Fast facts:
Cars cost money, but they also eat money — and not just in the form of expensive gasoline. Cars require routine maintenance, and as they age, they begin to require costly repairs as well.
For most working people, cars represent a top spending category, between gas, insurance premiums, and maintenance and repair costs. Together, these secondary automotive expenses can be just as important — if not more so — than the up-front purchase price of a vehicle.
That’s why reliability is so important when it comes to choosing a vehicle. Not only can a reliable vehicle save its owner tens of thousands in repairs compared to a less dependable car — it can also be cheaper to insure.
🏦 🏡 Don't miss the move: SIGN UP for TheStreet's FREE daily newsletter 🏦 🏡
Car insurance companies are obsessed with data, and premiums are calculated based on (among other things) perceived risk of claim payouts, so choosing a vehicle with a reputation for reliability and safety can sometimes result in a lower monthly Geico bill.
So, for the frugally minded driver, reliability should be a major consideration when car shopping. But just how is reliability measured? And where can consumers find trustworthy, experience-based information about how different car models compare when it comes to dependability?
Consumer reports, a nonprofit that has been testing cars and other products since 1936, is one resource that everyday shoppers have leaned on for unbiased product information for decades.
Consumer Reports, formed in 1936, is a non-profit consumer advocacy organization headquartered in New York State. The organization tests all manner of consumer products, cars included, at its private labs and facilities. For testing vehicles specifically, Consumer Reports uses a private, six-mile closed driving course that it maintains in Connecticut.
Related: How does Consumer Reports make money? The product-testing nonprofit explained
The organization purchases all of the products it tests (including vehicles) anonymously and at full price in order to keep its analysis objective. And, in addition to testing vehicles directly, Consumer Reports also surveys its over 6 million members annually about their cars. These surveys ask members about their driving experience, any problems that have arisen with their vehicles over the past year, how much these problems cost to repair, and more.
When looked at en masse and over the long-term, responses to Consumer Reports’ auto surveys help the organization identify vehicles that are more or less likely to experience certain problems at various stages in their ownership.
Collecting this data directly from owners of every vehicle model year over year allows the organization to assign relative reliability scores to each of the car models it reviews.
The 10 models listed below stand out as the most reliable on the market based on Consumer Reports’ auto survey data. Interestingly, 8 of the 10 models that made this list are manufactured by Toyota (two of which are on its luxury imprint, Lexus), and none of the vehicles that made the top 10 come from American automakers.
Here's the full list:
More automotive content:
Related: Consumer Reports: Cheapest cars to maintain over 10 years
Related: Veteran fund manager issues dire S&P 500 warning for 2025
2025-01-13T18:45:11Z