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2004-2009 Toyota Prius Prices Paid and Buying Experience

1971 messages,  Last post on Sep 10, 2009 at 9:17 AM

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What is this discussion about? Toyota Prius, Hybrid Cars, Sedan


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#1643 of 1971
Re: Extened Warranties. [jaxs1] by stevedebi
Jun 24, 2008 (10:26 am)
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Replying to: jaxs1 (Jun 23, 2008 5:34 pm)

"However, some of the points didn't make sense.
You would not be taking your NEW car to a non dealer anyway because that's what the new car factory warranty is for.
Of course one place is not going to fix damage caused by someone else for free.
If the first place caused damage, they are responsible for the damage and will have to fix it or pay to have it fixed. "
 
Well, I was replying to a different post, but here goes.
 
The whole point of EXTENDED warranties is that it applies AFTER the normal warranty. With a Toyota extended warranty, the service is done at the dealer. That was my point.
 
The second item was that if an "outside" shop fixes a problem wrong and it causes a different error, then the dealer may not fix it. For example, most cars have a 50K or more warranty on the transmission. The Prius has the 10/150K warranty. Yes, if it can be demonstrated definitely that the "outside" shop caused the damage, they have to fix it. However, the Toyota dealer may be the only ones that know for sure that a problem was related to a prior fix. If the "outside" shop denies they are related, you are stuck between, forced to take the "outside" shop to court.
 
That whole process is messed up compared to getting a manufacturer extended warranty.
 
But in any case a 3rd party extended warranty is inadvisable for the Prius (or any Hybrid) for the simple reason that the HSD is so complex that only the Toyota dealer should touch it.
#1644 of 1971
Re: Toyota Clear Lake (SE Houston) wants $7500 "premium" [lexusbunny] by jweaver39
Jun 24, 2008 (12:30 pm)
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Replying to: lexusbunny (Jun 23, 2008 6:16 pm)

if everyone would calm down and look at the long range picture, it is obvious toyota is taking advantage of high gas prices and the mania surrounding it. if you want to save gas get a 4-cyl.that gets 30-40 mpg and wait 2-3yrs when automakers(honda,chevorlet,ford & toyota) will have many more hybrid models available and dealers will not be able to take advantage of you, buyers you be in control!!
#1645 of 1971
Re: Toyota Clear Lake (SE Houston) wants $7500 "premium" [jweaver39] by bob104
Jun 24, 2008 (2:05 pm)
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Replying to: jweaver39 (Jun 24, 2008 12:30 pm)

Good advice. The small, fuel-efficient car you buy today will still be worth plenty when you go to sell it. The Civic I bought in 02 hardly lost $1,000/year. The Yaris and Fit should be excellent values. Problem is they might also be selling for a premium.
 
from Consumer Reports:
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/cars/new-cars/buying-advice/most-fuelefficien- t-cars-206/index.htm
 
  Fuel Economy
Rank Make & Model CR Overall MPG City MPG Highway MPG 150-mile trip MPG
1 Toyota Prius Base 44 35 50 48
2 Toyota Prius Touring 42 34 47 48
3 Honda Civic Hybrid 37 26 47 45
4 Toyota Camry Hybrid 34 28 41 37
5 Toyota Yaris Base (manual) 34 26 42 41
6 Honda Fit Sport (manual) 34 26 39 40
7 Toyota Yaris Base 33 23 44 40
8 Nissan Altima Hybrid 32 27 36 35
9 Toyota Corolla LE 32 23 40 39
10 Honda Fit Base 32 22 43 38
11 Honda Civic EX (manual) 31 22 40 37
12 Hyundai Accent GS (manual) 30 23 36 35
13 Kia Rio5 SX (manual) 30 23 36 35
14 Mini Cooper S (manual) 30 22 38 36
15 Mazda3 i (manual) 30 21 42 36
All have Overall MPG of 30 or higher
#1646 of 1971
Touring vs Base by bob104
Jun 24, 2008 (2:17 pm)
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From Consumer Reports. BTW, I paid only $500 more for my Touring#6 than for a Base#6. What makes the Touring get worse mileage is its sticky 195mm tires over the Base's 185mm tires. Somehow, though I wouldn't get the Touring again, I did get my moneysworth and then some when I safely braked HARD in heavy 70mph traffic near Las Vegas. In that case, the 10foot margin of safety saved me a bad collision.
 
Toyota Prius Touring: First Drive
 
  
The high-end Touring version of Toyota's Prius has wider wheels and tires and a tighter suspension than the car's base version. Online subscribers have often asked whether to opt for the Touring Prius, so we put it to the test. Our Touring car cost $24,803, which is $895 more than a base model.
Along with an option package including electronic stability control, this Touring Prius did have better handling and braking than a previously tested base model. It got through our avoidance maneuver 3 mph faster, which puts it on a par with some of the better-performing family sedans. It also stopped about 10 feet shorter from 60 mph. The main performance drawback is lower mpg: 42 vs. 44.
 
CR's take. Mileage for the Touring Prius is still much better than that for any other five-passenger car we've tested, and the edge in performance could give drivers an extra margin of safety. We think that's worth the extra money.
#1647 of 1971
Re: Toyota Clear Lake (SE Houston) wants $7500 "premium" [jweaver39] by indianajohns
Jun 25, 2008 (10:10 pm)
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Replying to: jweaver39 (Jun 24, 2008 12:30 pm)

I soooo love this debate. And I think you are exactly right. Here's why...
 
Compare Prius vs. Yaris. At $4 per gallon and 12,000 miles per year, you are saving $550 in gas money TOTAL. Assuming you are going to only keep the car for 5 years, a 60 month bank loan for a $26,000 Prius would be $502.65 a month.
And a $14,000 Yaris would be $270.66 per month. So in 3 months you have already spent more on car payments than you actually saved on gas money. Now multiply that by the whole 60 months = $13,919.40 difference in car payments made. Subtract the yearly $550 gas savings = $11,169.40. You have paid over 11 GRAND to "SAVE GAS MONEY." I don't get it.
  
Some guy in this forum said "Well what if gas is $20 per gallon. It could happen." THAT'S IMPOSSIBLE. If gas were $20 per gallon our economy would be destroyed so fast it wouldn't matter what kind of car you drove. The trucking industry would crumble, meaning every consumer product that is trucked would cost 5 or more times as much. There would be zero gas powered mass transit, no buses or planes or taxis. It would be the Great Depression Part II. With $20 per gallon gas you could probably trade your $26,000 Prius for a newspaper or some already chewed bubble gum if you were lucky.
 
All we can hope for in the near future is to build more nuclear power plants to give us electricity that doesn't rely on fossil fuels to power electric vehicles and even before that, pray that the oil companies start drilling oil on the U.S. public lands they already have a green light to drill on and pray they get green lights to drill in areas they don't already have permission because a squirrel might be inconvenienced.
 
Any way to lessen our dependence on foreign oil, I'm for it 100% but I'm not going to spend an extra $186 a month to do so. I'm going to stick to a $14,000 car or wait for the little "minis" to come out later this year or next year.
#1648 of 1971
Re: Toyota Clear Lake (SE Houston) wants $7500 "premium" [indianajohns] by jaxs1
Jun 26, 2008 (5:19 am)
Reply

Replying to: indianajohns (Jun 25, 2008 10:10 pm)

Gas will probably not stay flat at $4 per gallon for the next 5 years. Did gas prices stay flat the previous 5 years? 5 years ago people where assuming gas wouldn't go over $2 a per gallon in 5 years.
 
The Yaris will still be cheaper, but it isn't a comparable car. The Prius is a more substantial car with more space and many more features than just the hybrid battery.
If they make something a Yaris hybrid in a few years, then that will be something to compare it to.
#1649 of 1971
Re: Toyota Clear Lake (SE Houston) wants $7500 "premium" [jaxs1] by kirstie_h HOST
Jun 26, 2008 (5:45 am)
Reply

Replying to: jaxs1 (Jun 26, 2008 5:19 am)

OK, we're starting to veer a bit far afield for the "prices paid" discussion. There are a load of other Prius-related and fuel-related discussions that make more sense for this line of conversation. Thanks!
#1650 of 1971
Re: New 208 [oldcoach] by smokemirrors
Jul 06, 2008 (12:10 pm)
Reply

Replying to: oldcoach (May 27, 2008 12:26 pm)

Hello Old coach,
 
Can you share where you bought your Prius? I am in the market. Thanks so much!
 
smokemirrors
#1651 of 1971
Re: New 208 [smokemirrors] by oldcoach
Jul 07, 2008 (3:19 am)
Reply

Replying to: smokemirrors (Jul 06, 2008 12:10 pm)

I would be glad to share my purchase information with you. I got my 208 Prius on May 29,2008, from FERRIS TOYOTA in NEW PHILADELHIA , OHIO. I was treated real good and feel I got a fair deal. Need any more information let me know. OLDCOACH
#1652 of 1971
Paying over MSRP? by hawaiicarguy
Jul 09, 2008 (8:04 pm)
Reply
I have a deal in the works for purchasing a 2008 Prius for $2K over MSPR. This is for a Touring #6 so the MSRP is approximately $28K (out the door of $30K). I've been looking for a long time and don't have a car now because I sold it. There is a long waiting list all over the place, so I would pay a premium to get one now. What do you guys think?

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