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Consumer Reports article (as reported by Today Show): Prius "least expensive family car" to own

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by JimboK, Feb 29, 2008.

  1. JimboK

    JimboK One owner, low mileage

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    NBC's Today Show just aired a piece citing Consumer Reports' new April issue (the annual auto edition). The main thrust of the Today Show report was a new CR rating that evaluates total long-term cost of ownership. The reporter stated that CR now deems the Prius to be the "least expensive family car" to own. (Quoting the NBC reporter, not the article directly.)

    I haven't gotten my April issue yet so I haven't seen the article itself. I'm anxious to read the details.

    (I know this cites the same CR article as Danny did in this thread. But the focus is different, and IMHO worthy enough to have its own thread, so I started a new one.)
     
  2. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    The Prius got a lot of "face" time, but not a lot of discussion time. Still, it will probably spark some interest especially when gas hits $4 sometime later this year.
     
  3. chogan2

    chogan2 Senior Member

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    That was certainly my conclusion when I bought my '05. Most of our driving is city, most cars we were looking in '05 got 18 or so mpg city (e.g, Ford Taurus). At $2.50 a gallon, the lifetime (150K mile) gas cost was roughly $10K less for the Prius. That made the Prius vastly cheaper than any of the alternatives I was considering.

    At $4/gallon, the savings is almost $18K, and at $5/gallon, the Prius is more or less free, under the assumptions above. That is, at $5/gallon, the Prius+gasoline about the same as the gasoline alone for the vehicle getting 18 mpg city. That's a slight exaggeration because our miles were not 100% city, and because you can now get better city mileage midsize cars, but it's only a slight exaggeration. Buying the 05 Prius was a total no-brainer from the standpoint of minimizing cost on new family car. Good to see CR figure that out and say it.

    The funny (or not) thing is that cars are actually somewhat less sensitive to energy costs than many large appliances. For clothes dryers, the purchase price works out to be about 25% of the lifetime purchase+energy cost. For fridges, it's closer to 50%.
     
  4. morpheusx

    morpheusx Professor Chaos

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    Last year this was my conclusion as well, I heavily considered an Accord, Civic, and Fusion. At last years gas prices around $2.50 a gallon the costs were fairly close. But knowing that the fuel prices for gasoline have been trending up assuming gas would stay there would have been a foolish assumption. The higher the price of gas goes, the better the decision looks for the long run. And if the price of gas ever goes back to late 90's early 2000's prices ($1.25 - $1.50 gal) the price of running a Prius goes to costing virtually nothing.
     
  5. Doc Willie

    Doc Willie Shuttlecraft Commander

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    But they have not factored in:

    Graphics $360
    BT plate $165
    ScanGuage $160
    Tire Upgrade $360
    Seat Covers $500
    BT skid plate $360
    Hubcaps $160
    Detailing supplies $400
    Oil changing equipment $70
    Oil Valve $40
    Sharkfin antenna $60
    (All prices approximations from memory)
    and who know what else to come?

    And do not tell me that this is not a normal cost of ownership, since I have never spent money on these things in the previous 5 vehicles I have owned. :D
     
  6. Boo

    Boo Boola Boola Member

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    Here's the text of the article, with the chart for Family Cars at the end (sorry for formatting gliches):

    April 2008

    What that car really costs to own
    Knowing a vehicle's cost over time can save you thousands in the long haul

    A less-expensive car can cost you more in the long run than a more-expensive alternative, our new ownership-costs comparisons have found.

    At about $17,500, a Mitsubishi Lancer could cost $5,000 less than a Mini Cooper to drive home. But when you estimate the total costs of ownership for each car, the Lancer could cost you $3,000 more over five years. A Toyota Highlander can cost you $3,000 more to purchase than a Ford Explorer V6, but owning the Ford after five years can cost $6,500 more.

    In addition to shopping for a good deal, car buyers should also consider how much a model will cost them to own. That includes depreciation, fuel costs, interest, insurance, sales tax, and maintenance and repair costs.

    To help, Consumer Reports is introducing its new owner-costs estimates, which can help you compare models and could save you thousands of dollars. The "owner costs" Ratings cover one, three, five, and eight years of ownership and are based on a comparison of all models within the Consumer Reports database over eight years. Because depreciation is factored in our estimates, we assume that the vehicle will be traded in at the end of the term.


    COSTS VARY AMONG SIMILAR MODELS

    Here is how ownership costs break down over five years, based on our study of more than 300 vehicles.

    In analyzing ownership costs based on 2007 data, we made some notable discoveries:
    • While Hyundai and Kia models have low prices and long warranties, the savings are often offset by poor resale values. Hyundai's Accent and Elantra don't prove any less expensive after five years than Honda's more expensive Fit and Civic.
    • Most Lexus models have relatively high maintenance and repair costs (primarily due to maintenance), despite excellent reliability. The Lexus ES350 racks up an average of $2,300 in maintenance and repair in the first five years, about twice what you'd pay on a Lincoln MKZ.
    • A little sports car can cost less to own than a family sedan. The Mazda Miata and Mazda6 V6 sell for about the same price. But at the end of five years, we estimate the Miata owner will be about $6,000 ahead.
    • The Toyota Prius is one of the few hybrids that can save you money. It costs about $7,500 more than a similarly sized Chevrolet Cobalt to buy but costs almost $2,000 less over five years.
    CALCULATING THE COSTS

    Our cost of ownership Ratings comprise six main factors:

    Depreciation is the largest cost factor by far. On average, it accounts for about 48 percent of total ownership costs over five years. Depreciation is a vehicle's loss in value over a defined period. To calculate it, we start with the price of a typically equipped model and factor in the discounts offered off of the manufacturer's suggested retail price on some models. The average model depreciates about 65 percent over five years. Some vehicles depreciate faster than others because of oversupply, limited appeal, or rebates on similar new models. When we don't have depreciation data for a new model, we use estimates based on comparable vehicles.

    Fuel costs can really add up, especially for SUVs. For example, you could pay more than $10,000 to fill up a Dodge Nitro over five years, while a similar-sized but more-efficient RAV4 V6 could save you $2,000 during that time. To calculate fuel costs, we assume the vehicles are driven 12,000 miles a year, the average reported by respondents to our annual survey. To that we apply the national average price of $3.00 a gallon for regular gas as of December 2007. For models that require premium or diesel fuel, we use these costs: $3.20 a gallon for premium, and $3.40 for diesel. On average, fuel is the second-largest cost of vehicle ownership, at 21 percent over five years.

    Interest is tied directly to vehicle price, and accounts for about 12 percent of five-year ownership costs. We calculate it based on a five-year loan, with a 15 percent down payment, because that is how many people buy cars. We use the average interest rate of 6.86 percent as reported by Bankrate.com in December 2007.

    Insurance costs vary depending on many factors, including your age, location, and driving record. And they can dramatically boost the ownership costs of models that otherwise would seem affordable. For example, if you're looking for a fast car on a budget, steer clear of the Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution. Insurance can run $2,500 a year or more based on our 2007 figures. Conversely, the similarly priced Acura TL can cost as little as $900 to insure over a year. Overall, insurance makes up about 11 percent of total ownership costs over five years. Costs are derived from data from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

    Maintenance and repair costs make up 4 percent of ownership costs over five years on average, according to data from 675,000 Consumer Reports subscribers who responded to the online version of our 2007 Annual Car Reliability Survey.

    They gave us their estimated costs for the last year-excluding tires-and their responses provided data for more than 300 models on vehicles up to eight years old. We used estimates based on similar models when data was unavailable. The majority of the costs are covered by the factory warranty during the first few years. But for some vehicles it can still add up. On average, we found that the Range Rover is the most expensive vehicle to own for maintenance and repairs, costing about $2,000 in the fifth year alone. But the Toyota Land Cruiser is also luxurious and very capable off-road and costs only $600 in that year.

    Sales tax costs owners about as much as maintenance and repair does. We use the national average of 4.83 percent in 2007.


    CARRYING COSTS VS. OPERATING COSTS

    Costs can be divided into carrying costs, tied to the vehicle purchase, and operating costs associated with ongoing driving expenses. Operating costs include fuel, insurance, and maintenance and repair costs. Depreciation, interest, and tax are carrying costs.

    Carrying costs diminish significantly over time, while operating costs rise slightly, primarily due to increasing maintenance and repair costs. Still, on average, operating costs are less than carrying costs until a vehicle is about five years old.

    Still, we found that some cars are expensive to drive, even though they're affordable to park in your garage. Some small cars, for example, have low prices, but their high insurance costs make them relatively expensive to operate. The Toyota Yaris is the least-expensive car to own in our estimation, and most of its costs go into insurance, gas, and maintenance.

    But small cars are the exception. On average, carrying costs outweighed operating costs by 60 percent over the first five years for the average model we examined. For example, carrying costs for the Lexus LS add up to more than $12,000 a year. But it is relatively inexpensive to drive at just $3,500 a year.

    Even so, operating costs for some vehicles can be surprisingly high. The Ford F-250 turbodiesel, for example, costs about $5,750 a year for fuel, insurance, and maintenance and repair. The Dodge Viper is even more expensive, costing more than $7,000 a year to run. Insurance alone on the Viper costs almost $4,000 a year.


    AVERAGE CARRYING VS. OPERATING COSTS

    Carrying costs of depreciation, interest, and tax diminish over time. Operating costs, including fuel, insurance, and maintenance and repair increase over time.


    OWNER COSTS DROP OVER TIME

    Our ownership costs compare the expense of keeping a new car for one, three, five, and eight years.

    Most people keep their new vehicles for three or five years. But the high depreciation costs in the first year help explain why new cars are so expensive to own, so we break that out as well. Depreciation is the biggest reason cars cost so much to own during the first few years. It makes up almost 60 percent of the cost in the first year, and depreciation is still the largest annual ownership cost for vehicles up to six years old. Sales tax also adds to the cost of the car the first year.

    Cars cost less to own every year after that. For example, the average model in our study costs twice as much to own the first year as it does the second year. The sixth, seventh, and eighth years combined about equal the cost of the first year.

    While maintenance and repair costs increase, even over eight years they still don't average one-sixth the cost of depreciation.

    Still, we found that some cars can be inexpensive to own initially compared with others, then become relatively expensive as they age.

    For example, maintenance and repair costs are very low for BMWs over the first five years of ownership, primarily because BMW offers free maintenance during the four-year warranty. In fact, our readers report that the BMW Z4 roadster is the least-expensive car to maintain over the first five years. But BMWs are some of the most expensive cars to maintain over the long term. Once the free maintenance period expires, the BMW X3 SUV, 3 Series sedan, X5, and 5 Series went from having near the lowest maintenance and repair costs in their categories to among the highest.

    In the end, though, it is almost always less expensive to hang on to your current car than to buy a new one. Even the most-expensive repair bills for an old car can't outweigh the cost of depreciation on a new one.

    While our data can't show exactly what you'd pay for a specific vehicle, it can help you approximate which new vehicles can be the best value in the long run.

    Soon, online subscribers will be able to compare costs for one, three, five, and eight years of ownership from within the model pages. Find the model you want to research from the pull-down search tools and go to the "Prices & Costs" tab.

    AVERAGE COST PER YEAR

    Owner costs decrease significantly as cars age in most cases.

    For the average vehicle, owner costs decrease significantly with age, largely because depreciation—the highest cost—diminishes significantly. Paying off the new-car loan also eliminates interest payments. Maintenance and repair costs rise as cars age, but not nearly as much as other costs fall.

    MOST AND LEAST EXPENSIVE TO OWN

    FAMILY CARS

    Least Expensive

    Toyota Prius - $27,500
    Toyota Camry (4 cyl) - $30,250
    Chevrolet Malibu (4 cyl) - $31,750
    Ford Fusion (4 cyl) - $31,750
    Mercury Milan (4 cyl) - $31,750

    Most Expensive

    VW Passat (V6) - $44,750
    Mitsubishi Galant (V6) - $41,500
    Dodge Avenger R/T - $41,000
    Mazda 6 (V6) - $40,250
    Nissan Altima (V6) - $39,750
     
  7. Jack66

    Jack66 Kinda Jovial Member

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    I have to say that I have never known as much about my Prius as any of my other automobiles and I have a mechanics background. Not only am I more educated about the Prius but IT IS FUN!!!!:)
     
    Tunkamoose likes this.
  8. Godiva

    Godiva AmeriKan Citizen

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    I heard on NPR the other day that for the last 8 months, California has used less gas than the previous year's same months.

    I couldn't help wonder if we'd reached a point where the Prius was making a difference.

    But probably not. It's probably more a result of belt-tightening due to current depression/recession/stagnation/inflation/BAGEL.

    Still. I think the money you save on gas really makes the Prius a top choice for any car, not just family.
     
    Tunkamoose likes this.
  9. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    Well Mr. Spinella? Back to the drawing board :D
     
  10. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Sounds like CR got their heads around the issue of Prius depreciation ;)

    Glad to hear it. Actually the lowest TCO happens when you by a economical reliable *used* car and run that for a few 100 k. Most of them use a bit more fuel than Prius though, and a bit more polluting.

    Heaven help us, if fuel becomes so expensive that a new 2008 Prius actually has a lower TCO than a 1998 Camry (purchased used today).
     
  11. excuseMeButt

    excuseMeButt Member

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    "It costs about $7,500 more than a similarly sized Chevrolet Cobalt to buy but costs almost $2,000 less over five years."

    I think that a Cobalt is much smaller than a Prius. Am I wrong?

    ~buttster
     
  12. Boo

    Boo Boola Boola Member

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    Cobalt is a 180.5" long 2 door coupe or 4 door sedan.

    Prius is a 175" long 5 door hatchback, so it might hold more.
     
  13. donee

    donee New Member

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    Hi All,

    Do not know about the Cobalt, but a Pontiac G6 has about the same size rear seat as a Prius, except the head room is quite a bit shorter.
     
  14. chogan2

    chogan2 Senior Member

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    Yes, it is smaller, at least in terms of usable interior volume. It weighs a little less than a Prius (about 2800 lbs), it may have roughly the same external footprint, but it's smaller on the inside. I looked at a Cobalt when I heard that would be the platform for the Volt and I couldn't see any way an adult could sit comfortably in the back seat. Unless they redesigned it for the current model year I'd guess that's still true.

    The US Dept. of Energy (Fuel Economy) classes the Cobalt as a subcompact, classes the Prius as midsize. Here's the interior passenger volume, Cobalt vs Prius, from the DOE website, below.


    Passenger Volume​
    86 ft3 (4D)​
    [​IMG]
    96 ft3 (HB)​
    Luggage Volume​
    14 ft3 (4D)​
    [​IMG]
    16 ft3 (HB)​





    Per that DOE website, the Cobalt has less interior passenger room than many small cars. Less than a Corolla (89 cubic feet), Civic (91 cubic feet), Honda Fit (90 cubic feet), or Focus (93 cubic feet), and so on and so on. Actually, a Cobalt has less interior passenger space than a Yaris (87 cubic feet), though it does have a larger trunk space. Can't imagine why CR chose the Cobalt as the basis for comparison.
     
  15. ny biker

    ny biker Member

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    Geico thinks the Prius is the equivalent of the Cobalt, too. When I had to rent a car while mine was being fixed after an accident, they told me the approved rental would be something like a Cobalt. After speaking to a supervisor I got them to upgrade me one level. I was still not satisfied because I wanted nothing less than to rent a Prius, but they told me to take a hike.
     
  16. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    Prius : Cobalt :: First Class : Coach ;)
     
  17. sendconroymail

    sendconroymail One Mean SOB

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    My wife has a Mitsubishi SUV that was in the shop this past week because someone side swiped her. The insurance company gave her a cobalt for the week. This past weekend we drove it all over the place and let me say it is nothing compared to Prius. It's poorly made, small, and everything rattles on the highway. I can't believe Consumer Reports would even compare the prices of the 2 cars. Ones a poorly made american rental fleet vehicle and the others a high tech car of the future. They should be ashamed of themselves for this. At least they should have compared it to the price of a 4 cylinder Camry with similar features.
     
  18. Boo

    Boo Boola Boola Member

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    Nothing to be ashamed about. Consumer Reports was not saying that the Cobalt is as good as the Prius. They were just comparing the costs of owning comparably sized cars. They were saying that although the Prius costs a lot more to buy than the similarly sized Cobalt, in the long run the Prius ends up costing less than the Cobalt.
     
  19. micheal

    micheal I feel pretty, oh so pretty.

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    I don't think that people are ashamed about the Prius costing less. Rather that CR was not comparing two comparably sized cars, as the posts and numbers above highlight. Comparing the Prius against a similar sized vehicle would result in an even greater advantage to the Prius. To it's credit, the Prius has still come out ahead in all of CR's bad (IMO) comparisons to smaller vehicles.

    Don't get me wrong, I still like CR as a whole, but some of their comparisons and auto analysis over the last several years have been very odd. The depreciation debacle by not catching an obvious error and their general lack of emission ratings while putting greater emphasis on MPG are strange. A recent example of this is their "Who Makes the Best Cars?: Honda is tops, but Ford and GM have improved." Technically this is true, but gives the impression that the American manufacturers are closing in. In the actually reliability ratings, Ford is 17 points behind Honda, while GM is 24 points behind and they 12 and 13 out of the 15 manufactures. A less misleading title could have been chosen, one that would have accurately portrayed that Ford and GM are still at the bottom of the barrel in reliability despite improvements.
     
  20. Boo

    Boo Boola Boola Member

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    I don't know why some posters are getting all upset with this Consumer Reports article vis a vis the Prius.

    CR said that although the Prius cost $7500 more to buy than the similarly sized Cobalt, in the long run the Prius actually cost $2,000 less to own than the Cobalt. The Prius is 175" long and the Cobalt is 180" long. To me that's similarly sized.

    But because of the hatchback design, the Prius' interior dimensions are similar to those of Family or mid sized sedans. That's why CR also put the Prius in its Family car category and did compare it to much longer cars like the Camry, Altima and Passat (see the chart in my initial post of the article). And in this regard, CR crowned Prius as the least expensive car to own in this Family car category.

    So to sum up, CR praises the Prius for (i) being less expensive to own than the similarly sized (but longer) Cobalt, and (ii) being the least expensive car to own in the Family car category which includes the Camry, Altima and Passat. Yet, now 3 posters in this thread have criticized CR for comparing the Prius to the Cobalt. I don't get it.