My first thought was the Nissan Pulsar, which has cavernous rear legroom. Prices for decent newish models are nearer £6000
Not been around for a while but still lurking. Had to reply when I saw the Pulsar mentioned, a car about as popular as pox in a brothel, think I must have been the last person with the balls to type Pulsar until today. Posters from the past will remember we had one and what a great car it was. The price helped (we got £6000 discount on a brand new car) but in the years we owned it not a single issue. The rear legroom was limo like and the boot not half bad. We bought the 1.6 DIG-T since the 1.2 DIG-T did not have a great reputation for reliability and the only downside was the mpg, about 35 mpg at best but when you consider it had almost 190 bhp that was quite acceptable.
When we bought it many on here told me it would be a disaster and would not see it any other way, its the main reason I don't come on much. They said it would be worthless when we sold it (if we could actually find a buyer) but in truth (possibly thanks to covid and a shortage of good used cars) we had no issues at all and got a really good price (the smallest loss we have made on a new car).
It was a hard act to follow, finding a car as good and as roomy for sensible money was impossible but we eventually settled on an Octavia iV (got a decent deal on a pre-reg) and have to say we are more than happy. Its a better car than the Pulsar in every respect but we expect to loose a fortune when we come to move it on.
But having looked at and driven several earlier Octavias I would not recommend them to anyone. Very noisy and despite the size of the car the space in the rear was not great (the Focus's we had were better and they were not that great either), seemed that the designers wanted a huge boot and forget the rear passengers. The seat base in those earlier cars was also very low making getting out awkward.
Your budget is below what I would think would get you a really good car but you may just be lucky.
Edited by thunderbird on 18/01/2024 at 16:45
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