Porsche 911 Coupe
Toyota Tacoma
Jeep Wrangler
Honda Civic
Subaru BRZ
Chevrolet Camaro
Toyota C-HR
Subaru Crosstrek
Toyota Corolla
WORST
Maserati Quattroporte: 64.5% depreciation
BMW 7 Series: 61.8%
Maserati Ghibli: 61.3%
BMW 5 Series Hybrid: 58.8%
Cadillac Escalade ESV: 58.5%
BMW X5: 58.2%
Infiniti QX80: 58.1%
Maserati Levante: 57.8%
Jaguar XF: 57.6%
Audi A7: 57.2%
I’ve always said if I was smarter, I would buy a Jeep Wrangler. New or Used.
Drive it for a year. Sell it for MORE than I paid for it.
Repeat annually.
I’ve 2 new hot rods from the BEST list of course
Interesting. Most of the worst are the preppy status symbol manufacturers. Expensive to buy and expensive to own.
Ah, I am just a working class fool so what would I know?
Oops, I left off the Porsche 718 Cayman. Number 2 on the BEST list.
The list really doesn’t mean much to me. I’m going to have to keep my 2010 F150 because I still have a mortgage and can’t afford the second one it would take to buy a new one. $80 grand?
We own a 20 year old Toyota Corolla, paintwork doesn’t look great but it still gets from A to B.
Surprised that a Toyota RAV 4 isn’t on the top 10 list...
so its a wash
my porsche offsets my maserati
Good to know. Thanks for posting. I’ll tell Beau I NEED a Porsche 911 - due to it’s resale value. It’s an INVESTMENT, Right? ;)
What do you think they’ll give me for two ‘vintage’ 1984 Arctic Cat Snowmobiles? (His & Hers!) I’m not parting with them. Winter transportation up here on The Frozen Tundra. ;)
My 2001 VW Golf isn’t for sale, either. She’s only got a few dents in her and less than 60K miles on the engine. New tires and fresh windshield washer fluid, LOL!
I drive a 2005 Ford Ranger. It is a great truck, and serves me very well. I maintain it, and have no thought at all of selling it. I’m in my 70s, and I expect my truck to outlive me.
I build classics for a living. I only build vehicles that are before 1973. Every thing I sell goes for almost twice what it was bought for new.
One of my buds bought a top of the line 911 Turbo S last year, and has driven it for a year. The dealership has contacted him and is offering to buy it back for $10K more than he paid for it.
Evidently the days of stupid money are still happening for some models.
Best: Race cars.
Worst: anything else.
My 2013 Honda CRV is going strong and since I’m retired it’s not getting driven as much. I just replaced the battery in the key fob for the first time - it, the car and me, all good for another ten years!
2016 Tacoma owner here. I’ll probably drive this until it’s dead or I am. I love it.
Just picked up a 2003 s10. How’d I do?
WORST BY FAR — Fired Escapes
Lemons everywhere you look. My son’s 2016 Escape is a lemon. Blown transmission at 90k (warranty covered it); small crack in cooling channel in “Ecoboost” 1.4L engine block causing oil in the coolant and coolant in the oil (class action suit going nowhere); second blown transmission a couple weeks ago at 220k (no warranty). Same symptoms as blown Tranny #1 — just won’t run, no shifting or massive slippage.
He just sank a lot of money in the engine, brakes, tires, and struts. Everything was completely up-to-snuff. Now this.
Current resale value: $0.
Two daughters each bought Escapes. One 2012 was a horrendous lemon and she unloaded it to get a Subaru.
Other daughter’s 2012 is still running. It has a salvage title because of massive hail damage in Denver, but it still gets her where she’s going, even with the golf ball dimple look.
I’m surprised the Toyota fj is not on the list. The market for those is hot. I can get nearly what I paid for mine 11 years ago
High end cars are typically the worst for resale value. Maybe because they are overpriced to begin with.