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Consumer Reports

'Consumer Reports' lists top 10 most loved, hated cars

Chris Woodyard
USA TODAY
Hyundai created quite a stir with its Veloster, but it was the fifth least-satisfying in the "Consumer Reports" survey.

Sure, Consumer Reports magazine is known for its annual survey that asks car owners about reliability. But do owners actually like their cars?

That's the question that the magazine tries to answer in its January issue. It looked at what owners thought of their cars, 230,000 from the last three model years. It's a survey aiming to rate which cars are considered most satisfying.

The favorite of all of them was the Tesla Model S, which is already top rated by Consumer Reports. Some 97% of its owners say they would buy the luxury electric car again, based on its performance and the low costs of ownership — electricity from their own garages or using Tesla's free Supercharger network.

It ranked 40th, however, when it came to satisfaction on long trips.

Next came another car that has a passionate owner base, the Chevrolet Corvette, and three Porsches — Macan, 911 and Cayman. Consumer Reports notes that the Tesla, Corvette and Macan had worse-than-average reliability scores, yet are still loved by their owners.

As for the cars that owners disliked the most, it's a rogues gallery of cheapo economy cars, models late in their life cycles or those being discontinued.

The least satisfying car is the Kia Rio, an entry-level subcompact, although Consumer Reports says the finding is based on only a single year of ownership, not three years like the rest of the pack. It is followed by the Nissan Sentra, an economy compact, and the Jeep Compass and Patriot, both of which are being discontinued.

Of the top 10, Nissan and Fiat Chrysler each has four.

Tesla representative John Van Cleave, right, shows customers Sarah and Robert Reynolds, left, and Vince Giardina, a new Tesla all electric car in Cincinnati last year.

The magazine says fuel economy and safety features played heavily into how much owners like their cars. "Poor fuel economy can be a crushing blow," the magazine writes, with it showing up in every one of the 10 least-satisfying models. And it noted how Subaru owners loved the optional EyeSight safety system on their cars.

Here's the list:

Most satisfying:


1.    Tesla Model S
2.    Chevrolet Corvette
3.    Porsche Cayman
4.    Porsche Macan
5.    Porsche 911
6.    Acura MDX
7.    Ford Mustang
8.    BMW 2 Series
9.    Subaru Outback
10.  Volkswagen Golf


Least satisfying:

1.    Kia Rio
2.    Nissan Sentra
3.    Jeep Compass
4.    Jeep Patriot
5.    Hyundai Veloster
6.    Dodge Journey
7.    Nissan Versa Note
8.    Nissan Juke
9.    Fiat 500L
10.   Nissan Pathfinder

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