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Buying a car? Shop for reliability and fuel economy.

All of the luxury features you might want in a car should be completely secondary in your search. Focus instead on getting the best bang for your buck in terms of fuel efficiency and reliability.

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Paul Sakuma/AP/File
In this file photo, 2011 Chevrolet Malibus are lined up at a car dealership in San Jose, Calif. According to Hamm, fuel economy and reliability should be your chief priorities when buying a car鈥搊ther features can usually be added later.

The last two weeks have focused on appliances. Now, we鈥檙e going to shift directions and take a deeper look at automobiles.

Let鈥檚 take a look at two hypothetical cars.

You鈥檙e looking at a class of cars that, according to the data you鈥檝e researched, get to 150,000 miles pretty reliably before significant problems set in. You drive 25,000 miles per year, so you鈥檙e hoping to get six years out of the car. Gas costs $3.25 a gallon. We鈥檙e going to assume that insurance among the models is equal and that maintenance costs are equal, too.

Let鈥檚 call one Model A. Model A costs $25,000. It gets 35 miles to the gallon. Based on the data you鈥檝e seen, Model A is about 10% more reliable than the average car in the class you鈥檙e looking at.

The other one, Model B, costs $18,000. It gets 22 miles to the galoon. Based on the data you鈥檝e seen, Model B is about 10% less reliable than the average car in the class you鈥檙e looking at.

(I鈥檓 using 鈥淢odel A鈥 and 鈥淢odel B鈥 because I鈥檓 not advocating a particular car make or model here, but simply trying to demonstrate how much of an impact on your wallet that fuel economy and reliability make.)

Both cars will sell for about $1,500 used.

Which one is the better bargain?

The one figure I care about above everything else is the cost per mile while you own this car. Usually, you鈥檇 figure things like insurance and maintenance into this cost per mile number, but since we鈥檙e assuming they鈥檙e equal, we鈥檙e only going to worry about the cost of fuel and depreciation.

So, with Model A, you鈥檙e going to lose $23,500 due to depreciation. Given that it鈥檚 10% more reliable than the average car of that class, you鈥檙e going to get 165,000 miles out of it. You鈥檒l have to put 4,714 gallons of gas in it over that timeframe, totaling a cost of $15,321.43, for a total investment of $38,821.43. Per mile, over those 165,000 miles, you鈥檒l be putting 23.5 cents per mile into the car.

With Model B, you鈥檙e going to lose $16,500 due to depreciation. Given that it鈥檚 10% less reliable than the average car of that class, you鈥檙e going to get 135,000 miles out of it. You鈥檒l have to put 6,136 gallons of gas in it over that timeframe, making for a fuel cost of $19,943.18, for a total investment of $36,443.18. Per mile, over those 135,000 miles, you鈥檒l be putting 26.9 cents per mile into the car.

To put it simply, reliability and fuel efficiency are worth a lot when buying a car. You would need Model B to cost about $13,000 to compete on cost with the Model A (with a sticker price of $25,000). Yes, reliability and fuel efficiency are making up for about half of the price of the car in this example. The difference is enormous.

Not only that, the more reliable your car is, the greater the time between car purchases. That means less time spent looking at and buying a car and more time spent enjoying life. In the above comparison, Model A is going to last the owner more than a year longer than Model B even though the owner is putting 25,000 miles per year on the car. Not only is Model A cheaper per mile, it鈥檚 going to last longer, too.

So, how do you find out about reliability and fuel efficiency numbers? My first destination for such research is Consumer Reports, which usually has solid information on a wide variety of car models in terms of both fuel economy and reliability. Your library likely has several years worth of Consumer Reports car issues. Beyond reliability and fuel economy, I also look seriously at safety information, which Consumer Reports also helps with.

is a great online resource for fuel economy data. It gives all kinds of details on the fuel economy of various makes and models of automobile.

is another tool that can really help you identify which models have a history of reliability and which do not. I use their reliability index as one significant factor when deciding on what car to buy.

All of the luxury features you might want in a car should be completely secondary in your search. Most of those features can be installed later if you decide you can鈥檛 live without them, so don鈥檛 pay for them at the dealership. Focus instead on getting the best bang for your buck that you can get in terms of fuel efficiency and reliability, and you鈥檒l find yourself happy at the lighter load that car puts on your wallet.

This post is part of a yearlong series called 鈥365 Ways to Live Cheap (Revisited),鈥 in which I鈥檓 revisiting the entries from my book 鈥365 Ways to Live Cheap,鈥 which is available at Amazon and at bookstores everywhere.聽

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