pay the extra to get the hybrid, even if you don't want all of the extra trim (e.g. sunroof). It's an own goal from Honda...
@@johnsanford3596and maintenance on a hybrid is slightly more expensive. However the CVT on the non hybrid is not as good. But Honda have made leaps and bounds on improving it.
The hybrid gas sunroof, leather, 2x electric heated seats, bigger tech screen, and more power and torque. $8k difference isn't just the powertrain. Both are still too expensive. Honda, grow up.
Unlike Mazda (#3 in reliability, after Lexus & Toyota) that moved up from upper mass-market to premium segment without a full corresponding increase in price, Honda did the same move to premium, but with a large increase in price, unjustified by its quality and reliability (decreased vs. 20 years ago). Thus, I forgot about Honda (from which I had 2 decades ago a Civic Sport) and moved on to Mazda based on an objective choice (e.g. I got a Miata ND2 RF G-184 five years ago, zero issues - not even recalls) or to Lexus for a hybrid. However, this video comparison lacks some basic logic: 1) the hybrids have to be chosen for the regenerating braking/coasting driving - for the city and for the hilly/mountainous driving (thus the 50% drive on the highway is not at all realistic); 2) the price of the additional features vs. the ICE variant should be subtracted, to have the actual difference between the hybrid and the regular ICE variant (usually a couple of thousands, not at all almost 8k); 3) the price of changing the battery (probably in less than those 14 years calculated here, approx. 12 years in real life) have to be added to the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership); 4) the best reliability (according to the latest CR reliability survey) belongs to the hybrids segment - and it's normal, they lack the alternator, the starter (thus the stop/start feature doesn't create issues like in an ICE car), belts etc., they stress less the brakes and the engine (working in the Atkinson cycle) etc. (Toyota with the ECVT is by far the leader). Therefore, the conclusion is simple: the hybrid - beside being superior in quietness, punch, reliability (#1 segment according to the latest CR reliability survey) - is the clear winner (even for Honda/Acura, but more clearly for Toyota/Lexus), because the price difference is offset in few years only (despite including the price to change the battery) by the fuel savings. The hybrid is also far superior (even a modern, reliable ICE car is) to BEV (that is the almost the most unreliable segment, except the full-size pickups) because its logic/purpose is quite different from the BEV: its inception was based on saving energy while braking (otherwise the kinetic energy when braking is lost, the dissipating heat through brakes and other adjacent parts damaging them much faster - a logic used also by the BEV for charging while driving)/coasting, not on an all-electric drive (that requires far bigger batteries, that need far more additional hundreds of electrical connection and far more complex software - thus the inherent glitches) that makes the BEV far more polluting, very unreliable, more expensive (even without including the huge cost of replacing their battery, with the polluting raw materials imoral harvesting and extremely low recycling, making them rather disposable electro-appliances), very dangerous, impractical (weight, range, charging, towing etc.), more controllable etc. *** I do recommend better TH-cam sources of information: The Car Care Nut, Savagegeese, Car Help Corner etc. (for tyres, the best TH-cam channel is Tyre Reviews, with Jonathan - if you eliminate some bias helping GoodYear and Michelin). Plus most of the statistics from the Consumer Reports on reliability, ISeeCars, CarEdge, MyMechanic etc.
@@Abdulrahman11799, The Koreans use most of the hybrid approach from Toyota and Honda. Thus, they are not bad, but some of their innovations spoil the overall performance, especially the reliability. But the issue is that the overall reliability and the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) of their cars is much below the ones of the top Japanese brands. I had driven for months a Hyundai Accent and then a Santa Fe in the good times of the Koreans - still they were below the Japanese top brands (like Toyota, Mazda, Subaru, Honda, even Suzuki and Mitsubishi). Today I would not touch a Korean car, new or used. And I am walking the talk: I have 3 cars (a Miata ND2 RF G-184 for track-days and nice weather, a Suzuki Jimny 4x4 LCV for small offroad and a Lexus hybrid F Sport for city and mountainous roads), ofc from (different) Japanese brands - I have no loyalty to any of them, I just buy the champions of the segment I need my car to be in, for my specific needs. I used to have a Civic Sport, a Suzuki Swift and European and American cars below what I have today. If you want a hybrid, I would recommend the champion of the segment you are looking in, more than likely one from Toyota/Lexus (or one from Mazda, Subaru, Suzuki - using Toyota tech) or from Honda/Acura, Mitsubishi (for PHEV), but not from the Koreans (they have no champion of any segment).
@@Abdulrahman11799 It doesn't matter my personal opinion, but the statistics. Hyundai/Kia/Genesis group is far below not only Toyota/Lexus, but also below Honda/Acura (hybrid pioneers) etc. in reliability, low TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) etc. Thus, having so many alternatives from the top Japanese producers, why would anyone choose a Korean car? The only situation that would be good for the future owner of a Korean car would be a super-deal like a far below market price (like half price) for an almost new Korean car (probably from a friend or a relative, highly unlikely to happen). I shall never own a Korean car, my Japanese cars are serving me very well (Miata ND2 RF G-184, Lexus hybrid F Sport and a Suzuki Jimny 4x4).
Had a civic with the 1.8 ltr engine and a very good care with excellent economy. The thing missing in this test is overall life cost, what happens when the battery loses capacity reduces which we all know they do, what is life span of the battery and replacement cost and warranty period for the battery,etc
@@natas12rm I don’t know what you mean by that and I don’t want cheap aftermarket batteries in a car parked in my garage. Nevertheless, the cost as shown on the service desk computer was as above. Labour and testing was one of the biggest factors.
@@Cuzzazbuzz they are not cheaply made. They are the inserts. Idk I don’t drive hybrid but I remember watching a Scotty Kilmer video where he said you don’t have to replace the whole hybrid. You can just replace the trays
@@natas12rm sorry I forgot to say that there was only one ‘module’ in the battery that was faulty. I think there are 5 or 6 in total but they only changed one.
Great video. Only issue is using the second click to measure how much fuel was used can be inaccurate over shorter distances like 100km. This is because the click does not occur at the height every time. The amount of fuel difference can be up to a litre. So great video, but still taking it with a grain of salt.
Right on the money with this video chasing cars!!!! Too many people purchase cars, on purely the car manufacturers claims. And not with their own logical sense.
Always wondered why hybrids sell in the numbers they do. They don't stack up financially unless you're doing 30,000km or more a year, they really don't.
Amazing car, the best non premium hatch in the market currently, yet it was dead on arrival due to stupid pricing Strangely the CR-V is competitively priced... go figure. Drop 10k in each model and you will start selling again Honda...
Here in Canada it's priced very well. People who haven't driven this keep saying Volkswagen this and audi that. Go test drive one and you'll see Civic is no longer a simple car.
An interesting report, but with all the commentary around how ‘accuracy’ was obtained, what load did each carry and how much slip streaming did the hybrid do compared to the petrol version. These would also have an effect on the fuel consumption. Lloyd
As a 10th gen Civic owner from germany i Must say the pricing here is Crazy. The Entry Level Civic Starts at 39.500€ (44€ USD) For the Hybrid (no Petrol available)
It depends. For exampe in Austria the car insurance is insanely dependent on the CO2 emissions of the car, it is more hundred/thousand EUR difference on a year. That can you also calculate if you live here
Great comparison and test. Well done! I always consider how long it takes for me to pay back an ev over a similar ice vehicle equivalent. And the answer is usually the same. But ev buyers will have their ways of justifying the higher price
With current EV and FBT discounts, a $60k EV is the same out of pocket cost as a $40k petrol car, provided you can lease it. Discounts won't last forever of course. But then, EV prices will continue to drop too, and eventually will reach parity with ICE equivalents. And home charging will cost about 1/3 the price of petrol to cover the same distance.
In my case the 2021 RAV4 hybrid that I bought was $2,000 more than a non hybrid AWD model. I save more than $2000 per year in gas on a 20,000km per year basis. So yea, totally wort it. Not to mention that the resale value of the hybrid is a higher and it's much easier to sell because of the high demand for those models.
@@Mountain-Viking Are these US dollars? I mean, in the US we have miles. Don't get me wrong, you save a lot, I admit. The units didn't make sense to me
I'd go with the hybrid, but the price of fuel is getting higher and higher. Year 1 after purchase of hybrid it might stay the same, but current, it looks as though fuel along with everything else is going to swell in price/litre.
@@briansilva4643 I currently drive a Mini Clubman JCW (98RON) and we've had it 7 years with only 52k on the odometer. Costs a bomb each week to fuel. The real world urban fuel usage is definitely attractive.
Recently bought a US Touring Sedan, my first ever hybrid. I'm never going back, it is hands down a better system. No belts, pulleys, starter, alternator, no turbo and no CVT.
Petrol 3-400 for a start stop battery Hybrid, the same 3-400 + 3-4k if we take a Prius as an example (similar 1kwh battery sizes), so yeah it basically never pays for itself if you don't drive for a living - like all EVs
Based on the 8 year hybrid battery warranty required in the U.S.A., add $500 per year to the fuel cost to get a more realistic annual cost for fuel and battery consumables.
Funny how everyone complains about the cost of batteries but never complains about the cost of components that don't need to be replaced as often - hybrids are easier on brakes, no starter motor which is a big failure component in gas vehicles, runs easier on the engine so it's harder to burn the engines out.
@asdf_asdf948 for start it was a question ,not a complaint just in case you didn't notice, it is not only price, it is child Labor involved, disposal, repairs ,emf etc -look into these details-might shock you,
But what if you hold the cars for 6 or 8 years, and trade the cars in. Will you get a higher trade-in value for the hybrid version to offset its higher purchase price?
@@leos3003too many people are skipping over that. I got a sport non hybrid myself. Not to mention, you need to drive A LOT to make up the cost difference in fuel savings.
🇦🇺🇺🇲 My dilemma a new Camry hybrid cost the same as a top spec gasoline Civic. I can imagine when the Civic hybrid finally goes on sale here it will out price the Toyota Camry altogether.
I went with an ice 2023 civic touring. It’s a little more nimble because it’s smaller than a Camry. I wanted to have all the features and didn’t mind having to fill up.
Best civics in order = Type R (one of the most beautiful cars currently in production 315HP), SI (amazing value and still styling and fun 200HP), Hybrid (pretty damn good economy and still fun for an automatic 200HP), then the rest follow. Honda is doing great things these days.
In Europe the hybrid choice is the minimal requirement in order to get favorable emissions sticker and be able to enter cities and eventually park with some restrictions. PHEV and electric is the next tier to overcome such restrictions. So you must be rich to drive in major towns or cities.
It's not true. Maybe in some cities from Germany or Norway. But, everywere people are driving petrol or lpg based cars. Try to go on Greece or Italy and let me know what you see
Worth pointing out is the hybrid will have lower running costs mainly due to no turbo which will equal higher resale value. The only advantage of the petrol is you can get a manual transmission.
Now add in the lower used value on sale of the hybrid, the additional cost of replacement tyres on the hybrid, the additional cost of insurance of the hybrid and not to mention the additional fire risks.
Can you enlighten on the fire risks? These hybrids are non plug-ins. There no no known issues with them catching fire any more than a regular ICE catching fire
I like the Civic. I don't even mind them going premium, as it seems to be biting at the heels of the German offerings. My problem is that if you're going to go premium, then you need to do it properly -- they both lack surround view cameras and the turbo Civic even lacks lumbar support. Inexcusable.
And no rear parking sensors for 47k on the petrol model, an absolute must have in Victoria for reverse parking under pressure or parallel parking…you’ve got to be joking.
Those number ate amazing! But.... Still not as good as my 14yo diesel... I am stingy, i will keep it a little bit longer. Congratulations for test! It is so rare to see people who actually know what they are doing!
15 km/litre in city traffic for a petrol Civic seems very optimistic. I've always known Civics and Corollas that run on petrol to deliver 9 km/litre in the city.
There is very little maintenance with the Toyota hybrid. I don't know about the Honda. The brakes last almost the life of the car and there are no belts.
@@Imran-Shah5k for a new battery at around 160,000 km. Factor that into the maintenance cost. And even though it’s less frequent, general maintenance cost is higher for hybrid. So it’s almost the same. If you’re driving 25k + km a year and wants 50 more HP then go for it.
Loved the test, and ICE still makes the most sense for a lot of buyers based on these numbers. Honda are just a mess here in NZ, with all dealerships having gone and everything going online. I tried to enquire multiple times about buying a new Civic and didn't get a single response. Ended up buying one of the last non-hybrid Puma's instead.
On a island nation it seems like continuing to invest in ICE cars are a waste of money, especially since most of the driving distances are probably short, it would be better to invest in EV infrastructure instead.
The Honda hybrid is also very good on its brakes as well, we have a crv hybrid and at its first service and 6000 miles the front brakes had used 10% and the rear 0% this is because of the high harvest of the electric from the brakes
Comparative fuel economies don't take I to account driver and engineering characteristics! I went from 1.6L '95 5spd man corolla to '97 3.8L v6 automatic (4spd) commodore (australia) and got same mpg average in similar traffic at similar speeds and acceleration over years along the same road.
Thanks for this. It proves what I've been saying for many years; that buying/owning an EV or Hybrid vehicle as compared to a Petrol or Diesel vehicle, isn't worth/doesn't justify, the additional cost of buying one. The market for EV and Hybrid vehicles here in the UK has crashed, although much of that problem is due to the lack of infrastructure for Recharging EV's; something the Government has been extremely slow in setting up. Additionally, wherever you are in the UK, a very large proportion of people live in blocks of flats or high-rise building, with limited on-street parking, so charging facilities are extremely limited. Ipso Facto, buying an EV/Hybrid vehicle, isn't an option for most people; especially those who have to commute for work, or who cover hundreds of miles per day, such as my local Taxi Divers. Russ. Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK.
The Honda Civic Hybrid is charged by its combustion engine only, or by braking. You cannot plug it in. It has no problem with range. What the hybrid provides is instant torque from the electric motor.
Really? 50km in town and 50km on the highway - I realise that the conditions are the same for both but the '2nd click' method isn't that exact - over 4-500knm then any difference would be negligible.
$47k is ridiculous money for a civic. Who do they think is going to buy it at the price? You have to pass up a Mazda 3, VW Golf or Toyota Corolla to name a few.
I really don’t know where everyone who is complaining about the price is coming from. Can’t afford a new car, buy second hand. Stupid to pay for a new car and suffer the depreciation. Proven that over the last twenty five years time and time again. Went back to a low mileage eleven year old Honda in good condition and couldn’t be happier. Other car is a Prius,seven years old and only gets better on economy(900 kilometres on a tank and less than 40 litres even on the warning light). Have owned three and none have ever required anything other than regular servicing(every six months). 100% reliable, no issues with head gaskets, batteries, corrosion and only one 12volt battery replaced. The issues the naysayers bring up are total myths. Toyota make the best and Honda are very close behind. Nothing wrong with Mazda either except for fuel economy. Cheers
Hmmm. Mums 2018 astra saloon got 3.4l per 100 when i took it sydney melbourne and back... I can get around 5l per from my ceratoGT highway (up or down a touch depending on terrain). Around 6l per mixed daily commute (semi rural to nearly the city and back). Colour me not thaaat impressed with the hybrid honda... especially given the price.
This mindset "x$ saving over y time to match the purchasing price difference" seems skewed to me - I'm going to sell of the vehicle in few years, and the HEV version will fetch a better price, so I don't need to offset the full price diff. But yeah, Honda sucks now with the pricing. I actually bought 2 months ago KIA Sportage here in EU - the difference between HEV (with AT) and the non-hybrid (DCT) version was about 2.300 Eur and I did buy it for the smoother power delivery more than I really need it on the occasional city visit. Having a traditional AT over a DCT was also a win for me. Living with Kia Niro HEV for 3 years thought me why they make more sense than the ICE only cars, at least in my case - when mostly accumulating highway kms, it wouldn't make any sense.
Here in Australia, The top model Corolla is $44,000 and the Civic is $49,990. The Honda is so much a better car, night and day. The materials, finish and the drive train etc. Rear boot and rear leg room is heaps better than the Corolla. Honda has a better hybrid system too. Going from the Hybrid Civic to a mid priced SX, the Corolla looks so cheaply made. I now understand you Honda. ThanksHere in Australia, The top model Corolla is $44,000 and the Civic is $49,990. The Honda is so much a better car, night and day. The materials, finish and the drive train etc. Rear boot and rear leg room is heaps better than the Corolla. Honda has a better hybrid system too. Going from the Hybrid Civic to a mid priced SX, the Corolla looks so cheaply made. I now understand you Honda. Thanks
@@iulian2548 well, I agree but I'll have to try it out with Mazda's powertrain programming. For me, it's all about fun behind the wheel so I'm really curious to pin this and the Mazda3 head-to-head. That said, the Civic has independant rear suspension. I'm hoping Mazda brings that back. Also, my 2014 Mazda3 isn't holding up great to Canadian salty winters. I hope Honda does better at this, or that both manufacturers improve drastically.
Here in Canada this new petrol Civic starts at 22K CAD (24K AUD). And it’s considered an entry level compact sedan, I don’t understand why you guys are paying this much for this.
The owner of a 2021 rav4 prime lost all of its gas saving when he had to replace a cooling part for 6k$ cad last week. Not talking about the cost of the high voltage cable that corrode and need to be replaced.
John Cadogan did the maths on a mitsubishi pajero sport phev and said you would have to drive on ev mode only, for 7 years, just to break even on the price difference. If hybrid cars are not good value, then how can a pure EV even enter the conversation?
Most car odometers are deliberately inaccurate to give better fuel consumption results. I think they can be up to 10% out. I had two Subarus that were both 7 to 8 % out using GPS readings. ( My 2015 Mercedes ML is spot on. 100% accurate. ) So, using the cars odometers can be used for comparison, but not for real world accuracy. Also, you are not taking into account the extra capital cost of the $8000. If you have to borrow that, at say the Australian average of 12%, that is an extra $1000 a year. IF you have the cash and instead bought $8000 in a blue chip company that gave a capital return of 5% a year and a dividend return of 10% a year with franking, then that is $800 in you pocket every year, PLUS you would have shares worth ~$11,000 after 8 years, the average car ownership length in Australia. So it makes no financial sense at all to spend an extra $8000 on basically the same car just to save $400 a year in fuel costs ( $4 saved per 100kl over 20,000 kl per year. )
The fuel consumption should be calculated over the life of the vehicle. I have a hybrid camry and in the first 2 years it has already paid for its price gap.
also got to look at difference between Honda vs Toyota... how are the hybrids impacted above 70mph where Honda will engage clutch and turn off electric but is locked into a single ratio...where Toyota will still be able to increase overdrive ratio at higher speeds?!
Hybrid version all the way to avoid the sensitive, random-reliable belt/chain design CVT found in 100% ICE vehicles. The "eCVT" design in most hybrids is so superior to any belt/chain CVT design.
As for fuel economy, would you rather pay $100 or more for a tank full or $56 to$78 per tank? Acar is an ongoing cost so stop thinking about how long it takes to recoup the cost difference. It is immaterial. You can either afford to own a car or not. Truthfully it is rare to have public transport conveniently nearby especially in regional areas. Think about it.
I was trying to do the math and if you're not driving 2000 km a week then there is no point in getting a hybrid over the normal car with that price difference
Let’s not forget the auto industry always makes you pay a premium for more power within a model range regardless of how they do it capacity/cyclinders/turbo More power more moola !!! I use to look at hybrids as just what’s the efficiency kicker but it’s now how much ahem “performance” grunt is the added kicker I know you said it’s a efficiency test but CC how much easier/effortless was the hybrid drive on hwy / overtaking / up the big hills f3 ?
There a definite advantage in terms of performance with the hybrid. The 1.5T is perfectly fine around town but it gets a bit breathless at higher speeds, with an electric motor at low speeds and a 2.0L petrol suppling direct drive at higher speeds the hybrid absolutely has a greater breadth of ability in terms of performance.
What’s interesting will be the depreciation cost difference as these cars age and the issue of the hybrid battery replacement cost comes to mind for used car buyers.
I did consider this car in the Hybrid version, mainly for the better performance. I went with the WRX Sportswagon 😂 cheers 🇦🇺
A new Civic Touring cost about $31,000 US.
The cost disparity between the EU and the US is ridiculous
Australia is in EU?
50'000 euro here in Ireland for the hybrid no petrol version available. The prices are unrealistic and very few on the road.
37 000 euros (lowest trim) in Lithuania with shipping to Ireland. It still noticeably more expensive than Corolla Hybrid (29 000 €, lowest trim) and on par with Camry.
That's crazy! 50k Euro is about $70k my countries money!
A few months ago I got myself a 2024 Civic Sedan Sport and it came out to right about $40k out-the-door. Our sports come with a sunroof, heated steering wheel, heated seats, remote start, all the safety nonsense (have turned off everything except blind spot and front collision braking), LED headlights, blah blah blah. That price also included Honda Extended warranty up to 6 years/100k km comprehensive and the all weather floor mats, trunk mat and rear mudflaps and I also got a 4 year rim and tire protection package.. The rim and tire I got because I was concerned those 18" rims will get some nicks on them but now that I got it, I could have some myself a few hundred bucks not getting it. Live and learn.
We don't get the Hybrid Hatchback where I'm from (yet) so can't do a comparison between the gas and hybrid versions but we do get the 2025 Sedan in both gas and hybrid and the hybrid is only about $2k more so for most folks it would make sense to get the hybrid. The hybrid wasn't available here for 2024 but even if it was I'd still get the gas. Only drive about 1,000km (600 miles) a month, a bit less in the winter, so fuel costs really aren't a concern to me. Gas has been hovering about $1.60 a liter +/- for awhile now here in my parts.
Ireland has been breaking EU law for decades and getting away with it by applying the illegal Vehicle Registration Tax (VRT). The EU lets them away with it. Anybody thinking of emigrating to Ireland, I'd give it a miss as the taxes are among the highest for everything, in the world.
Honda is crazy on prices worldwide
Irish are so much wealthier than the rest of Europe. You can afford it.
Hi, Tom. Long time no see. We went to uni together and you fell asleep in class one time. Great to see you out in the wild. Reviewing a civic no less!
I’ve driven the civic hybrid and that blue colour. Honestly one of the best cars i’ve driven and i’ve owned VW golfs and a BMW, the interior quality is right up there.. But yes the price is pretty high for a Japanese car, Was shocked when he said $55k But if i could i’d buy one over the equivalent BMW or Audi.
The 47k petrol doesn't even have parking sensors or at least a space saver spare tyre. Just pathetic.
And at that price too a shocker of a reversing camera in terms of clarity if you have tried it, and also not 360 degree periphery views, say compared to the golf’s rear camera quality. Lack of parking sensors on a car this size (on reversing in under duress you really need it in Aus), also inexcusable at this price..
Many will compare the prices of used hybrids vs nonhybrids, probably less than 8 thousand dollars. The hybrid big battery becomes much more reliable for the newer designs. Note that there is an air filter for the hybrid battery that needs to be maintained for most of them.
I learnt a lesson about trusting Factory Fuel Consumption figures. I did a return loop from Toowoomba to Brisbane and I averaged 6.4 L/100km and the factory figure is 7. 2021 Mitsubishi Outlander.
Not sure if it's just Japanese manufacturers in general going full dumb-ass, or just having a total toddler style meltdown over what's coming out of China, but the price for the "entry level" Civic being $47200 on road in Vic, is an absolute joke.
It's like Honda just doesn't want to sell Civics anymore.
I'd love to ask a modern Civic buyer why on earth they chose to buy that car, for that much money, over every other contender on the market.
Currently, the Civic is the best selling compact car in the USA and Canada, it sells around 200-300 thousand units every year despite its higher price tag compared to its competition.
@@Mububban23 I'm going to buy one in EU in a few days. What other car would you suggest? I've test driven 10+ cars over last 6 months and I chose Civic.
Yes, Honda is losing about 12% sales in China year over year, so they have to make up for the shortfall somewhere
you know why they that high right? you guys ask for to much technology in America plus government make them add a lot stuff in car as well now for example emission. ofcourse is not going be same, they put lot effort into car we cant have simple cars anymore. We just privilege in America we cant make these cars price that cheap anymore
So tired of seeing people whingeing on here about Honda’s pricing yet the same people aren’t whingeing about VW pricing. As an owner of both I can wholeheartedly say Honda’s product is superior for the same money. Also Honda’s cost of ownership over 5 years is comparable to 2-3 years for other brands.
Toyota’s pricing is also practically the same when you factor in on-road costs, if not more (like the new C-HR?)… Time to move on.
In the United states, the 2024 Camry hybrid option is around $2k option and the car will pay for itself in a few years and Toyota warranty the battery for 150k. Forget Honda for hybrid. Toyota is king on this tech.
Markup for Toyota hybrid is 3K-5K in Bay area. No reason to buy hybrid.
Sorry to hear that. Look around other parts of the country. I'm seeing advertised prices at 500 to $2000 below MSRP.
@@charliem432Then buy somewhere else for MRSP or less.
If you do not see any reason to buy a hybrid, that gets its price differential (vs. the ICE alternative) covered from savings in a few years - battery change price included - then don't buy one.
I covered the price difference in less than two years, so I am enjoying the savings I am making until the battery change (probably around 2K), after probably 14 total years of use.
Yeah but the Corolla sucks compared to the Civic 😂
Honda's been doing hybrids just as long as Toyota fyi...
The savings don't stop there by saving fuel!. Maintenance wise it's about the same but where you do save are these: no transmission, no starter, brakes last much longer and no alternator to worry about! So in the long run, less things to replace.
So the HYBRID doesn’t have a petrol motor, with all its bits and pieces? No one ever mentions that a hybrid is even more complicated, having BOTH drive systems.
all hybrid? Planning to buy a byd sealion
@@mikequinn6206depends on the drivetrain. There's a lot of differences by make and model. In Toyota land at least, their Ecvts are dead reliable and I haven't heard much if any claims of motor or inverter problems. And often the battery packs are small so while replacement can be a few thousand, it doesn't total your car and is still pretty rare. I used to mock them but have become somewhat of a fanboy since owning my '13 Highlander (Kluger) hybrid. At 130k miles I still have over 50% of the factory front brake pads left and I regularly beat the fuel consumption rating in the spring summer and fall. I do A bit worse than rated in the winter, maybe by %10
Don't forget you'll need to replace the hybrid battery at some point
Unlikely
There's more to it than that. In the case of the RAV4 and the Camry, the hybrids are simply better cars, quieter and faster. In the case of AWD models, they also have a simpler system, a rear electric motor, rather than the transfer case, prop shaft and rear diff. This is easier and cheaper to service.
Do they have the same size fuel tanks? I know it’s minor but going to the servo less often is a good thing.
40l vs 47l
Good work Chasing Cars! Another way to express this test result is that it will take more than 200,000 km to repay the additional up-front cost of the hybrid through fuel savings alone.
What a rip off
Yes, BUT a large part of the cost difference is all the other elements of the higher trim level on the hybrid.
@@johnsanford3596 True... but you *have to* pay the extra to get the hybrid, even if you don't want all of the extra trim (e.g. sunroof). It's an own goal from Honda...
@@johnsanford3596and maintenance on a hybrid is slightly more expensive. However the CVT on the non hybrid is not as good. But Honda have made leaps and bounds on improving it.
The hybrid gas sunroof, leather, 2x electric heated seats, bigger tech screen, and more power and torque. $8k difference isn't just the powertrain. Both are still too expensive. Honda, grow up.
Unlike Mazda (#3 in reliability, after Lexus & Toyota) that moved up from upper mass-market to premium segment without a full corresponding increase in price, Honda did the same move to premium, but with a large increase in price, unjustified by its quality and reliability (decreased vs. 20 years ago).
Thus, I forgot about Honda (from which I had 2 decades ago a Civic Sport) and moved on to Mazda based on an objective choice (e.g. I got a Miata ND2 RF G-184 five years ago, zero issues - not even recalls) or to Lexus for a hybrid.
However, this video comparison lacks some basic logic: 1) the hybrids have to be chosen for the regenerating braking/coasting driving - for the city and for the hilly/mountainous driving (thus the 50% drive on the highway is not at all realistic); 2) the price of the additional features vs. the ICE variant should be subtracted, to have the actual difference between the hybrid and the regular ICE variant (usually a couple of thousands, not at all almost 8k); 3) the price of changing the battery (probably in less than those 14 years calculated here, approx. 12 years in real life) have to be added to the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership); 4) the best reliability (according to the latest CR reliability survey) belongs to the hybrids segment - and it's normal, they lack the alternator, the starter (thus the stop/start feature doesn't create issues like in an ICE car), belts etc., they stress less the brakes and the engine (working in the Atkinson cycle) etc. (Toyota with the ECVT is by far the leader).
Therefore, the conclusion is simple: the hybrid - beside being superior in quietness, punch, reliability (#1 segment according to the latest CR reliability survey) - is the clear winner (even for Honda/Acura, but more clearly for Toyota/Lexus), because the price difference is offset in few years only (despite including the price to change the battery) by the fuel savings.
The hybrid is also far superior (even a modern, reliable ICE car is) to BEV (that is the almost the most unreliable segment, except the full-size pickups) because its logic/purpose is quite different from the BEV: its inception was based on saving energy while braking (otherwise the kinetic energy when braking is lost, the dissipating heat through brakes and other adjacent parts damaging them much faster - a logic used also by the BEV for charging while driving)/coasting, not on an all-electric drive (that requires far bigger batteries, that need far more additional hundreds of electrical connection and far more complex software - thus the inherent glitches) that makes the BEV far more polluting, very unreliable, more expensive (even without including the huge cost of replacing their battery, with the polluting raw materials imoral harvesting and extremely low recycling, making them rather disposable electro-appliances), very dangerous, impractical (weight, range, charging, towing etc.), more controllable etc.
*** I do recommend better TH-cam sources of information: The Car Care Nut, Savagegeese, Car Help Corner etc. (for tyres, the best TH-cam channel is Tyre Reviews, with Jonathan - if you eliminate some bias helping GoodYear and Michelin). Plus most of the statistics from the Consumer Reports on reliability, ISeeCars, CarEdge, MyMechanic etc.
Wow incredibly logical and good comments!
@@goni274, thank you!
All the best!
Great comment, you seem pretty knowledgeable, so I wanted to ask what do you think about Hyundai/Kia hybrid system? is it reliable on the long run?
@@Abdulrahman11799, The Koreans use most of the hybrid approach from Toyota and Honda. Thus, they are not bad, but some of their innovations spoil the overall performance, especially the reliability.
But the issue is that the overall reliability and the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) of their cars is much below the ones of the top Japanese brands.
I had driven for months a Hyundai Accent and then a Santa Fe in the good times of the Koreans - still they were below the Japanese top brands (like Toyota, Mazda, Subaru, Honda, even Suzuki and Mitsubishi).
Today I would not touch a Korean car, new or used.
And I am walking the talk: I have 3 cars (a Miata ND2 RF G-184 for track-days and nice weather, a Suzuki Jimny 4x4 LCV for small offroad and a Lexus hybrid F Sport for city and mountainous roads), ofc from (different) Japanese brands - I have no loyalty to any of them, I just buy the champions of the segment I need my car to be in, for my specific needs. I used to have a Civic Sport, a Suzuki Swift and European and American cars below what I have today.
If you want a hybrid, I would recommend the champion of the segment you are looking in, more than likely one from Toyota/Lexus (or one from Mazda, Subaru, Suzuki - using Toyota tech) or from Honda/Acura, Mitsubishi (for PHEV), but not from the Koreans (they have no champion of any segment).
@@Abdulrahman11799 It doesn't matter my personal opinion, but the statistics.
Hyundai/Kia/Genesis group is far below not only Toyota/Lexus, but also below Honda/Acura (hybrid pioneers) etc. in reliability, low TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) etc.
Thus, having so many alternatives from the top Japanese producers, why would anyone choose a Korean car?
The only situation that would be good for the future owner of a Korean car would be a super-deal like a far below market price (like half price) for an almost new Korean car (probably from a friend or a relative, highly unlikely to happen).
I shall never own a Korean car, my Japanese cars are serving me very well (Miata ND2 RF G-184, Lexus hybrid F Sport and a Suzuki Jimny 4x4).
Had a civic with the 1.8 ltr engine and a very good care with excellent economy.
The thing missing in this test is overall life cost, what happens when the battery loses capacity reduces which we all know they do, what is life span of the battery and replacement cost and warranty period for the battery,etc
Repair to our Mini Countryman hybrid battery cost £5,115 at just under 6 years. Warranty covered fortunately.
Hybrid batteries are usually way cheaper and they make aftermarket sleeves
@@natas12rm I don’t know what you mean by that and I don’t want cheap aftermarket batteries in a car parked in my garage. Nevertheless, the cost as shown on the service desk computer was as above. Labour and testing was one of the biggest factors.
@@Cuzzazbuzz they are not cheaply made. They are the inserts. Idk I don’t drive hybrid but I remember watching a Scotty Kilmer video where he said you don’t have to replace the whole hybrid. You can just replace the trays
@@natas12rm sorry I forgot to say that there was only one ‘module’ in the battery that was faulty. I think there are 5 or 6 in total but they only changed one.
Great video. Only issue is using the second click to measure how much fuel was used can be inaccurate over shorter distances like 100km. This is because the click does not occur at the height every time. The amount of fuel difference can be up to a litre. So great video, but still taking it with a grain of salt.
Your narrative is getting better, much easier to listen to.
have not watched video yet but Im wondering what petrol is used
98 ron or lower
Right on the money with this video chasing cars!!!! Too many people purchase cars, on purely the car manufacturers claims. And not with their own logical sense.
Always wondered why hybrids sell in the numbers they do. They don't stack up financially unless you're doing 30,000km or more a year, they really don't.
@@rickb314, they do, Chasing Cars calculations are faulty, see my comment explaining the real life calculations.
Now THIS was a well done test!
Honest review, thanks
Amazing car, the best non premium hatch in the market currently, yet it was dead on arrival due to stupid pricing
Strangely the CR-V is competitively priced... go figure. Drop 10k in each model and you will start selling again Honda...
Here in Canada it's priced very well. People who haven't driven this keep saying Volkswagen this and audi that. Go test drive one and you'll see Civic is no longer a simple car.
An interesting report, but with all the commentary around how ‘accuracy’ was obtained, what load did each carry and how much slip streaming did the hybrid do compared to the petrol version. These would also have an effect on the fuel consumption. Lloyd
Wish Honda had an entry level base model with a manual. Then I’d buy one.
So do we!
Yes Honda have always done a nice manual. Shame
The 1.0 civic was very popular in the UK before it was discontinued but it was so slow.
Is Hyundai Elentra hybrid a viable alternative or does Austrailia also suffer from their notorious dealer shenanigans like in the US?
As a 10th gen Civic owner from germany i Must say the pricing here is Crazy.
The Entry Level Civic Starts at 39.500€ (44€ USD) For the Hybrid (no Petrol available)
It depends. For exampe in Austria the car insurance is insanely dependent on the CO2 emissions of the car, it is more hundred/thousand EUR difference on a year. That can you also calculate if you live here
When the battery finally wears out, do you HAVE to replace it or will it run fine without?
Great comparison and test. Well done! I always consider how long it takes for me to pay back an ev over a similar ice vehicle equivalent. And the answer is usually the same. But ev buyers will have their ways of justifying the higher price
Glad you enjoyed
With current EV and FBT discounts, a $60k EV is the same out of pocket cost as a $40k petrol car, provided you can lease it. Discounts won't last forever of course. But then, EV prices will continue to drop too, and eventually will reach parity with ICE equivalents. And home charging will cost about 1/3 the price of petrol to cover the same distance.
In my case the 2021 RAV4 hybrid that I bought was $2,000 more than a non hybrid AWD model. I save more than $2000 per year in gas on a 20,000km per year basis. So yea, totally wort it. Not to mention that the resale value of the hybrid is a higher and it's much easier to sell because of the high demand for those models.
Why do you have to save $2000 PER YEAR? The math makes no sense
@@Imran-Shah That's what I save in gas per year compared to a non hybrid model. The math are extremely simple to understand.
@@Mountain-Viking Are these US dollars? I mean, in the US we have miles. Don't get me wrong, you save a lot, I admit. The units didn't make sense to me
Great to use external fuel used and distance travelled measures because the onboard measures are inaccurate. How inaccurate were they?
I'd go with the hybrid, but the price of fuel is getting higher and higher. Year 1 after purchase of hybrid it might stay the same, but current, it looks as though fuel along with everything else is going to swell in price/litre.
$5k Battery replacement at 160,000kms. Factor that into the fuel savings and it almost doesn’t make sense. But the extra 50hp is nice.
@@briansilva4643 I currently drive a Mini Clubman JCW (98RON) and we've had it 7 years with only 52k on the odometer. Costs a bomb each week to fuel. The real world urban fuel usage is definitely attractive.
Recently bought a US Touring Sedan, my first ever hybrid. I'm never going back, it is hands down a better system. No belts, pulleys, starter, alternator, no turbo and no CVT.
No mention on cost of replacing the battery-petrol vs hybrid
Petrol 3-400 for a start stop battery
Hybrid, the same 3-400 + 3-4k if we take a Prius as an example (similar 1kwh battery sizes), so yeah it basically never pays for itself if you don't drive for a living - like all EVs
Based on the 8 year hybrid battery warranty required in the U.S.A., add $500 per year to the fuel cost to get a more realistic annual cost for fuel and battery consumables.
Funny how everyone complains about the cost of batteries but never complains about the cost of components that don't need to be replaced as often - hybrids are easier on brakes, no starter motor which is a big failure component in gas vehicles, runs easier on the engine so it's harder to burn the engines out.
@@baubonithat would happen in 10 to 13 years so the price will drop from $4k to $2k or less, so yeah
@asdf_asdf948 for start it was a question ,not a complaint just in case you didn't notice, it is not only price, it is child Labor involved, disposal, repairs ,emf etc -look into these details-might shock you,
But what if you hold the cars for 6 or 8 years, and trade the cars in. Will you get a higher trade-in value for the hybrid version to offset its higher purchase price?
It'll need a new battery by then, while the regular will go another 200K. Any idiot buying it will need to budget 5K for a new battery.
@@leos3003too many people are skipping over that. I got a sport non hybrid myself. Not to mention, you need to drive A LOT to make up the cost difference in fuel savings.
keep in mind that CVT on the hybrid is much more reliable
Good real life test, enjoyed from Toronto Canada ❤
🇦🇺🇺🇲 My dilemma a new Camry hybrid cost the same as a top spec gasoline Civic. I can imagine when the Civic hybrid finally goes on sale here it will out price the Toyota Camry altogether.
I went with an ice 2023 civic touring. It’s a little more nimble because it’s smaller than a Camry. I wanted to have all the features and didn’t mind having to fill up.
What are the tested speed? Is it Texas highway speed or 55 mph?
Do we know what the depreciation of the two is likely to be? Will the hybrid hold more value?
Having the hybrid always behind the petrol seemed to be negative in the effort to keep things even and must have been a positive for the hybrid.
Not sure what you're on about here. The hybrid is literally at the front of the shot for the bulk of the video?
@@chasingcars Sorry, my mistake, it was the other way around. The petrol car had an advantage by slipstreaming the hybrid.
Does the Hybrid come with a spare tire?
No
Best civics in order = Type R (one of the most beautiful cars currently in production 315HP), SI (amazing value and still styling and fun 200HP), Hybrid (pretty damn good economy and still fun for an automatic 200HP), then the rest follow. Honda is doing great things these days.
crazy thinking the Civid is a 50k car now.... im my mind it will always be a 30k car
Lol it was always a sub 20k car for me
50K australian dollars, or 32k USD
In Europe the hybrid choice is the minimal requirement in order to get favorable emissions sticker and be able to enter cities and eventually park with some restrictions. PHEV and electric is the next tier to overcome such restrictions. So you must be rich to drive in major towns or cities.
It's not true. Maybe in some cities from Germany or Norway. But, everywere people are driving petrol or lpg based cars. Try to go on Greece or Italy and let me know what you see
Thank you for doing the math for us!
Worth pointing out is the hybrid will have lower running costs mainly due to no turbo which will equal higher resale value. The only advantage of the petrol is you can get a manual transmission.
Are you forgetting to factor an expensive battery replacement?
Now add in the lower used value on sale of the hybrid, the additional cost of replacement tyres on the hybrid, the additional cost of insurance of the hybrid and not to mention the additional fire risks.
Can you enlighten on the fire risks? These hybrids are non plug-ins. There no no known issues with them catching fire any more than a regular ICE catching fire
Cost to replace batter around 160km
I like the Civic. I don't even mind them going premium, as it seems to be biting at the heels of the German offerings.
My problem is that if you're going to go premium, then you need to do it properly -- they both lack surround view cameras and the turbo Civic even lacks lumbar support. Inexcusable.
There's no excuse or reason for charging over $47k for a Civic.
And no rear parking sensors for 47k on the petrol model, an absolute must have in Victoria for reverse parking under pressure or parallel parking…you’ve got to be joking.
Those number ate amazing! But.... Still not as good as my 14yo diesel...
I am stingy, i will keep it a little bit longer.
Congratulations for test! It is so rare to see people who actually know what they are doing!
15 km/litre in city traffic for a petrol Civic seems very optimistic. I've always known Civics and Corollas that run on petrol to deliver 9 km/litre in the city.
There is very little maintenance with the Toyota hybrid. I don't know about the Honda. The brakes last almost the life of the car and there are no belts.
No starter, no alternator either
@@Imran-Shah5k for a new battery at around 160,000 km. Factor that into the maintenance cost. And even though it’s less frequent, general maintenance cost is higher for hybrid. So it’s almost the same. If you’re driving 25k + km a year and wants 50 more HP then go for it.
They also have to take into consideration idle time.
Loved the test, and ICE still makes the most sense for a lot of buyers based on these numbers. Honda are just a mess here in NZ, with all dealerships having gone and everything going online. I tried to enquire multiple times about buying a new Civic and didn't get a single response. Ended up buying one of the last non-hybrid Puma's instead.
On a island nation it seems like continuing to invest in ICE cars are a waste of money, especially since most of the driving distances are probably short, it would be better to invest in EV infrastructure instead.
I wouldn't buy a hybrid for economy the main reason would the increased performance.
The Honda hybrid is also very good on its brakes as well, we have a crv hybrid and at its first service and 6000 miles the front brakes had used 10% and the rear 0% this is because of the high harvest of the electric from the brakes
In the UK its hybrid only. The civic used to be popular here, even with the weedy 1.0 engine but they're too expensive now.
Comparative fuel economies don't take I to account driver and engineering characteristics! I went from 1.6L '95 5spd man corolla to '97 3.8L v6 automatic (4spd) commodore (australia) and got same mpg average in similar traffic at similar speeds and acceleration over years along the same road.
Thanks for this. It proves what I've been saying for many years; that buying/owning an EV or Hybrid vehicle as compared to a Petrol or Diesel vehicle, isn't worth/doesn't justify, the additional cost of buying one. The market for EV and Hybrid vehicles here in the UK has crashed, although much of that problem is due to the lack of infrastructure for Recharging EV's; something the Government has been extremely slow in setting up. Additionally, wherever you are in the UK, a very large proportion of people live in blocks of flats or high-rise building, with limited on-street parking, so charging facilities are extremely limited. Ipso Facto, buying an EV/Hybrid vehicle, isn't an option for most people; especially those who have to commute for work, or who cover hundreds of miles per day, such as my local Taxi Divers. Russ. Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK.
The Honda Civic Hybrid is charged by its combustion engine only, or by braking. You cannot plug it in. It has no problem with range.
What the hybrid provides is instant torque from the electric motor.
These are on plug in hybrids. No cables needed
This days all the new cars are to expensive. To expensive. 😅 Great video!
Really? 50km in town and 50km on the highway - I realise that the conditions are the same for both but the '2nd click' method isn't that exact - over 4-500knm then any difference would be negligible.
$47k is ridiculous money for a civic. Who do they think is going to buy it at the price? You have to pass up a Mazda 3, VW Golf or Toyota Corolla to name a few.
Its better than the mazda 3 and vw golf. Even better than the corolla in touch and feel, but youd get the corolla for its even better reliability.
@@deshanmk6the Mazda is cheaper by 10k
@@asdf_asdf948this is worth the 10k extra.
@@deshanmk6it's not better than the Mazda 3
@@mharro88drive one. Definitely feels better. Different strokes... i guess
In future can you guys also comment on miles per gallon for us in the Uk please- thanks
Does Honda still sell cars in Australia? I thought they were pulling out of the market.
At these prices, well done to Honda for helping Dacia out.
Shouldn't you also do a test on tyre wear as I'm going to presume that the hybrid variant is heavier?
I really don’t know where everyone who is complaining about the price is coming from. Can’t afford a new car, buy second hand. Stupid to pay for a new car and suffer the depreciation. Proven that over the last twenty five years time and time again. Went back to a low mileage eleven year old Honda in good condition and couldn’t be happier. Other car is a Prius,seven years old and only gets better on economy(900 kilometres on a tank and less than 40 litres even on the warning light). Have owned three and none have ever required anything other than regular servicing(every six months). 100% reliable, no issues with head gaskets, batteries, corrosion and only one 12volt battery replaced. The issues the naysayers bring up are total myths. Toyota make the best and Honda are very close behind. Nothing wrong with Mazda either except for fuel economy. Cheers
Hmmm.
Mums 2018 astra saloon got 3.4l per 100 when i took it sydney melbourne and back...
I can get around 5l per from my ceratoGT highway (up or down a touch depending on terrain). Around 6l per mixed daily commute (semi rural to nearly the city and back).
Colour me not thaaat impressed with the hybrid honda... especially given the price.
This mindset "x$ saving over y time to match the purchasing price difference" seems skewed to me - I'm going to sell of the vehicle in few years, and the HEV version will fetch a better price, so I don't need to offset the full price diff. But yeah, Honda sucks now with the pricing. I actually bought 2 months ago KIA Sportage here in EU - the difference between HEV (with AT) and the non-hybrid (DCT) version was about 2.300 Eur and I did buy it for the smoother power delivery more than I really need it on the occasional city visit. Having a traditional AT over a DCT was also a win for me. Living with Kia Niro HEV for 3 years thought me why they make more sense than the ICE only cars, at least in my case - when mostly accumulating highway kms, it wouldn't make any sense.
Good review.. that's what I thought, too.. hybrid will need at least 10 years to self pay.
Here in Australia, The top model Corolla is $44,000 and the Civic is $49,990. The Honda is so much a better car, night and day. The materials, finish and the drive train etc. Rear boot and rear leg room is heaps better than the Corolla. Honda has a better hybrid system too. Going from the Hybrid Civic to a mid priced SX, the Corolla looks so cheaply made. I now understand you Honda. ThanksHere in Australia, The top model Corolla is $44,000 and the Civic is $49,990. The Honda is so much a better car, night and day. The materials, finish and the drive train etc. Rear boot and rear leg room is heaps better than the Corolla. Honda has a better hybrid system too. Going from the Hybrid Civic to a mid priced SX, the Corolla looks so cheaply made. I now understand you Honda. Thanks
I bought my Hybrid Renault because of the smoothness of the drive train the consumption was not really a consideration
It’s a genuine reason to consider a hybrid over a petrol for sure
As petrol prices increase (and they will) hybrid payback period shortens. Also who drives 50% city and 50% highway overall?
Mazda 3
Unfortunately the next 3 appears to have a Toyota hybrid engine, which in my opinion is much less refined than the Honda mainly due to the CVT.
@@iulian2548 well, I agree but I'll have to try it out with Mazda's powertrain programming. For me, it's all about fun behind the wheel so I'm really curious to pin this and the Mazda3 head-to-head. That said, the Civic has independant rear suspension. I'm hoping Mazda brings that back. Also, my 2014 Mazda3 isn't holding up great to Canadian salty winters. I hope Honda does better at this, or that both manufacturers improve drastically.
Here in Canada this new petrol Civic starts at 22K CAD (24K AUD). And it’s considered an entry level compact sedan, I don’t understand why you guys are paying this much for this.
It's right-hand drive. But Honda are ripping us off if they are trying to justify the price hike just because the steering wheel is on the other side.
How much will that hybrid battery cost to replace after 14 years?
It's a tiny battery, 1.05kW. So the price is miles away from the bigger ones.
The owner of a 2021 rav4 prime lost all of its gas saving when he had to replace a cooling part for 6k$ cad last week. Not talking about the cost of the high voltage cable that corrode and need to be replaced.
No warranty?
I drive an older Honda hybrid, so not a hater, however I’d be sceptical about that battery making it to 14 years to get to the break even point.
Please do a comparison of diesel vs hybrid car
You know measuring fuel consumed by the fuel pump is incredibly inaccurate. They don’t click off at the same place.
Hybrids are just cars with both the problems of an ev and ice in one wholesome package.
In Switzerland, there is no choice between... Honda only offers Hybrids in our country
Hybrids are worth only downtown big cities and only if you make at least 30k miles a year. Basically as a taxi or delivery car.
When trading in the hybrid is a no brainer.
John Cadogan did the maths on a mitsubishi pajero sport phev and said you would have to drive on ev mode only, for 7 years, just to break even on the price difference. If hybrid cars are not good value, then how can a pure EV even enter the conversation?
Most car odometers are deliberately inaccurate to give better fuel consumption results. I think they can be up to 10% out. I had two Subarus that were both 7 to 8 % out using GPS readings. ( My 2015 Mercedes ML is spot on. 100% accurate. ) So, using the cars odometers can be used for comparison, but not for real world accuracy.
Also, you are not taking into account the extra capital cost of the $8000. If you have to borrow that, at say the Australian average of 12%, that is an extra $1000 a year. IF you have the cash and instead bought $8000 in a blue chip company that gave a capital return of 5% a year and a dividend return of 10% a year with franking, then that is $800 in you pocket every year, PLUS you would have shares worth ~$11,000 after 8 years, the average car ownership length in Australia. So it makes no financial sense at all to spend an extra $8000 on basically the same car just to save $400 a year in fuel costs ( $4 saved per 100kl over 20,000 kl per year. )
The fuel consumption should be calculated over the life of the vehicle. I have a hybrid camry and in the first 2 years it has already paid for its price gap.
Can you repeat this test using a Toyota say the Yaris or the Yaris cross?
Try driving a hybrid in a cold climate, the hybrid system will go into hibernation until the spring. Might be ok in Australia, rubbish in the UK.
I've owned ine for 2 years and have had no problem the the hybrid system
also got to look at difference between Honda vs Toyota... how are the hybrids impacted above 70mph where Honda will engage clutch and turn off electric but is locked into a single ratio...where Toyota will still be able to increase overdrive ratio at higher speeds?!
Hybrid version all the way to avoid the sensitive, random-reliable belt/chain design CVT found in 100% ICE vehicles. The "eCVT" design in most hybrids is so superior to any belt/chain CVT design.
As for fuel economy, would you rather pay $100 or more for a tank full or $56 to$78 per tank? Acar is an ongoing cost so stop thinking about how long it takes to recoup the cost difference. It is immaterial. You can either afford to own a car or not. Truthfully it is rare to have public transport conveniently nearby especially in regional areas. Think about it.
I was trying to do the math and if you're not driving 2000 km a week then there is no point in getting a hybrid over the normal car with that price difference
Take a math class. A hybrid may make no sense for a potential buyer but not because of the figures you state
Let’s not forget the auto industry always makes you pay a premium for more power within a model range
regardless of how they do it capacity/cyclinders/turbo
More power more moola !!!
I use to look at hybrids as just what’s the efficiency kicker but it’s now how much ahem “performance” grunt is the added kicker
I know you said it’s a efficiency test but
CC how much easier/effortless was the hybrid drive on hwy / overtaking / up the big hills f3 ?
There a definite advantage in terms of performance with the hybrid.
The 1.5T is perfectly fine around town but it gets a bit breathless at higher speeds, with an electric motor at low speeds and a 2.0L petrol suppling direct drive at higher speeds the hybrid absolutely has a greater breadth of ability in terms of performance.
the hydrid is also more reliable as it has less parts that can go wrong ie. starter, alternator
What’s interesting will be the depreciation cost difference as these cars age and the issue of the hybrid battery replacement cost comes to mind for used car buyers.