Seriously thinking of trading my 530D for a Subaru Outback ?
Seriously thinking of trading my 530D for a Subaru Outback ?
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Discussion

RupertNuetron

Original Poster:

21 posts

89 months

Thursday 9th October 2025
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Edited by RupertNuetron on Monday 13th October 19:49

troika

2,063 posts

172 months

Thursday 9th October 2025
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You’re way off beam with the ‘fallen on hard times’ view of the Outback IMHO. Most are bought outright from petty cash and outlast the labradors. A BMW driver (on tick of course) is about as diametrically opposed to an Outback driver as I can imagine.

Sargeant Orange

3,068 posts

168 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Outback driver checking in wavey

In very similar circumstances to you I "traded down" from a Mercedes C43 to my outback.

- I needed more space - the C class was a reverse tardis and the rear legroom an absolute joke.

- I'm now rural and the ride in the Mercedes was bone shattering at times. Any hint of ice and it turned into bambi.

- The arrival of a second large dog meant more boot space and more mud.

Having had a Subaru legacy in the past the outback seemed an obvious choice. The standard kit is great - keyless, adaptive cruise, electric memory seats, carplay. The AWD has taken me places it has no right to go with X mode engaged.

I added roof bars/box and the travall dog cages and it's given us many a good trip away fully loaded.

I've even got a double mattress for it which has meant car camping with my young daughter - great fun! Check out the many YouTube clips - it's a bit off a thing in the US and Australia.

Performance is meh, but it's not what the outback has been designed around. It's not wanting by any stretch, and I quite like the CVT.

It returns 40mpg on a long trip, 30 everywhere else which suits me fine. Thinks it's my first car to get over 30 biglaugh

Edited to add: I'm of the age now where I don't give a st what neighbours or friends think. The outback is understatedly smokin2 from my perspective and that's all that matters. If a generic white audi is what floats their boat, then good for them - there's plenty of them about to choose from


Edited by Sargeant Orange on Friday 10th October 00:28

Pistom

6,139 posts

180 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Incredible that what the neighbours think still has influence on decision making. Possibly move somewhere with no neighbours?

You've had a change of requirement. Buy the car that best meets your needs.

The 530D is a great family saloon but the Subaru seems better suited as a form of transport for you and you seem to know it.

You enjoyed the stter Rav 4. Why not just get another and keep the BMW as well. Once you realise you don't use the BMW any more, you can sell it and start enjoying life on your terms, not what the neighbours expect of you.



Edited by Pistom on Friday 10th October 03:27

JonPH

77 posts

79 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Keep what you’ve got, unless the swap is going save £, which it rarely does.

Of AWD is important, winter tyres will help.

golfer19

1,641 posts

154 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Why would you worry what the neighbours think.
Drive the car that best suits your needs.

Bonefish Blues

34,220 posts

244 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Fit the BMW with all seasons and let it get dirty. Job jobbed.

cliffords

3,432 posts

44 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Sit in one for a bit of time before you change. It's a narrow car and you will be much closer to any passenger than in your current vehicle.
Not in a good way.

7 5 7

4,130 posts

132 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Keep what you got and get some winter tyres on all year (this is what I do on my 318d Touring), keep it messy and rugged, but keep the oily stuff happy it will be go forever until the subframe rusts out.

My 3 series on winter tyres is absolutely superb when the weather is wet and even better in the icy and snow rurally, makes other drivers take a double take.

Who gives a fig what the neighbors think, my BMW runs its winter tyres on steel wheels all year round, my neighbors must think I cant afford an M sport one with big fancy wheels.... biggrin

Shedding is the way forward for complete care free motoring, as you've already alluded too.

Edited by 7 5 7 on Friday 10th October 08:36

BlueJ

400 posts

66 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Keep the 530 OP, you'll 100% regret selling it.

I swapped an F90 M5 for an FL5 CTR thinking it would be more fun to drive - it was, but the step down in quality and ambience was massive and I have to admit it was a mistake. Forget change in circumstances - you've got a great car and as someone says above, use it, get it dirty and don't worry about it!

JonnyWhitters

855 posts

103 months

Friday 10th October 2025
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Agree with Troika here, the Outback whispers generational wealth far more than a run of the mill BMW ever will. Don't let your perception of your neighbours' perception put you off making a switch.

If I were your neighbour I'd give a subtle nod each time I walked past, whereas a 5 series doesn't get a second glance.

Rob 131 Sport

4,271 posts

73 months

Sunday 12th October 2025
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BlueJ said:
Keep the 530 OP, you'll 100% regret selling it.

I swapped an F90 M5 for an FL5 CTR thinking it would be more fun to drive - it was, but the step down in quality and ambience was massive and I have to admit it was a mistake. Forget change in circumstances - you've got a great car and as someone says above, use it, get it dirty and don't worry about it!
Just don’t even consider changing it as you’ll regret it and it will end up costing you a fortune changing back to something similar.

I’m saying this as a former G30 530d M Sport owner. Yes they are a bit big, but as you know they are truly brilliant cars.

Matt_T

1,071 posts

95 months

Monday 13th October 2025
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RupertNeutron - I've just re-read your post to figure out why you want to change your BMW for an Outback... and with the kindest respect, I'm lost.

If you want to come out of a diesel because you are doing lower mileage - just swap it for a petrol 5 Series?

The latest Outbacks are lovely cars (I've driven a few) but they are quite expensive, probably because there are very few of them and they were pricey when new. So if you are looking for a cheaper car to pocket some money the Outback isn't the answer, you need to be looking at Insignias, Mondeos etc.

So... what is the reason for wanting to change?