A rough character went on the rampage near my daughter's school and collided with three parked cars, one of which is our petrol Toyota Avensis estate. The rear quarter was badly dented along the light cluster.
I took it to my local body shop, which I trust, and they said it would need a replacement panel, which would cost almost £1200.
My insurer wants to write off the car due to its age (14) and mileage (153k).
Bar excessive cabin noise, the Avensis is a paragon of reliability and comfort, but it might not be economical to fix.
I looked at what I can get for an absolute maximum of £7k + £1k contingent for sorting things on AutoTrader, and there seems to be a fair selection, so I like the panel’s opinion.
We do everything with the car: short school runs, dog tasks, commutes, and the occasional 300-mile cross-country stint. We covered around 9500 miles last year, which is about right for us going forward.
I'm looking with simplicity and travel comfort in mind, up to six years of age, about 520 litres of boot space with seats up, and I don't mind autos or manuals. We always have petrol cars nowadays, so I prefer to stick to this and keep it simple.
A few younger cars (2018-2021) are showing as reasonable potential candidates, but are there any vices I should keep an eye on?
There are 2020 - 2019 Skoda Fabia and Octavia estates with reasonable mileage under 100k and 1.0 - 1.4 , 1.5 turbos. Is there anything to notice? Is this cheap for a reason?
Also, a Renault Megane 1.3 Tce seems to have decent figures in the performance section.
What about natural aspirated/ manual combos like the Avensis? I see a fair few Astra Tourers with a 1.6 motor. Is this worth a punt?
I am looking mostly around the Bristol area but am willing to travel to most places to look at a good example.
|