RE: Lexus LS600h | High Mile Club
RE: Lexus LS600h | High Mile Club
Wednesday 29th January

Lexus LS600h | High Mile Club

One owner, full Lexus history, a 5.0-litre V8... and 365,000 miles


You may have seen in the news of late that the Lexus LS has been withdrawn from sale in the UK. Or perhaps you haven’t; it was never the most exciting thing in the world, even by luxury car standards, and the current generation has been soldiering on for a good few years now. As evidenced by the sales; according to  Autocar just 39 examples of the V6 hybrid have been sold here this decade (!), so it’s hard to begrudge Lexus pulling the plug. Particularly as the giant LM MPV is going better than expected, and with future legislation not looking favourable for large, grand cars with engines. 

But even though the big Lex has faded away with a whisper - in some ways that’s kind of appropriate - its demise really represents the end of an era. For 35 years in the UK, the LS pioneered technology and offered up the sort of luxury and durability that showed up so many European rivals. All, typically, for less money as well. Perhaps they were never the most stylish or cool saloons, but the Lexus LS marked a real turning point; prior to 1990 there wasn’t a Japanese luxury saloon to rival the established elite, then Lexus provided a real contender at their very first attempt. 

Indeed part of the LS’s problem after that groundbreaking first generation was that subsequent cars all felt a tad samey. Always quite conservatively styled, always with a familiar interior layout, keeping a naturally aspirated V8 for as long as possible. Great for repeat customers who probably enjoyed gentle evolution, though not brilliant, presumably, at creating excitement for conquest sales. 

Plus there’s the simple fact that the LS was typically so good - dependable, reliable, sturdy - that many must have felt little need to upgrade. That definitely appears to have been the case here; it’s a 2010 LS600h - so a 5.0-litre V8 hybrid with batteries and motors, but no plug - that’s been with one owner from new. Not unheard of, perhaps, but the mileage is: there are more than 365,000 miles on the clock, believe it or not. Even by high mile club standards - even by Lexus standards - that’s a hearty total: an original LS with a mere quarter of a million isn’t even in the same ballpark. 

And if a familiar refrain these days, the LS really doesn’t look that used. Of course there is some wear and a few scuffs inside, and there’s not a good pic of the seat bolsters, but all the switches remain clear, the screen isn’t damaged and the wood looks… well, almost as good as it would have 15 years ago, put it that way. Build quality isn’t really a sexy subject, and this won’t have been an alluring cabin new, but what staying power. 

Outside, too, the LS looks like a car that’s done half the miles, if that; a little bit of kerbing on the wheels seems more than acceptable given this has driven as far as 56 years of the average UK annual mileage. At its most recent MOT, at 365,242 miles in November, it recorded not a single advisory. Seriously. Just as in 2023 and 2022, happily plodding along past 300,000 miles. In 2021 there were advisories for tyres, the first such notices since 2013; this went from 130,000 miles to more than 300,000 with flawless, first time MOTs. It has never failed one. There are well-built cars, then there are Lexuses. 

Some credit must go to the owner as well, who has by and large kept on top of maintenance it seems and kept the car really nicely. Now they’ve moved it on there’s a chance for another driver to crack on towards half a million. The asking price is £7,490, and there must be some wiggle room there given the phone number on the odometer. Wonder where it might be in another 15 years…


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

skylarking808

Original Poster:

979 posts

105 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Respect to Lexus and the owner.

I thought I was doing well taking a Mercedes diesel to 297K miles recently, but not with such a clean MOT history.

Motormouth88

657 posts

79 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
If you swap the 4 and 7 around it might be more tempting

Turbobanana

7,517 posts

220 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Motormouth88 said:
If you swap the 4 and 7 around it might be more tempting
Umm...well...yes, but you could say the same about any price where the second digit is higher than the first.

You either "get" high mileage cars, or you don't. If I was in the market for a barge I'd buy it in a heartbeat.

Masiv

325 posts

102 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
I would.

dunnoreally

1,356 posts

127 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
I looked into these a while back. Obviously this one has been well looked after to rack up the miles it has, but an LS600h is a very different animal to an LS400 in terms of reliability. From what I read it seemed things can and do go wrong, sometimes in very expensive ways.

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,497 posts

117 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
If you are going to do over 20K presumably mainly motorway miles a year for 15 years in one car and can afford the petrol, then this is a really sensible choice.

Not sure it is still worth the asking price going forwards though. Cars, even Lexi, can wrack up big bills when they reach these miles...

Writhing

623 posts

128 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
I just bought one of these, but mine only has just under 80,000 miles. I have to say, it's amazingly serene.

J4CKO

45,018 posts

219 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Looks very well looked after, so robust these, the quality is beyond anything else you can buy really, even stuff like Rollers and Bentleys dont seem to be as good, too many VAG and BMW bits, would take this over a 15 year old Spur.

But, it is a risk, 15 years old, high miles and a hybrid system, I know Lexus parts can be pricey for suspension arms and the like so a lot will depend on whats been done fairly recently.

Its probably nearer a five grand car to be worth the gamble.

SlowV6

681 posts

158 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Admirable but still a brave pill IMHO. The steering rack on the LS460 and 600H seems to be a not unheard of and not inexpensive problem. Any kind of issue with the air suspension or in the LS600H's case the hybrid system is going to cost a fortune.

I actually think High Peak Auto's LS430 is the pick of the crop at the moment, although it is due a timing belt and water pump (haggle required) despite what he says in the YouTube video.

LS400 Mk4 or LS430 facelift was peak LS in my opinion.




Edited by SlowV6 on Tuesday 28th January 13:18

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,497 posts

117 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
For £500 more, there's one on AT with over 200k less miles.

How often can you say a sentence like that ?

Sandpit Steve

13,381 posts

93 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Ooh, good Brave Pill, for those of us who remember that.

Can’t help thinking that if it’s a private owner rather than a limo company, they’re offloading it just as it’s about to get really expensive.

The non-hybrid LS is going to be a better buy, as are probably the German rivals with good availability of second-hand and refurb major parts.

The Pistonsdead

5,736 posts

226 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Writhing said:
I just bought one of these, but mine only has just under 80,000 miles. I have to say, it's amazingly serene.
thumbup Many years of life in it yet.

Skaben

333 posts

160 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Wonder how much this has cost to keep on the road for so long?

david83monty

16 posts

13 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
That's pretty cool especially if there's wriggle room.

Especially because you could buy a whole fleet of them for the price of one of the last new ones!

ex-devonpaul

1,524 posts

156 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Skaben said:
Wonder how much this has cost to keep on the road for so long?
Exactly, these things have 5000 mile service intervals. 80 services at a couple of hundred quid each, plus about 13,000 gallons of fuel.

Those (if it is a full Lexus History as in the title) must have cost more than the car did.

Kuwahara

1,304 posts

37 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Were they really low VED when they were launched because of the hybrid system …

lordturns

80 posts

205 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Wasn't there an LS400 in the USA that had done over one million miles (think it was cosmetically crabby) on the original drivetrain only requiring consumables through it's life? not surprised about this one to be honest......

smithyithy

7,727 posts

137 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
lordturns said:
Wasn't there an LS400 in the USA that had done over one million miles (think it was cosmetically crabby) on the original drivetrain only requiring consumables through it's life? not surprised about this one to be honest......
Matt Farah's LS400...

https://www.roadandtrack.com/car-culture/a28991860...

Glenn63

3,630 posts

103 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
What MPG do these do? Must be some monies spent on fuel alone doing that millage in a big ol’ v8.
Would be interesting to see the total cost of running to that mileage with fuel, servicing, consumables, depreciation.

Snow and Rocks

2,957 posts

46 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
ex-devonpaul said:
Exactly, these things have 5000 mile service intervals. 80 services at a couple of hundred quid each, plus about 13,000 gallons of fuel.

Those (if it is a full Lexus History as in the title) must have cost more than the car did.
I'm pretty sure all modern Lexus are on 10k fixed price service intervals and alternate between full and intermediate services.

Lexus UK have the intermediate service listed at £480 and the full service at £890 - which doesn't seem too outrageous to me for what it is and the service apparently usually offered. Still adds up though!