Girlfriend wants a new (to her) car - £8k-12k

Girlfriend wants a new (to her) car - £8k-12k

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Rotary Potato

Original Poster:

258 posts

97 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Afternoon all. The better half is searching for a new car. I've tried to advise as best I could, but her wants and needs could not be more different to mine ... so thought I'd throw this out to the PH collective to see what I might have missed.

In terms of a need, the car needs to be automatic. She cannot drive a manual, so if it's got a 3rd pedal then it's a non-starter. Her budget is somewhere around £8k-£12k but does seem to be a little flexible for the right car.

All the rest of these are various levels of 'want'. I'm trying to list them more or less in order of priority ...

- She likes a saloon. She strongly dislikes an estate. Hatchbacks are 'OK'. SUVs are a mixed bag - some are deemed acceptable, some are damned as being "too estate'y".
- She likes luxury, but has quite an old fashioned definition of luxury - lots of chrome, a light coloured interior, lots of natural light in the cabin, space, good materials. She dislikes the trend for 'sporty' luxury cars with blacked out trim, carbon everywhere and black leather interior. If your grandfather would approve, chances are she will. smile
- The light interior mentioned above is a VERY strong want. It'd need to be an amazing car to sway her from that.
- She isn't much of a brand snob (side point, she's not from the UK and hasn't heard of a lot of European brands that are popular here ... Peugeot, Alfa, etc. so has no preconceived ideas, either positive or negative, about a lot of brands). That said, brands which are very expensive where she grew up (SE Asia) she considers to be prestigious - regardless of their rep here.
- White is a colour for kitchen appliances and not for cars.
- She cares very little for how a car drives. Provided it's comfortable and reliable, that'll do for her.
- Her usage is occasional (2-4 times a week) 80-100 mile round trips - 40-50 miles there & same back home. Probably 70-80% dual carriageways/m'ways and 20-30% through town. She does very little 'running around' in the car outside of those. For this reason I'm inclined to steer her towards diesel rather than petrol ... but that's not a hard & fast rule.
- Her office is inside a 'Clean Air Zone', so if diesel then Euro 6 is a minimum.
- She likes to have all the gadgets. So her default option would be the top of the range trim of whatever she's looking at.
- I've managed to educate her than cars don't fall apart like a clown car once they hit 100k miles. That said, she's still mileage sensitive. 90k seems to be a hard limit (she intends to put 30k-40k on the car, so started at her max comfort level before selling and worked backwards). Whilst lower is better, she doesn't see the premium charged for ultra low to be worth it. Her sweet spot seems to be around 60-75k.
- The lower the running costs are, the better. But if higher costs get her a better car (newer, lower mileage, more toys, etc.) at a lower purchase price, then she's not against that ... but it'd have to feel 'worth it' to her. A very subjective calculation that I haven't worked out yet - so I just show her stuff and explain the compromises and she gives it either a yes or a no.
- A panoramic roof is a big tick, but usually the first thing to be dropped when we move from the realm of theoretical cars to what's actually available at the moment.

We went through this once with her first car (but with no 'Clean Air Zone' requirement as she wasn't working for that company at the time) at a much lower budget and she is currently very happy with a 2010 Jaguar XF 3.0d that she picked up for just under £3.5k. However, this is now pushing towards 130k miles and is costing her an £8 charge every time she goes into the office, so she's wanting an upgrade. (this may well be cover for "I want something newer and shinier" smile )

At the moment the leading contender seems to be more of the same ... a newer, smaller engined, cheaper to run, XF with more toys. Specifically, a 2016-17ish Jaguar XF 2.0d Portfolio with light interior, the digital dash upgrade and a panoramic roof. She loves the brand, the size is perfect for her, the 2.0d is Euro 6 and appears to sip diesel very frugally and cost only £35 a year to tax, while being in a lower insurance group than her current car, and the Portfolio with the upgraded dash has (to her eyes) a perfect blend of luxury and tech. However, such a specific set of requirements means there's rarely more than 2-3 cars in the country available that tick every box. Hence opening up to other thoughts ...

She likes the Merc E-Class (2017ish onwards) but not many with a light coloured interior. Ditto the 5 series of a similar vintage. A Volvo S60/S90 got a nod, but one she looked at had an centre console she described as "looking like a telephone" so that generation (no idea which) would be out! Oddly, the Maserati Ghibli diesel got a big tick from her ... but not sure that'd be the right car for her.

I'm sure I've probably missed a few bits, but as people make suggestions, I should be able to fill in any extra requirements she has, to pull together a decent set of options.

Thanks in advance for any and all suggestions.

Monkeylegend

26,465 posts

232 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Rotary Potato said:
Afternoon all. The better half is searching for a new car. I've tried to advise as best I could, but her wants and needs could not be more different to mine ... so thought I'd throw this out to the PH collective to see what I might have missed.

In terms of a need, the car needs to be automatic. She cannot drive a manual, so if it's got a 3rd pedal then it's a non-starter. Her budget is somewhere around £8k-£12k but does seem to be a little flexible for the right car.

All the rest of these are various levels of 'want'. I'm trying to list them more or less in order of priority ...

- She likes a saloon. She strongly dislikes an estate. Hatchbacks are 'OK'. SUVs are a mixed bag - some are deemed acceptable, some are damned as being "too estate'y".
- She likes luxury, but has quite an old fashioned definition of luxury - lots of chrome, a light coloured interior, lots of natural light in the cabin, space, good materials. She dislikes the trend for 'sporty' luxury cars with blacked out trim, carbon everywhere and black leather interior. If your grandfather would approve, chances are she will. smile
- The light interior mentioned above is a VERY strong want. It'd need to be an amazing car to sway her from that.
- She isn't much of a brand snob (side point, she's not from the UK and hasn't heard of a lot of European brands that are popular here ... Peugeot, Alfa, etc. so has no preconceived ideas, either positive or negative, about a lot of brands). That said, brands which are very expensive where she grew up (SE Asia) she considers to be prestigious - regardless of their rep here.
- White is a colour for kitchen appliances and not for cars.
- She cares very little for how a car drives. Provided it's comfortable and reliable, that'll do for her.
- Her usage is occasional (2-4 times a week) 80-100 mile round trips - 40-50 miles there & same back home. Probably 70-80% dual carriageways/m'ways and 20-30% through town. She does very little 'running around' in the car outside of those. For this reason I'm inclined to steer her towards diesel rather than petrol ... but that's not a hard & fast rule.
- Her office is inside a 'Clean Air Zone', so if diesel then Euro 6 is a minimum.
- She likes to have all the gadgets. So her default option would be the top of the range trim of whatever she's looking at.
- I've managed to educate her than cars don't fall apart like a clown car once they hit 100k miles. That said, she's still mileage sensitive. 90k seems to be a hard limit (she intends to put 30k-40k on the car, so started at her max comfort level before selling and worked backwards). Whilst lower is better, she doesn't see the premium charged for ultra low to be worth it. Her sweet spot seems to be around 60-75k.
- The lower the running costs are, the better. But if higher costs get her a better car (newer, lower mileage, more toys, etc.) at a lower purchase price, then she's not against that ... but it'd have to feel 'worth it' to her. A very subjective calculation that I haven't worked out yet - so I just show her stuff and explain the compromises and she gives it either a yes or a no.
- A panoramic roof is a big tick, but usually the first thing to be dropped when we move from the realm of theoretical cars to what's actually available at the moment.

We went through this once with her first car (but with no 'Clean Air Zone' requirement as she wasn't working for that company at the time) at a much lower budget and she is currently very happy with a 2010 Jaguar XF 3.0d that she picked up for just under £3.5k. However, this is now pushing towards 130k miles and is costing her an £8 charge every time she goes into the office, so she's wanting an upgrade. (this may well be cover for "I want something newer and shinier" smile )

At the moment the leading contender seems to be more of the same ... a newer, smaller engined, cheaper to run, XF with more toys. Specifically, a 2016-17ish Jaguar XF 2.0d Portfolio with light interior, the digital dash upgrade and a panoramic roof. She loves the brand, the size is perfect for her, the 2.0d is Euro 6 and appears to sip diesel very frugally and cost only £35 a year to tax, while being in a lower insurance group than her current car, and the Portfolio with the upgraded dash has (to her eyes) a perfect blend of luxury and tech. However, such a specific set of requirements means there's rarely more than 2-3 cars in the country available that tick every box. Hence opening up to other thoughts ...

She likes the Merc E-Class (2017ish onwards) but not many with a light coloured interior. Ditto the 5 series of a similar vintage. A Volvo S60/S90 got a nod, but one she looked at had an centre console she described as "looking like a telephone" so that generation (no idea which) would be out! Oddly, the Maserati Ghibli diesel got a big tick from her ... but not sure that'd be the right car for her.

I'm sure I've probably missed a few bits, but as people make suggestions, I should be able to fill in any extra requirements she has, to pull together a decent set of options.

Thanks in advance for any and all suggestions.
Be easier to get another girlfriend yikes

TGCOTF-dewey

5,199 posts

56 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Sounds like my wife.

She ended up with a lexus Rx450h. Like an automotive handbag. The off-white leather, pano roof, and analogue clock were what sold it.

Very very reliable too, although might be out of budget.

Lexus do old man car well. smile

Boleros

172 posts

7 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Just get her a convertible Evoque, job done. Joking aside, as someone else has said, it might be easier to chop your Doris in for a less demanding one.

NugentS

686 posts

248 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Given the mileage requirements - any thoughts on electric?

Monkeylegend

26,465 posts

232 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
I would certainly step back from the selection process with this one or it will soon be ex.

You know for a fact that OP will be to blame for anything she doesn't like or that goes wrong with the car hehe

TimmyMallett

2,849 posts

113 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Has she considered using a site like Autotrader?

It has this facility where you can select budget, body style, colour, options, gearbox, interior, mileage, and narrows down your choice so you can browse for ideas.


driving


Monkeylegend

26,465 posts

232 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
How about a jaguar F Pace, the 2 litre diesel is Euro 6 and has all the luxury she seems to want.

Fermit

13,029 posts

101 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Monkeylegend said:
How about a jaguar F Pace, the 2 litre diesel is Euro 6 and has all the luxury she seems to want.
If she worries about cars imploding at 100k, a quick read of Ecsys thread would have her running away screaming.

Monkeylegend

26,465 posts

232 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Fermit said:
Monkeylegend said:
How about a jaguar F Pace, the 2 litre diesel is Euro 6 and has all the luxury she seems to want.
If she worries about cars imploding at 100k, a quick read of Ecsys thread would have her running away screaming.
I knew I should have put a smilie at the end of that smile

Fermit

13,029 posts

101 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Monkeylegend said:
I knew I should have put a smilie at the end of that smile
Ah, I see.

Gastons_Revenge

87 posts

5 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Rotary Potato said:
Specifically, a 2016-17ish Jaguar XF 2.0d Portfolio with light interior, the digital dash upgrade and a panoramic roof. She loves the brand, the size is perfect for her, the 2.0d is Euro 6 and appears to sip diesel very frugally and cost only £35 a year to tax, while being in a lower insurance group than her current car, and the Portfolio with the upgraded dash has (to her eyes) a perfect blend of luxury and tech. However, such a specific set of requirements means there's rarely more than 2-3 cars in the country available that tick every box. Hence opening up to other thoughts ....
Avoid the 2.0d Ingenium engine at all costs!

Masiv

280 posts

84 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
A left field choice and a bit more £. Lexus ES

https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/364309838270?itmmeta=01...

pocketspring

5,319 posts

22 months

Tuesday 23rd April
quotequote all
Skoda superb?

Rotary Potato

Original Poster:

258 posts

97 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
NugentS said:
Given the mileage requirements - any thoughts on electric?
She has no strong feelings either way about electric. However, she currently lives in a flat with no off road parking ... so electric is unlikely to be the right choice. Electric cars appear to hold a significant premium over a similar petrol/diesel car, almost as if the cost savings in the running costs are baked in to the asking prices.

Rotary Potato

Original Poster:

258 posts

97 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
TimmyMallett said:
Has she considered using a site like Autotrader?

It has this facility where you can select budget, body style, colour, options, gearbox, interior, mileage, and narrows down your choice so you can browse for ideas.


driving
Hi Timmy. We both use Autotrader, but neither of us were aware of a filter for the interior colour. Is this something that isn't available on their mobile site, or is there maybe an Autotrader app that has extra features? Or maybe we've just missed that filter ...

As it stands, browsing for ideas is stymied by the want for a light coloured interior. Using Autotrader's filters serves up page after page of cars with dark interiors that we aren't certain whether they might be available in a lighter colour, or if a dark interior was the only option.

Our best approach so far has been to focus on makes and models we are fairly sure do have the option of a lighter interior, but this means we're potentially missing options that aren't front of mind for us.

If you could give some more details about the interior filter on Autotrader, that would be much appreciated.

Thank you.

Rotary Potato

Original Poster:

258 posts

97 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
Thank you to those of you who've made suggestions. They were all helpful in the own way.

For example, while the Mazda 3 was rejected as too small, that led us to the Mazda 6, which got a tick, and is available (in a seemly rare trim choice) with a light coloured interior.

blue_haddock

3,224 posts

68 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
Fermit said:
Monkeylegend said:
How about a jaguar F Pace, the 2 litre diesel is Euro 6 and has all the luxury she seems to want.
If she worries about cars imploding at 100k, a quick read of Ecsys thread would have her running away screaming.
Yep that engine is a nightmare and well JLR stuff arent reliabe at the best of times!

scot_aln

417 posts

200 months

Thursday 25th April
quotequote all
Has anyone suggested or have you looked at Volvo. I thought they tended to have a bit of different colour palette to some others.

I think Superb was mentioned above but didn't the Octavia come in a Laurent Clement (or something like that) spec that was light inside.

With children though I do get why most of the cars end up with dull dark interiors. If only you could jet wash them too smile

Edited by scot_aln on Thursday 25th April 17:16