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Dodge Charger vs Nissan Altima

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Nissan Altima comes out ahead overall (4.8 vs 2.6), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Dodge ChargerNissan Altima
Reliability & Durability 1.3 6.0
User Sentiment 2.5 2.4
Complaint Severity 6.5 6.8
Consensus Strength 2.0 1.0
Value for Money 1.3 1.8
Owner Advocacy 2.4 5.7
Dodge Charger

The Dodge Charger nameplate suffers from severe generational fragmentation. Pre-2023 V8 models (especially Hellcat variants) are beloved by enthusiasts for raw power and sound despite chronic reliability issues, high insurance costs, and theft vulnerability on 2017+ models. The all-new 2025/2026 generation is a spectacular disappointment: rushed software, excessive weight, poor powertrain tuning, and lack of V8 at launch alienated the core fanbase. V6 models across all generations are universally panned as underpowered and poor value. Better alternatives exist at every price point, Mustang GT for V8 performance, Camry for practical reliability, or any number of EVs for electric performance. Only consider: old V8 if you're mechanically inclined and accept high costs, or new EV on a deeply discounted lease only.

Nissan Altima

Two generations, two completely different stories. The 2007-2018 Altimas earned their brutal street reputation with CVT transmissions that failed around 100k miles even with proper maintenance, steering column locks that stranded owners in parking lots for $900, and dashboards that melted in the sun while Nissan looked the other way. The 2019+ redesign fixed the catastrophic mechanical issues and added segment-rare AWD, but arrives so damaged by its predecessors that resale value craters and nobody trusts the nameplate. Nissan's decade of subprime financing flooded roads with neglected examples driven into the ground, turning 'Altima driver' into a cultural punchline that obscures the current car's actual competence. Pre-2007 models with the VQ V6 and traditional automatics are legitimately durable. Anything 2007-2018 is a transmission time bomb. The 2019+ is a rational midsize sedan at a discount, but you're buying a car everyone assumes is terrible, plan on keeping it forever because resale is punishing.