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Buying a Prius is an emotional decision

Posted Jul 07 2009, 07:52 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Jim Wang at partner blog Bargaineering.

Did you see all the Toyota Prius commercials recently? The ones with the people dressed up as foliage and climbing on top of one another? It was to highlight how "green" the vehicles are and announce that Prius was launching another generation of the hugely popular hybrid-electric.

At first, my wife didn't even realize they were people, and I to this day think it's just a little bit creepy. 

However, despite the creepiness of the ads and the whole slew of new hybrid-electric cars, I would still love to have a Prius (or a Tesla). The only problem I have is that it's not a financially sound decision. It's an emotional one (which is fine, too).

The distinction may seem unnecessary, right? People buy cars for emotional reasons all the time. You buy one type of vehicle over another, in part, because of what you think it says about you.

Buying a car for emotional reasons is perfectly fine -- as long as you know that's what you're doing.

Making an emotional decision is perfectly acceptable. It is your money, you earned it, you can spend it however you like. You can buy a car because you like new-car smells or because you want to make a statement. You did the work, you get the spoils. The point of this post is that it's important to recognize when you're making an emotional decision and not to trick yourself into believing it's a financial one.

The Prius. If you really want fuel economy, there are plenty of cars that give you similar performance without the toxic battery and with a sticker price under the $22,000 starting price. If you look at the third-generation Prius, you'll see that the estimated miles per gallon are 51 city, 48 highway. Those are pretty good numbers, right?

The Smart Fortwo. Take a look at the Smart Fortwo, a tiny vehicle that has the ability to get up to 45.9 mpg with a starting price of $12,000. Benjamin Jones at Ecomodder took the Smart Fortwo on a test drive and listed the pros and cons of the Fortwo.

The difference. From a strictly financial perspective, the Smart Fortwo is a better value than a Prius. Assuming all other financial costs are the same, which is a huge assumption given the Prius' battery and the Fortwo's diminutive size, gas would need to be $5 a gallon for 26 months before the Prius' fuel-sipping hybrid premium would pay off.

While 26 months doesn't seem like a long time, $5-a-gallon gasoline is also really, really expensive. Last year, the average retail gas price peaked at $4.054 during the week of July 14. California, known for ridiculously high gas prices, peaked at $4.588 during the week of June 16, 2008 (gas price data provided by the Energy Information Administration).

So while a Prius is nice and does conserve fuel, it's important that we understand it's an emotional decision and not a financial one. Too bad we don't have a clunker we can trade in.

Related reading at Bargaineering:

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Comments

 

Why don't you just buy a Corolla instead? You get Toyota reliability and don't pay the premium for the Prius (if you don't think dealers are selling the "hybrid" at a premium you're living in a parallel universe). Gas mileage is slightly lower, but you don't have to wait for financial payback. Oh, and it is a lot more soundly built than a Fortwo.

I don't care what the crash tests say, the car may do well against a stationary object, but try a collision with say, an SUV? The Fortwo would be nothing but scrap.

While Toyota and Honda products are no longer eligible, the federal government is allowing tax credits for certain hybrid vehicles, which could take some of the sting out of the price. www.energystar.gov/index.cfm

I like a good-looking vehicle.  In my book, the Prius is UGLY!!

What is the purpose of this article?  Is it to ridicule the Prius and promote the Smartfortwo?  It is a ridiculous article.  The Prius is a finely built automobile and gets exceptional mileage.

Like another poster commented, I think the Prius is ugly.  Even if I was inclined to buy new vehicles, I want one that I like the looks of.  Since I only pay cash for used vehicles, the Prius would also not be a choice, because the average age of used vehicles I buy is 5 to 10 years old, I would be looking at an expensive battery needing to be replaced.  

There's more to a car than gas mileage. There's low insurance rates, there's flexibility to haul people and stuff (can the back seats go down and... are there some in the Fortwo?), reasonable get-up-and-go, super traction in bad weather and reasonable comfort on the inside.

the purpose of this article is to make smart choices, on average it would take 10 years to make these cars pay for themselves and most people are already trading in long before 10 years

Probably a better idea to just purchase a Toyota Yaris.  I get about 38 MPG in mixed city/highway driving.  It's 4 doors & comfortable in size vs. the ForTwo which is tiny.  The difference in MPG is neglible when you take into consideration the comfort factor.

ummm i don't have a Prius and don't plan on getting one, but i think the main point of owning a Prius is to cut down the dependence on fossil fuels and therefore reduce ones carbon footprint. Now I am all for doing that cheaper than $22,000, but i do think it's about more than MPGs

ummm i don't have a Prius and don't plan on getting one, but i think the main point of owning a Prius is to cut down the dependence on fossil fuels and therefore reduce ones carbon footprint. Now I am all for doing that cheaper than $22,000, but i do think it's about more than MPGs

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