Honda built a car that medical couriers trust to rack up 236,000 miles in a single year, and it sold for $19k afterward, still running. That's the Civic's superpower: it absorbs punishment, holds value, and asks for nothing but oil changes every 10k miles. The 2022-and-newer models look sharp, feel grown-up inside, and the hybrid actually delivers 40+ mpg without the usual compromises. The 2017-2019 turbo models had an oil dilution problem in cold climates that Honda was slow to address, so avoid those years if you live where it freezes. The Type R is brilliant but costs $48k, which is Elantra N money plus a vacation. Buy a Sport or EX trim under $30k and you'll understand why people who own one Civic tend to buy another.
This asymmetric three-door splits into two personalities: buy the base 2.0L and you get a buzzy economy car that looks quick but drives like it's apologizing, while the Turbo and especially the N deliver genuine hot-hatch thrills that embarrass cars twice the price. The 2013s grenaded engines with rod knock and bearing failures, avoid completely. Later first-gen models (2015+) and the second-gen (2019-2021, now discontinued) are far more solid, but every year suffers from comically persistent horn failures that need replacement after replacement, even under warranty. If you're considering a 2015+ Turbo or any N, commit to 4,000-mile oil changes and accept the horn lottery, you'll get a legitimately fun driver's car for used Civic money. Skip the base model unless you need cheap transport and nothing more.