Author Topic: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000  (Read 1681 times)

JJazz

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Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« on: July 13, 2025, 09:15:34 PM »
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Best Cars on Sale Under £30,000 in 2025 | Carwow
For seniors seeking a reliable and comfortable petrol car under £30,000, several excellent options exist. The Honda Jazz stands out for its easy entry/exit, high seating position, and compact size, making it ideal for urban environments. The Ford Puma offers a comfortable ride, elevated driving position, and good handling, also suitable for city and rural driving. Other strong contenders include the Toyota Yaris Cross, Skoda Kamiq, Kia Soul, Hyundai Kona, Volkswagen T-Roc, and Mazda CX-3, all of which offer varying degrees of raised seating, spacious interiors, and user-friendly features.

Think we all knew that about the Jazz. Still just under 5,000 miles with 3 year warranty up in November this year. I have 5 year service plan so going to extend warranty for another 2 years.

JB

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Re: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« Reply #1 on: July 13, 2025, 11:44:21 PM »
IF you have a car that your happy with and its giving you no problems keep it, all cars do is get you from A to B and in this day and age everything is about money or how to get it, total greed today  created by successive governments , if you have any money someone somewhere will try to get it.
I forgot what I came to forget.

Sean Regan

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Re: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« Reply #2 on: July 14, 2025, 10:41:13 AM »
Up to this year, I'd had successively, three new Hondas.
a Civic LSI for three years when I was still working.
Then, when I took early retirement, one of the first CRVs for seven years when they were being imported from Japan.
Then my last CRV for 20 years.

None gave me any real trouble.
But I bought a 2023 Crosstar in March  with 6000 miles on the clock from a Honda main dealer, as I reckon at 85, it may well be my last car. I just wanted a smaller car, with low mileage and still under warranty. The Jazz fitted the bill. I can get my tour golf bag and electric trolley in, if I fold the back seats down.
It wasn't cheap, but that wasn't a consideration. I find it easy to drive apart from, "its natural instinct to interfere with my driving," which you can suppress, a less than comprehensible hand book and too many bells and whistles.
Why any small car needs eight speakers, I've no idea. I rarely use my memory stick with 3000 mp3s and even less the radio.
The sat/nav is good, the woman who gives the instructions "seems to have a more refined voice than the one on my old TomTom."
Ok it's a hybrid, but it's the best of both worlds. I think having a big cable stuck on the side of our house to recharge an all electric car would be too messy. I like the fact that the Jazz has an indicator, to tell me how far I can go before I need to fill up again.
This is my first automatic car, I'd always had a "stick shift" car right back to my teens with a pre-war Austin 7, with a crash gearbox. I like the fact that it's remarkably quick away from the lights.
"The information's out there, you only have to let it in." (Jesse Stone)

Nicksey

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Re: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« Reply #3 on: July 14, 2025, 12:59:24 PM »
Well, at 63 I still don't think of myself as senior..

The Jazz was bought as my last car though, after successive Renaults that I only kept for 3 or 4 years.
The Honda reputation for reliability long term appealed to me.

It does what I did with the Renaults, I can get a pair of bikes on the roof rack or a kayak.
I can get a pair of folding bikes in the boot, and thanks to magic seats lots of camping gear too.

It is my first hybrid, but more importantly my first auto.

It drives better than everything else I have driven, and it is more comfortable on long journeys too.

I have moaned about various things, things I shouldn't have had to worry about in a car only just coming up to 3 years old, but hey ho..

As it approaches it's 3rd service in September, it will have completed 33,000 miles. I have the 5 year warranty/service package and fingers crossed it behaves, I will add another 2 years on at the end.

ninanina

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Re: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« Reply #4 on: July 14, 2025, 05:16:09 PM »
Well, at 63 I still don't think of myself as senior..

The Jazz was bought as my last car though, after successive Renaults that I only kept for 3 or 4 years.
The Honda reputation for reliability long term appealed to me

It is my first hybrid, but more importantly my first auto.

It drives better than everything else I have driven, and it is more comfortable on long journeys too.

I have moaned about various things, things I shouldn't have had to worry about in a car only just coming up to 3 years old, but hey ho

I’m 62 so similar age

I also purchased the Jazz as a last car so I hope she will give me no trouble

The Jazz drives absolutely lovely and on a long motorway journey it’s perfect; it’s quiet, soft riding, has little road noise and is a pleasure on these type of trips

I still can’t get over how swift she is away from the lights  :o.  I beat most cars easily
« Last Edit: July 14, 2025, 05:19:03 PM by ninanina »

Kremmen

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Re: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« Reply #5 on: July 14, 2025, 05:31:12 PM »
The only thing for some older people to be wary of is, if appropriate, switching from manual to auto driving

For me, I started auto driving in 1972ish when my boss loaned me his Austin 2200 and I loved the stop or go option and no gearstick fiddling

From that year I've always had autos
Let's be careful out there !

stani

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Re: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« Reply #6 on: July 14, 2025, 05:39:26 PM »
I see that this is a "seniors' club", which (unfortunately) I also join.  :D
The Jazz is a good car, but it's not flawless.
With a "tear in my eye" I remember my 17.5 year old Toyota Avensis 1.8 petrol with AT Aisin, with the only(!) "major" defect (water pump), which I recently said goodbye to. The last honest car, this one will never come back...
Things should serve me, not me them

ninanina

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Re: Best petrol car for seniors < £30,000
« Reply #7 on: July 14, 2025, 11:38:06 PM »
No car is flawless, including the Jazz

However I think Honda got most things spot on with the Jazz

The Jazz is such a lovely car to drive. It’s great around town but it’s certainly not perfect out of town

I took mine on the motorcycle version midlife and I

 

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