Advertisement

2016 Yahoo Autos Savvy Ride Of The Year: Mazda CX-3

Have you ever owned a car that made you seem smarter? Maybe it wasn’t the flashiest or most gadget-filled, but you could get your friends and neighbors nodding in agreement when you talked about it. When we tested 22 of the most important new models of 2016, searching for our Yahoo Autos Savvy Ride of the Year, that’s what we were aiming for.

Through Wednesday, Yahoo Autos will unveil the 2016 Ride of the Year awards, our picks for the best of the best among new cars and SUVs. Check out our choices for the Tech, Epic and Fresh Rides of the Year.

The idea of a “car of the year” contest dates to a time decades before the birth of the SUV. This year, in several segments, buyers will chose more SUVs than cars, and it’s far more common to cross shop across body styles. For this year’s Yahoo Autos test, we rethought our contest to focus on the way people choose their vehicles today, comparing cars and SUVs together, and the result was our Ride of the Year.

For the Savvy Ride of the Year, our formula essentially boils down to “value plus common sense.” The average new vehicle now costs $32,000; money most people don’t have when they walk into a dealership to make the second-biggest purchase of their lives. The average commuter will spend 100 hours every year in their vehicles, and while there’s lots of pressure to overpay, it’s also easy to economize yourself into a rolling detention hall that’s your second home for the next several years. Our Savvy pick would recognize the best new vehicle in the sweet spot between those extremes; a vehicle that deserves your hard-earned cash.

image

Of the 22 vehicles in our field, fully half were mulled as potential picks, from the least-expensive car we tested (the $17,570 Scion iA) to $45,000 SUVs. Not every car we invited managed to show up; Chevrolet was unable to provide a new Chevy Volt in time, and Honda couldn’t provide the new Civic despite our invitation.

ADVERTISEMENT

Working through the field, the standards became quickly apparent. Every new car should now have automatic emergency braking. Most will offer some combination of lane-departure system and rear camera with a warning system for objects behind you. The dash controls should work without needing a night class from a dealership IT guy. Power matters, as does driving feel, but so does fuel economy, even if most buyers don’t pay as close attention to MPGs as they once did.

image