Two completely different cars wear this badge depending on when it was built. The 2009-2012 models burn oil from flawed piston rings, an expensive fix that makes those years a hard pass. But the current B9 generation (2017+) is genuinely reliable if you maintain it properly, which means premium fuel, timely oil changes, and no skipped service intervals. This isn't a Camry you can neglect. New pricing at $52k for a base model is laughable, but a 2-3 year old Premium Plus with ventilated seats around $34k is where the A4 makes sense: refined interior, Quattro that actually works in snow, and 40+ mpg highway. Buy it used, maintain it religiously, or skip it entirely.
The Focus is Ford's compact that splits into two completely different ownership experiences depending on what's bolted to the engine. The 2012-2018 PowerShift dual-clutch automatic fails so reliably that owners budget for multiple $2,000 transmission replacements, and the 1.0L EcoBoost's wet timing belt sits in hot oil degrading toward catastrophic engine failure every 60-80k miles. Manual transmission models across all generations are a different story, scrappy, fun to drive, and genuinely durable, with the 2000-2011 cars earning particular loyalty for hitting 200k+ miles on basic maintenance. Buy a manual from any era and you'll likely be fine; buy a 2012-2018 automatic and you're inheriting someone else's repair bills.