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Edmunds.com 'True Cost to Own' calculator

Insurance Institute for Highway Safety

 
The Basics
The cheapest cars to own (and fix)

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From flimsy bumpers to intricate technology, some cars simply cost a lot more than others to maintain and repair. You can bet your insurer notices, too.

 By Liz Pulliam Weston

The blue-white light from those new high-intensity-discharge headlights can seem pretty cool -- until you crunch one in a fender-bender and have to replace it.

Instead of a few bucks for an old-fashioned lamp, or even $60 for a halogen, youll shell out $500 or more.

Thats just one of the surprises that could be in store for you the first time your new car needs a repair. Thanks to differences in design and manufacture, two vehicles with similar price tags can rack up vastly different fix-it bills over time.

Cars with higher repair costs ding their owners another way: in higher insurance premiums. Insurers tend to boost the cost of collision coverage on vehicles that regularly rack up big repair bills.

People get excited when they see a great deal advertised on a lease for a luxury car, said Jeannine Fallon, spokeswoman for car comparison site Edmunds.com. They think, hey, I can afford to drive a Jaguar instead of a Ford Taurus.

Only after they get the car home do they start to notice how much more it costs to fix and maintain their prize, Fallon said. Then they realize they cant afford to own it.
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Why some repairs cost more
Why the variations? Among the key factors:
  • Design. How a car is put together can determine how well it survives a crash -- and how much it costs to fix afterward. Among 2003 midsized sport utility vehicles, for example, the Honda Pilots bumpers simply hold up better than many of its rivals. In 5-mph crash tests conducted by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the Pilot sustained an average $404 in repair costs -- compared with $1,246 for the Toyota 4Runner and $1,646 for the Kia Sorento.

  • Technology. Obviously, cars in general are far more sophisticated than they used to be, but some really push the envelope. BMWs iDrive technology is much more advanced than its competitors, says car expert Phil Reed. The training required (for mechanics) is greater, the parts are more specialized.

  • Imported vs. domestic. If the car is imported, chances are the parts need to be, as well. That can add to the price, particularly for the less popular makes.

  • Luxury vs. everything else. All other things being equal, more expensive cars are going to cost you more to repair just because its what the market will bear.
Everything in a luxury car is inflated, said Reed, Edmunds.com consumer advice editor and lead author of Strategies for Smart Car Buyers. Im not sure the cost is always justified.

Mobile money pits not easy to identify
Figuring out just which cars are repair nightmares, though, isnt as easy as it might seem. Different groups measure these things differently, which is why I turned to three different sources for their evaluations.

I started with Edmunds.com, which has a True Cost to Own feature designed to measure the five-year cost of vehicles, including financing, depreciation, gas, insurance and, yes, repairs.

There are some pretty major variations in repair costs, even between similarly priced cars and among vehicles made by the same manufacturer. Audi had both the cheapest and most expensive cars in the luxury wagon category, while Nissan had the same in compact trucks.

The differences were often substantial. Among luxury convertibles, the Lexus SC 430 had a five-year repair cost of $742 -- about one-third that of the Porsche 911.

Below are the cars Edmunds.com identified as the most and least expensive to own in various classes, based on their five-year repair costs as measured by warranty providers.

 Highest and lowest repair costs
DescriptionMakeModelStyleRepair cost
Compact truck
Best:NissanFrontier2dr King Cab Standard RWD SB $701
Worst:NissanFrontier4dr Crew Cab SVE-V6 4WD SB$1,011
Luxury convertible
Best:LexusSC 4302dr Convertible $742
Worst:Porsche911Turbo AWD 2dr Cabriolet$2,067
Midrange Convertible
Best:MitsubishiEclipse SpyderGS 2dr Convertible $701
Worst:BMWZ42.5i 2dr Roadster $1,156
Luxury coupe
Best:ChevroletCorvetteZ06 2dr Coupe$920
Worst:Porsche911Turbo AWD 2dr Coupe $2,067
Midrange coupe
Best:ToyotaCamry SolaraSLE V6 2dr Coupe$701
Worst:Mercedes-BenzC-ClassC230 Kompressor RWD 2dr Sport Coupe $1,328
Large truck
Best:NissanTitan4dr Crew Cab LE RWD SB$701
Worst:CadillacEscalade EXT4dr Crew Cab AWD $1,010
Minivan
Best:KiaSedonaEX 4dr Minivan $632
Worst:OldsmobileSilhouetteGLS AWD 4dr Ext Minivan $869
Luxury SUV
Best:FordExcursionLimited 4WD 4dr SUV$860
Worst:PorscheCayenneTurbo Tiptronic AWD 4dr SUV $2,067
Low-priced SUV
Best:KiaSorentoEX RWD 4dr SUV$632
Worst:HondaElementLX AWD 4dr SUV$889
Midrange SUV
Best:SuzukiXL-7EX III RWD 4dr SUV $653
Worst:Land RoverFreelanderSE3 2dr AWD SUV$1,897
Luxury sedan
Best:LexusGS 4304dr Sedan $742
Worst:JaguarXJR4dr Sedan $1,937
Midpriced sedan
Best:HyundaiXG350L 4dr Sedan $632
Worst:JaguarX-Type2.5 4dr AWD Sedan $1,897
Luxury wagon
Best:Audiallroad quattroAWD 4dr Wagon $1,205
Worst:AudiS4Avant quattro AWD 4dr Wagon$1,668
Midpriced wagon
Best:SaturnL3004dr Station Wagon $702
Worst:AudiA41.8T Avant quattro AWD 4dr Wagon $1,368
Source: Edmunds.com

Youll notice the above chart doesnt include many low-priced vehicles; thats because the lower-priced convertibles, coupes, sedans and wagons in Edmunds.coms survey tended to have similar repair costs. The Honda Civic, for example, technically had the worst five-year repair cost among low-priced coupes, but its tab of $724 wasnt much higher than the $632 price tag run up by the best-ranked coupe, the Hyundai Accent.

The Edmunds.com figures have their limitations, however. Since theyre based on warranty repairs, they dont include the really big repair costs -- those inflicted by a crash.

To get that information, I turned to the Insurance Services Office, which provides risk information to insurance companies. The ISO rates vehicles based on insurers actual loss experience -- how much real-world crashes cost to fix. The ISOs data blend frequency as well as severity, which means some cars get a worse rating because theyre involved in crashes more often (as well as being more expensive to repair afterward). The vehicles below are all 2003 models.

 Costliest and cheapest collision coverage
CostliestCheapest
DodgeNeon4 DRBuickLeSabre4 DR
Ford Focus2 DRBuickPark Avenue 4 DR
Ford ZX22 DRChevroletSuburbanSUV
HyundaiAccent2 DRChevroletTahoeSUV
HyundaiAccent4 DRGMCYukon SUV
HyundaiElantra4 DRGMCYukon XLSUV
HyundaiTiburon2 DRMercedesM-ClassSUV
KiaRio 4 DR
Toyota Celica2 DR
Toyota Echo2 DR
Toyota Echo4 DR
Source: Insurance Services Office

The ISO doesnt give dollar amounts for repairs, though, which is a major limitation of their data. So I turned to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which performs all kinds of crash tests and measures the damage afterward. I focused on the kind of repair damage were most likely to face: the low-speed fender-bender.

Some cars, like the inexpensive midsized Mazda 6, did OK, averaging just $342 in damages. Others fared far worse. Institute researchers called the bumpers on the more expensive Infiniti G35 a disaster, with a repair price tag four times greater.

The following vehicles were rated poor in 5-mph crash tests conducted by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Each suffered greater-than-average damage in collisions designed to test the effectiveness of the vehicles bumpers.

 Fender-bender flunkers
YearMake ModelTypeAverage repair cost
2003KiaSorentoMidsize SUV$1,646
2004CadillacSRXMidsize SUV$1,644
2003InfinitiG35Midsize Moderate$1,481
2003InfinitiFX35Midsize SUV$1,436
2004Chrysler PacificaMidsize SUV$1,315
2003MercedesE-ClassLarge Luxury$1,300
2003Toyota4RunnerMidsize SUV$1,246
2004Nissan QuestMinivan$1,137
2004AcuraTSXMidsize Moderate$989
2004Chevrolet MalibuInexpensive$952
Source: IIHS

Of course, theres a lot more involved in buying a car than just evaluating its potential repair costs. But if youre bent on buying one of the vehicles that didnt fare well in these evaluations, you might want to consider budgeting a little extra to cover the inevitable surprises your mechanical baby is likely to present.

Liz Pulliam Weston's column appears every Monday and Thursday, exclusively on MSN Money. She also answers reader questions in the Your Money message board.


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