Hello! Every few years I look into buying a Prius and keep biting the bullet and keeping my Nissan Versa running but I think its finally time for an upgrade as I'm nearing 200,000 miles on the Versa and the heels of my feet are wearing through the rubber floor mats I bought early in tis life. I'm interested in any hybrid, really. Prius C, Prius, and Prius V are my favorites though. My budget is about up to $12,500 and it would be nice to get one with under 80,000 miles. What sort of car should I shoot for? Is my mileage limit unrealistic? Would I be just as well getting a sub 110,000 mile car? Any site users selling a prius with a good service record? Thank you all for your time, Taylor
give todd a call, he can at least give you some good advice, and an idea of what you should be looking for in your price range. he's a member here and a great guy. at that price you're closing in on a nice pip i would think, if you have somewhere to plug in. all the best!
For $12,500, you're probably not likely to get a PRIUS Gen 4 <80,000 mile - but could get a fairly new Gen 3. When I looked 2 yrs ago, my assessment: PRIUS Gen 4 - great car; PRIUS Gen 3 - after trying Gen 4, Gen 3 was a bit underwhelming; PRIUS v (or +) - larger cargo space, heavier than Gen 3 and feels it, doesn't get the economy of Gen 3 or Gen 4, but still good for it's size; PRIUS c - is basically a budget car. Doesn't rate as safe as normal PRIUS either, and, really not suited to a lot of "out of town" driving, a small city car mainly. There is another which might suit - bit rarer, but the PRIUS Gen 3 PIP - Plug-In. If you have cheap electricity (or SOLAR), not huge commutes, it could be worth considering. Being out of Gen 4 $$$$ range, you might be better to ask on Gen 3 FORUM.
Before you jump into a Prius rent one for a week-end to be sure it is right for you. The Gen 4 has many improvements over the Gen 3, so that would be my only consideration.
I hope I'm not hijacking this thread, but . . . could I get an idea of why the Prius 4 is felt to be superior to Prius 3 (which has about 100,000 miles on it, and is fine except it burns too much oil)?
a little better mpgs, a little quieter, a little roomier, a little smoother, no flying bridge, better information feedback, 12v under the hood, more safety tech, of course, there are some negatives.
I've been wanting to sell my Prius C for awhile now. If you like I can check payoff with Toyota. 2016 Prius C two 22k miles
Listen, if you are use to driving a Nissan Versa? I'm assuming you are comfortable with sub-compacts. If that's the case, you could probably get the "newest" lowest mileage bang for your buck looking at Prius c's. And since you're coming from a Nissan Versa, you wouldn't have any size change "shock". I personally do a lot of suburban driving, and so I really like smaller vehicles. Having owned a Gen 3 Prius, and now a Honda Fit-very "Versa" like....I can tell you that IMO the Prius-standard- is a bigger vehicle. It's much "nicer" from a capacity standpoint. But overall even in the used market, they are going to cost you more than a Prius c. I'd at least test drive and example of both and just see what you like best. There is a North American attitude that "Bigger is Better" that I don't always agree with.
I know of one negative: the double glove compartment no longer exists, and the interior tries to be futuristic. I'm not sure what I think of having the shift column on the dashboard. Any others?
depending on the package, no spare tire, no rear wiper, no lithium ion battery. mendel has a couple others i think.
I faintly remember that the Prius model II (not the II eco) has some kind of spare tire and a rear wiper (wouldn't buy a hatchback without one). Is there any reason why I must have a lithium ion battery(which is not in present in the third generation, right?)
Take both for a test-drive - you'll know immediately - how much better Gen 4 feels. Gen 4 is more modern feeling, corners and handles better, more stable and quieter on Motorway. It also takes lower octane fuel (in some markets, not sure of yours), gets a little better fuel economy. Depending on the version of Gen 4, the Gen 4 will be better equipped, Heads Up Display, RADAR Cruise, Safety sense etc. Battery - I think they jury is out on which is best, the NiMH is tried and proven, been in PRIUS almost 20 years. Li-ION has only been in Plug-In Gen 3 and PRIUS v (+), and not as long. As I said, the jury is out - expected to come back in 8 years and give a verdict - which of the 2 lasted longer. Both have similar specifications, both have 8 (or 10) year warranty, similar fuel economy (by TOYOTA's testing) - NiMH is likely to cost less in today's environment, but by 8+yrs old, that could be different. BUT - for a $12,500 budget - a Gen 3 would be probably in the OP's sights.
I found this thread - have a look at the 4th post by @Tideland Prius nearly a year ago which explains some of the improvements: differences between gen3 and gen4 hybrid battery modules | PriusChat And this Press Release from TOYOTA gives some other differences: Toyota Unveils Advanced Technologies in All-New Prius | Toyota USA Newsroom
Thank you so much, but Tideland Prius's posting talks about engine power matters, and I'm not technical enough to care about that. What I care about is (a) is the standard equipment better? (b) does the car ride better?(c) does it have better visibility (a problem with my generation 3, IMHO) (d) is there a good chance it will be more reliable (my 3 has been generally great? (e) is the new car safer? (f) is the comfort level better.; (g) are the lights better? (I've gotten old so I really care about this, and I think the Gen 3 is inadequate in this area), (h) does the car handle better . . in other words, a lot of non-tekkie stuff. While this forum is *great,* I notice that a lot of posters care about matters that are very technical, and I'm not at that level; I lack training in auto mechanics or physics or engineering.
It will probably be best for a USA member to answer in regard to the US Models, but these are my thoughts from my Australian base model: (a) is the standard equipment better? - Yes, it has more standard equipment - though it depends on the package for specifics; (b) does the car ride better? - Definitely (c) does it have better visibility (a problem with my generation 3, IMHO) - Yes, I felt so - but I read that it depends on the driver's height to some extent - I'm average height, but my driver's seat is set to the highest; (d) is there a good chance it will be more reliable (my 3 has been generally great? - *Opinion ONLY* yes - it is a newer car, and newer technology - the 4th version hopefully will be an advance on the 3rd; (e) is the new car safer? - Crash Test results are excellent in Gen 4 - I'm not sure if Gen 3 results are directly comparable (as they were conducted much earlier), but Gen 4 got a "Good" rating for "small overlap front" barrier crash test, Gen 3 an "Acceptable" in the IIHS testing; (f) is the comfort level better - I've barely driven a Gen 3, but when test-driving both, I was impressed with Gen 4, less so the Gen 3 . I didn't think either had really good seats. Hopefully someone who has owned both long-term can answer this; (g) are the lights better? (I've gotten old so I really care about this, and I think the Gen 3 is inadequate in this area) - Yes, on Australian cars, but I remember PriusChat members commented about the headlights being improved even more with later Gen 4 US Models - not sure where the cut-off is; (h) does the car handle better - Definitely, no real comparison - this is probably the greatest improvement.