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    Home»Featured»Why More Drivers Are Rethinking What Makes a Car Good Value
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    Why More Drivers Are Rethinking What Makes a Car Good Value

    News TeamBy News Team01/06/2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Something’s changed in how British drivers shop for cars. It’s not dramatic — no single moment flipped the switch — but the shift is real, and the numbers back it up. What makes a car good value used to mean badge prestige or the smell of a new interior. Now it means something altogether different.

    Affordability is running the show. Higher list prices, rising finance costs, and insurance premiums that refuse to behave have squeezed private buyers hard — they accounted for just 38.6% of new car registrations in 2025. More than half of UK drivers went used for their last purchase, per Tempcover research, spending more time doing the maths on total ownership costs than fixating on sticker price. That’s not penny-pinching. That’s a fundamental rethink.

    Here’s the thing: practicality has quietly become the dominant filter. SUVs and crossovers now dominate the market because they actually do things — school runs, motorway miles, weekend loads, all without drama. Commute length, family size, parking realities, fuel type — these are the questions buyers ask first now. Brand loyalty and aesthetic preference? They’ve slipped down the list considerably.

    The catch, for many, is reconciling a real budget with a genuine need for modern safety kit and reliable everyday performance. Used cars offer a compelling middle ground. A well-maintained three-year-old vehicle sits surprisingly close in specification to its new equivalent — and buyers on the used market save roughly 40% on average compared to new prices, without giving up much in technology or safety features. That gap used to be harder to close. Not anymore.

    So what happens next?

    Deloitte’s read on the UK market suggests 2026 could ease some pressure if interest rates fall and borrowing becomes less punishing for households. Fair enough — that would help. But the deeper shift here isn’t purely economic. Drivers who’ve recalibrated what they expect from a car don’t tend to snap back once conditions improve. The question “what do I want?” has been replaced — maybe permanently — by “what does this car actually need to do?”

    Value has been redefined. For a growing share of UK drivers, what makes a car good value isn’t newness or prestige. It’s reliability, practicality, and running costs that don’t ambush you six months in. The market is already adjusting. Buyers got there first.

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