Suzuki Swift Named Least Expensive New Car to Own and Operate
11 November, 2024
Suzuki Swift Named Least Expensive New Car to Own and Operate
The Suzuki Swift Hybrid has been named the cheapest new car to own and operate in 2024 by the Royal Automobile Club of Queensland.
The strong selling five door hatchback was overall winner of the Australian survey after the RACQ evaluated the running costs of 87 cars across twelve different categories.
According to the club, this analysis could help save motorists thousands of dollars in on-going running costs. The independent RACQ is Queensland’s equivalent of the Automobile Association in New Zealand.
Ged Bulmer, motoring editor of the RACQ, said the Suzuki Swift Hybrid was Queensland’s most affordable car to own. Costs were calculated by factoring in fuel, servicing, tyres, registration and insurance, based on 15,000 kilometres a year for five years.
In New Zealand, the Swift continues to be the most popular car in the light segment. Year to date registrations reveal sales of new Swifts achieved 44 per cent of the class and are more than twice that of the second best selling model.
Britain’s Northern Group of Motoring Writers have named the Swift their Car of the Year for 2024 after the Suzuki model faced strong competition across many brands. The Swift emerged the clear overall winner and the journalists said it was “a fantastic supermini that was economical, dynamic and wouldn’t break the bank.”
The 50 year old Northern motoring writers is the longest established group of automotive journalists in the UK and their judges said the Swift was a real joy to drive and packed full of safety and technology for the price.
The latest, fourth generation, self-charging GLS Smart Hybrid 12V ISG manual is priced at $25,990 plus on-road costs, and the same model with automatic continuously variable transmission (CVT) retails at $27,990 plus on-road costs. Topping the range is the RSC model priced from $29,990.
Standard equipment for the latest Swift GLS Hybrid includes rear parking sensors, reverse camera, Dual Sensor Brake Support II, adaptive cruise control, keyless entry and push button start, factory immobiliser with alarm, Android Auto and wireless Apply Car Play.
The Swift’s Hybrid system combines a highly efficient 1.2 litre, 3-cylinder petrol engine with a self-charging electric motor and 12 volt lithium-ion battery so there is no need for plugging in to charge and no additional electric road user charges.
The Swift has been New Zealand’s favourite compact car for several years and is also a best seller in 169 countries, reaffirming its position as Suzuki’s top-selling vehicle for the last decade. It played a significant role in Suzuki posting record sales in South Africa for October, while Maruti Suzuki in India sold 206,434 vehicles last month, its best ever October, with the Swift the top selling new car.