If you're shopping for a modern midsize sedan, the Malibu delivers maximum backseat legroom for minimum money, then reminds you why it's cheap every time you close those hollow-sounding doors. The plastics feel dated before you drive off the lot, and the whole experience is so aggressively forgettable you might struggle to describe it an hour later. Some examples have crossed 200k miles on basic maintenance, but timing chain failures lurk around 70k-120k on certain years, and the transmission has known weak points. It's spacious, fuel-efficient, and will probably start tomorrow, but the Accord and Camry offer actual refinement for similar money. Buy it if you need a roomy commuter and truly don't care about interior quality or driving feel; skip it if you value long-term durability or want anything approaching premium materials.
The Accord is what happens when a company that knows how to build engines decides comfort and space matter just as much as the drive, and mostly nails it. The 2017-2019 1.5T burns head gaskets between 60k and 100k miles, a $2,000-4,000 repair that's common enough to be a known hazard; skip those years or budget accordingly. If you want a roomy, efficient sedan that won't bore you on a back road and won't strand you at 150k miles, the 2.0T or hybrid models deliver, just know the latest generation traded the sharp looks of the 10th gen for something safer and blander.