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Honda Civic vs Subaru Impreza

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Honda Civic comes out ahead overall (8.0 vs 6.4), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Honda CivicSubaru Impreza
Reliability & Durability 8.5 6.0
User Sentiment 8.3 6.5
Complaint Severity 7.4 7.1
Consensus Strength 4.9 2.9
Value for Money 4.9 2.4
Owner Advocacy 9.0 8.1
Honda Civic

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.

Subaru Impreza

Standard all-wheel drive in a compact hatchback makes this the default choice for snow-belt buyers who don't want an SUV, but Subaru killed the $22k base trim, so now you're starting at $27k and wondering why you're not in a sharper Civic or Mazda3. The real problem is internal: the Crosstrek is the same car with a lift kit, and it outsells the Impreza by a landslide because ground clearance photographs better than handling does. The powertrain feels a half-step behind rivals, the infotainment lags, and if you live somewhere it doesn't snow, you're funding capability you'll never use. Buy this if winter traction matters more than driving enjoyment and you genuinely prefer the lower center of gravity, otherwise, the Civic is quicker, more efficient, and costs less to insure.