You’re right to leave out the BMW. The following simple petrol engined models would make good family transport though.
Ford Focus 1.6 petrol - These use a very robust Yamaha designed motor with a great reputation and they’re great fun to drive. Cheap for parts and very practical. Avoid the Powershift autos and the fragile 1.0 Ecoboost.
Mazda 3 petrol - Your budget will just about get you a second gen 2.0 Skyactiv petrol. These are excellent cars, both reliable and good to drive.
Toyota Auris 1.33/1.6 petrol - Robust and long lived, these are utterly pain free to own.
Honda Civic 1.4/1.8 petrol - Practical, well made and very robust. Only cars to avoid are early 2012 1.8’s due to reported oil usage issues. Buy a 2013 onwards or a 1.4.
The Kia Cee’d and Hyundai i30 are ok but they rot badly underneath as they age and tend to crash in value as they exit warranty term. Really they sell on price alone later in life while a nice Civic or Auris will always find a buyer easily.
I'd add to that to go for a mid-spec (trim) model at most to enable the OP, especially in the current high-prices climate, to get as much car for their money by getting the one that's newest / has a full dealership service history, no MOT failures and is in the best phyiscal condition, reasonable (not overly high or low) mileage.
Lower and mid-spec (trim) cars also come with small wheels and higher profile tyres, which are far less susceptible to damage, wear less generally, are better for mpg and especially for ride quality/road noise, and for the cars stated, barely noticably less good handling - and, of course, FAR cheaper to replace.
They also reduce the insurance costs and have less gizmos to go wrong, which are (all cars) often not cheap to repair/replace.
|