Small Car Buying Guide
Small cars can be affordable, fun, and thrifty, though they can vary widely in practicality, price, and performance. Due to
the breadth of offerings, there are many considerations in choosing the best small car for your needs, budget, and driving
style. This buying guide will advise you on important considerations.
Brands
Below we highlight the most popular and the most significant sedan brands, with a synopsis of traits common among their sedans.
BMW
BMW has long set the standard for European-style "driver's cars." We have long given BMW high marks for the cars' agility,
handling finesse, sophisticated engineering, and impeccable fit and finish. We have criticized the lack of rear seat room
in the smaller models and the over complexity of some controls, as well as persistent small gripes such as inadequate cup
holders and mediocre radio reception. Reliability has not been BMW's long suit. Some models hold up well, some assuredly do
not.
Chevrolet
Chevrolet is an iconic, all-American brand, though its smallest offering, the Aveo, is a mediocre car made by the successor
to the Korean Daewoo company. While the larger Cobalt was no great shakes either, it's due to be replaced by the Cruze, which
could turn out to be a lot better.
Ford
Ford has turned a corner in reliability, compared with the rest of Detroit, with most Ford products, especially newer designs,
scoring average or better on our reliability surveys. The Focus used to be tops in its class, earlier in the decade, but now
is only mid-pack.
Honda
For years, Honda made a name for itself, and a good one, selling just two vehicles in the U.S., the Civic and Accord. While
it now competes in other segments, the Civic and Accord remain vastly popular cars for the right reasons: They are high quality,
reasonably priced, and have excellent reliability.
Nissan
In recent years, Nissan has made marked improvements in interior quality and packaging, though fuel economy and dynamic performance
are midpack. It offers the subcompact but roomy Versa and the small Sentra.
Scion
The youth-focused division of Toyota, Scion is focused on small, affordable cars with design personality and clever features.
The xD provides very good fuel economy at an affordable price.
Toyota
Known for fuel economy and quality, Toyota offers several small cars with varied personalities and test scores. The subcompact
Yaris is reliable and cheap but one of our lowest-rated cars. The Corolla is a well-balanced sedan with great fuel economy.
Volkswagen
A specialist in small and midsized cars, Volkswagen can be counted on for excellent fit and finish, crisp handling and good
ride composure. Reliability has been spotty-good one year, poor the next. That's a shame, because otherwise the cars score
high in our tests and are fun to drive.