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Juke or yeti? - Best larger reliable car on a budget - Beaglelady

I have a 4 month old baby,two dogs,I currently have an 11 year old Toyota Yaris which is under miles at 38000 and in great condition. I brought my Yaris a year or so ago when I was not pregnant and had one dog. I do not drive too far or make long journeys however when I take the car out now it is so tight on space even if I have a passenger and my son the back seat is full and the boot is full with the pram let alone with the dogs to. I am considering selling my Yaris and getting a bigger slightly newer car such as a Skoda Yeti or a Nissan Juke I think I would get around £4,000 to £5,000 for my Yaris and I was hoping to get a newer car for no more than say £11-12,000.Ideally I would like an Automatic this time with some mod cons like heated seats parking camera bluetooth etc but I also want it to be very reliable and relatively cheap to run and maintain,thank you

Edited by Beaglelady on 24/07/2022 at 12:31

Juke or yeti? - Best larger reliable car on a budget - elekie&a/c doctor
Probably neither. The juke has a very small boot and is not a particularly nice car . The yeti could do the job , but you would need a petrol with a manual gearbox . For your needs , I would be looking at Honda, Toyota or one of the Kia / Hyundai models .
Juke or yeti? - Best larger reliable car on a budget - Engineer Andy

I agree - given the very high price of cars at the moment, it would be far better to get a reliable 'ordinary' car (e.g. the KIA Ceed with the boxy rear end and remainder of the 7 year warranty) than those two suggested.

I'd also go for the absoluate lowest trim spec you need (heated seats are more of a nice to have luxury unless you live in remote northerly/costal parts of the UK that regularly get very cold winters) and get the newest car that gets you, in order to get the more efficient, reliable one - and possibly (e.g. with the KIAs [7yr] or Hyundai [5yr]) manufactuer's warranties still in effect for over a year.

Whatever you whittle your initial list down to, make sure you see if the boot can take all your things you would like to fit in it and do a thorough test drive - not just a short one at 30mph around the locale - to get a good sense of how it feels, comfort, etc, making sure the seat and steering wheel are adjusted as best you can in order to give the most representative driving experience.

Poor driving comfort often only occurs via longer drives and/or on fast-ish flowing country roads with frequent changes of direction.

If you must have an auto this time, consider (as the car will be used, and you are unlikely to know how the previous owner(s) drove it) ones that either have a torque converter (Mazdas, Fords [not the Powershift DCTs], Vauxhalls, Peugeots - highly reliable but are less efficient) or high quality CVT (Toyota, Honda [not the i-Shift], not Nissan [unreliable IMHO]) automatic gearboxes.

Dual clutch [DCTs] 'automatic' gearboxes are really only reliable if used on faster flowing roads, i.e. not slow stop-start urban traffic, which wears out the clutch packs as the clutch is in a manual transmission car. As such, buying secondhand cannot guarantee reliability of a DCT gearbox - it may be that the previous owner sold it because the DCT box's clutch pack was beginning to wear.

Of the more affordable cars, Hyundai and KIA seemingly use the most reliable DCT box.

Those first two auto box types (TC and CVT) are far better suited to urban work reliability and drive-wise.

I also agree with eleckie that petrol is best unless you're going to be doing mileages well over 20,000pa - like with DCT gearboxes, modern second hand diesels are rather a lottery on reliability, because they are designed for use on faster flowing roads but often used for short urban trips from cold, which cause problems with the emissions systems like the DPF and fuel dilution.

Most Focus sized petrol cars are quite efficient these days. If you can choose one with a manual gearbox, it gives you far more choice of makes as most have decent reliability if well maintained.

Edited by Engineer Andy on 24/07/2022 at 13:55

Juke or yeti? - Best larger reliable car on a budget - badbusdriver

The Juke, at least on paper, has a smaller boot that your Yaris (251 litres vs either 272 on the older car or 286 for the newer shape). On top of that, there will probably be less rear seat space than your Yaris (certainly no more).

The Yeti is appreciably bigger in all respects, but reliability as an auto (DSG) is going to be down to luck. As a manual?, yes, go for it. Your budget could get you into a 1.2 turbo petrol as young as 2017. Alternatively (sticking with Skoda), you could get into a Fabia estate with the 1.0 turbo petrol as young as 2019.

For an auto with your requirements, i'd be thinking of a Honda Civic estate myself (1.8 petrol auto). Not physically that big, but huge boot (624 litres) and (not being an SUV) the distance from boot to ground is not that big making it much easier for the dogs to get in and out, and of course, very reliable.

Other (automatic) possibles are Vauxhall Zafira Tourer 1.4 turbo, Toyota Verso 1.6/1.8, Mazda 5 1.8/2.0. These would all be 7 seaters, but fold the rears down and you've plenty of dog space.

Off the top of my head, the only smaller SUV I'd consider as an auto which (should, 430 litres) fit your dogs as long as they are not huge (what breed are they?) is the Suzuki SX4 S-Cross. Your budget would (just) get you into the newer shape with the 1.0 turbo engine.

Juke or yeti? - Best larger reliable car on a budget - Adampr

Sounds like a small estate is needed.

Kia Ceed, Hyundai i30, Toyota Auris hybrid?

Juke or yeti? - Best larger reliable car on a budget - elekie&a/c doctor
My wife runs a Suzuki Vitara szt , got everything you want including reverse camera , nav , Bluetooth, car soft , I play etc . No heated seats , doesn’t really bother me . Does around 45+ mpg . Easy access and boot is plenty big enough.
Juke or yeti? - Best larger reliable car on a budget - SLO76
Avoid both of you want an auto, the Juke uses Nissan’s fragile CVT gearbox and the Skoda uses VW’s troublesome automated manual DSG box, they’re notorious for gearbox failures. If you must have an auto then look at the following within your budget.

Toyota Auris (preferably the estate)
Honda Civic 1.8 (as above but the hatchback is very spacious too)
Honda HRV 1.5
Mazda 3 2.0 Skyactiv
Mazda CX3 2.0 Skyactiv
Mazda 6 2.0 Skyactiv estate



All of these use robust well proven automatic gearboxes and reliable yet economical conventional engines. They’re well made and long-lived. Avoid any VW/Skoda/Seat or Audi automatic within your budget and size requirements. Also pass on Ford’s very fragile Powershift automated manual box.

Edited by SLO76 on 24/07/2022 at 15:21