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Cheapest cars to run

  • By Neil McDonald
  • Herald Sun
  • image

    Three years in a row Hyundai Getz remains the cheapest car to run and own. Photo Gallery

The Hyundai Getz has topped the survey of Australian car costs ? for the third year running.

Lower petrol prices have helped soften the hip-pocket hurt for Australian motorists.

The latest RACV survey on vehicle running costs shows that cars are on average 7 per cent cheaper to own and operate this year compared to last year.

This translates into real savings of $16.61 a week for popular small and medium size cars.

Large cars and four-wheel drives too are cheaper but still figure as among the most expensive vehicles to operate.

For the third year in a row, the Hyundai Getz remains the cheapest car to run and own, with the Toyota LandCruiser diesel the most expensive.

The popular baby Korean car costs $114.65 weekly, $8.18 cheaper than last year.

The LandCruiser four-wheel drive diesel costs $366.05 weekly, but it too is cheaper compared to $401.53 last year.

The RACV says lower petrol prices, lower interest rates and good new car deals helped soften overall costs.

RACV chief engineer, Michael Case, said the drop was the first "in recent memory".

"I'm pleasantly surprised," he said.

"It means at a time of tough economic conditions, consumers are having a win."

Not surprisingly, of the 75 cars surveyed, the best performers are from the light and small-car classes and the worst performers large four-wheel drives.

At $171.92 weekly, the LPG Falcon ute was the cheapest in the ute category and large car sections.

The six-cylinder locals were well down the overall list but family favourite Holden Commodore again scored a narrow win over the Ford Falcon.

The Falcon costs $231.31 weekly against $226.29 for the Commodore.

However, the Falcon and Commodore work utes are cheaper to operate than their sedan cousins.

A Falcon ute costs $187.22 weekly while a Holden ute costs $187.63 a week.

Case said utes are cheaper to buy and have better resale values, bolstering their overall rating.

Much-hyped hybrids fared comparatively poorly against petrol cars.

Because of the depreciation on their higher showroom price, hybrids trail the fuel misers in the small car class.

A Toyota Prius costs $203.47 a week compared to an equivalent size Toyota Corolla, which costs $156.11 a week.

The diesel versus petrol debate too was sharply illustrated by the Hyundai i30.

The i30 diesel costs $151.66 weekly, $5.71 more than its petrol stablemate.

However, at $224.88 weekly the Holden Captiva diesel was just 56 cents more expensive than the petrol version.

The Honda Odyssey bucked the downward trend though, with costs rising from $239.36 last year to $243.90 this year, largely because the newer model is $4700 more expensive.

The RACV survey looks at the cost of fuel, tyres, servicing, spare parts, insurance, registration and depreciation.


WHAT YOUR CAR COSTS TO RUN*

LIGHT
Hyundai Getz $114.65
Honda Jazz $126.92
Ford Fiesta $126.70
Holden Barina $123.33
Toyota Yaris $122.27

SMALL
Ford Focus $160.48
Mazda3 $163.28
Hyundai i30 petrol $145.95
Honda Civic hybrid $182.82
Mitsubishi Lancer $155.18

MEDIUM
Holden Epica petrol $187.04
Toyota Camry 2.4 $191.83
Ford Mondeo petrol $199.50
Subaru Liberty 2.5 $204.99
Honda Accord Euro $212.04

LARGE SEDANS
Ford Falcon petrol $231.31
Holden Commodore petrol $226.29
Toyota Aurion V6 $216.39

LARGE UTES
Ford Falcon petrol $187.22
Holden Commodore petrol $187.63
Mitsubishi Triton 4x2 $187.95
Toyota HiLux 4x2 $190.07

COMPACT off-roaders
Honda CRV $203.72
Subaru Forester $194.95
Toyota RAV4 $207.39
Nissan X-Trail $217.21
Hyundai Tucson $179.08

MEDIUM off-roaders
Ford Territory 4spd $221.50
Mitsubishi Pajero $262.00
Holden Captiva petrol $224.52
Toyota Kluger $239.41
Toyota Prado petrol $270.73

* RACV figures; weekly cost

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 6 comments

  • Previous comments are not valid critiques of this rating. 1. depression is different from interest. your car after each year sells for less dollar and that dollar has less value. 2. the amount of kilometres you can get out of a car will affect the resale value of a car. a 100k commodore values better than a 100k Getz in terms of percentage of initial price 3. Golf has more capital and repair costs. every $1000 of more initial price adds around $2 just in the form of interest rates. The problem with this scale is that it does not take into account non-monetary costs like: Health & Safety risks or Social Status loss due to driving a cheapo

    Braim Hedayati of Sydney Posted on 31 January 2011 3:14pm
  • RACV reports are seriously flawed. In the most basic sense if you've got $40,000 you can invest it and pay tax on the returns and use the returns plus capiutal to pay for your travel by hire car/ public transport / taxis etc OR you can buy a car and pay all the car related costs for your travel. The relative cost is the difference between the two options. But RACV calculations include both interest on the cost of the car AND depreciation - that is they double count the cost of capital. To suggest a Commodore costs $0.80 per km based on 15,000 km per year over 5 years is a nonsense. That's one service a year plus rego plus insurance plus tyres plus petrol plus the difference in the sale price compared to a newq car price - say $400 + $500 + $400 + $120 plus $1800 (@ 10 litres / 100 km and $1.20/litre) plus $4000 ($20,000 over 5 years) = $7200 / 15000 km = $0.48/km

    John M Lambert of Geelong Australia Posted on 08 July 2009 12:49am
  • HOW SAFE IS ONE OF THESE COMPAIRED TO A COMMODORE OR FALCON I KNOW WHICH CAR I,D RATHER BE IN IN AN ACCIDENT, AND HOW MANY KILOMETERS CAN YOU GET OUT OF ONE OF THESE BEFORE THEY DIE. I HAVE 220,000 OUT OF A COMMODORE WITH THE MAJOR EXPENCE REPLACING TYRES.

    DALE REYNOLDS Posted on 07 July 2009 11:17pm
  • What, no golf in the list? It's fuel consumption is equal to that of a yaris in the tsi and has unbeatable resale value, surely its a contender.

    Stoney! of Manly Posted on 07 July 2009 5:22pm
  • It would be handy to include the dedicated LPG falcon in the figures for comparison.

    John of Colac Posted on 07 July 2009 4:25pm
  • These figures sound good for the city but could you imagine 5 real Aussie blokes traveling more than 2km. in a Getz? ? As for the Ford Territory being listed as an off roader, it is no more an off roader than my AWD Magna.

    Robert Smissen of Murray Bridge Posted on 07 July 2009 12:43pm
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