- Jun 22, 2004
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I'm surprised how low Land Rover and Mini are.
http://priceonomics.com/the-lemon-index-which-cars-have-the-highest/
http://priceonomics.com/the-lemon-index-which-cars-have-the-highest/

BMW and Mercedes at the top - who woulda thunk it!
For just maintenance though that seems a bit much, and why would maintenance be more on a Chevy than a GMC![]()
Ouch.
Makes sense though... Especially if you're going to the dealer.
A lot of the cars don't really need a lot of adjustment. Less features also means less stuff to replace every X months and less stuff that breaks (and could be very costly).
A typical Toyota that has no turbo, no exotic features, and is low on power/performance... It'll be cheap because you'll mostly be replacing fluids, tires, rotors, pads, belts, plugs, and some filters. And that will be with very low frequency. Of course, some of the models don't even have belts anymore and you might never even have to replace the chains or gears over the course of 10 years.
Now with a lot of other cars moving onto turbos, direct injection, and a host of other things... It'll increase maintenance cost because those things are more expensive to maintain (carbon buildup from DI) and replace (HPFP failures and having to replace/rebuild a turbo seems common now).
Toyota is good for those who want relative affordability with high reliability and low maintenance. People buy a 3-series for a different reason.
(Sigh... I'm looking at buying a 3-series soon. These stats don't make me any more happy about it.)
These costs seem really high.
yeah, a little
i know i didn't spend more than $4k during the 10 years i drove my civic, which was already 8 years old when i bought it
BMW and Mercedes at the top - who woulda thunk it!
For just maintenance though that seems a bit much, and why would maintenance be more on a Chevy than a GMC![]()
How is Mini so low? Its a BMW owned brand that is known for its laughable reliability + has BMW repair costs. I know so, I own one.
Meanwhile, the Honda Pilot is in the top 20 most expensive cars to maintain.
Now that I think about it, are these results skewed for Toyota and Lexus because they all include the first 2 years of normal maintenance for free? I would expect them to be the best on the list anyway, but maybe the gap between Toyota and Honda wouldn't be so large if they didn't have the first 2 years of maintenance
These costs seem really high.
I have a 2015 highlander and like it, but if you need a functional 3rd row you have to look elsewhere. From what I can tell it's only there to check a box, and I doubt anyone over 10 years old would fit. I just keep them folded flat at all times.Makes me just want to stick with a highlander/Sienna when the family hauler time comes (probably next year). Seems Pilot/Odyssey never seem to live up to Honda's reputation.
These costs seem really high.
It used to be the first 4 years/50k miles, for a new car, and it could transfer to another owner. But, they tightened it down to 3 years/36k milesBMW provides 3 years of maintenance unless that has changed recently. So either that is truly damning of BMW, or not really a factor.
Now that I think about it, are these results skewed for Toyota and Lexus because they all include the first 2 years of normal maintenance for free? I would expect them to be the best on the list anyway, but maybe the gap between Toyota and Honda wouldn't be so large if they didn't have the first 2 years of maintenance