It just goes to show how car prices have inflated hugely over the last 14 years.
14 years ago, we bought our 9 year old, 28k miles Jazz for £3,000.
On the Horizon site, the cheapest Jazz is now a 2016 model (10 years old) for effectively £11,000 ..... which is more than our 2003 model would have cost when it was brand new and close to 4 times as much as we paid back then for a slightly younger model with similar miles.
I just bought my 2012 mk2 Jazz with 98k miles on the clock for £3.4k, and I thought it was a bargain, having been searching yearningly on Autotrader for a couple of years!
My 2003 Toyota Yaris, which had done 94k miles by 2016, and had served me beautifully up to this point, only cost me £1.2k back then, which I think would be around £1.6k today, accounting for inflation. That felt like a reasonable price at the time, not a bargain.
So yeah, second-hand car prices have gone insane, for a long list of reasons.
And yes, I appreciate the extra safety features, and I do feel much safer driving in my Jazz than I did on the Yaris (which is *very* light), but a lot of what newer cars (post-2015-ish) have is not just safety, I think, it’s bloatware, and a lot of it is designed to become obsolete very quickly. I find that the mk2 has the perfect amount of tech and safety for me, and I’m not sure I would have gone for a mk3+ even if I could have afforded one. But that’s just me!

At some point I hope I will be able cast all that aside and go electric, make my peace with all the software and the fact that I won’t be able to tinker with things myself… not yet, though.