Why You Maybe Shouldn’t Buy A First Model-Year Car Or A Final Model-Year Car

First Year Last Year Ts
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It’s pretty well established by now that buying a first model-year car is not the best idea, especially if that car isn’t based on another well-established vehicle with a proven powertrain and mechanical/electrical architecture. “By the final year of production, all the bugs will have been worked out, so I should get a final model-year car, right?” Well, not so fast.

Let’s first establish this: The “never buy the first model-year” advice is good; I could probably give you a million examples of design flaws that were changed sometime in the middle of the production run. Here are a few just off the top of my head:

  1. Around 2005, General Motors fixed its 2.2-liter EcoTec four-cylinder engine’s timing chain lubrication problem after numerous early (first three model years) timing chain failures
  2. In 2013, Nissan replaced its quickly-degrading Leaf battery packs (first two model-years) to a new “Lizard” pack that lasts longer
  3. In 2013, Jeep fixed the issues its 2012 and 2013 Jeep Wranglers (first model years with new engine) were having with cylinder head valve guides
  4. In 2015, BMW changed its timing chain/guide design of its N20 2.0-liter engines after numerous engine failures (first three model years).
  5. In 2014, Subaru made engine changes after 2013 (first model-year) Scion FRS and Subaru BRZs valve spring failures

Here’s a quote from Consumer Reports about first model-year cars:

“…as our data has consistently shown, reliability-minded consumers would be best served by forgoing brand new vehicles in their first model year.”

It makes sense; as much research and development that automakers do before sending to customers, there are going to be some real-world conditions that the automaker will not have accounted for, and if this leads to significant failures and especially recalls, the automaker will likely fix the issue during the vehicle’s production run. Warranty repairs are expensive for automakers, after all.

But while those changes are happening something else will also be taking place: TCR

Technical Cost Reduction

TCR is technically an internal term used at DaimlerChrysler/Chrysler Group, LLC/FCA/Stellantis/whatever the hell people are calling the company I once worked for. It stands for “technical cost reduction,” and, well, I’ll allow FCA to define it in its “Supplier Help Resources” document:

FCA cost reduction program is a partnership with the supplier to reduce the cost of components and systems through innovative ideas that include material, function, form, process, and part management. If a supplier submits their idea into GPSIS, and it meets the FCA business case criteria without Decontenting, reducing Quality or Performance, FCA has 2 teams to support supplier idea development.

The short of it is that the goal is to reduce the cost of building the car not by reducing features, and not by reducing the car’s perceived quality — the point is to reduce cost in a way that’s imperceptible. At least, that’s the theory. In reality, sometimes the cost reductions are noticeable. Oftentimes they involve removing features that manufacturers’ data shows most folks don’t actually use, or they involve reducing the gauge of certain materials, or they involve change materials that companies don’t think customers will miss.

 

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Generally, an ideal TCR, when pointed out to a customer, would result in a reply: “Oh, I don’t really care about that. The car feels the same.” But to diehards, sometimes it’s hard to look at a TCR and not be a bit disappointed just knowing that you’re getting less for your money.

Take my 2021 BMW i3. I’ve been driving a 2014 for over a year, so stepping into my 2021, some cost-saves things become obvious to me. First, the glovebox lock is no longer made of metal; it now appears to be made entirely of plastic.

2014:

Screen Shot 2024 06 05 At 6.57.10 Am

2021:

Screen Shot 2024 06 05 At 6.58.38 Am

In addition, 2014 BMW i3s came with netting on the back of the front seats; this was a handy place to store documents. BMW removed that starting in 2015.

2014:

Screen Shot 2024 06 05 At 7.00.28 Am

2021:

Screen Shot 2024 06 05 At 7.00.49 Am

Then there’s the Giga World interior changes. From 2014 to 2017, it looked like this:

Gpp Sn Aeaad3k1

You can see a slight change in leather color and fabric; those aren’t the cost-saves obvious to me — it’s the armrests. Notice how they were leather before, and now they’re white leatherette:

Gpp Sn Akaem Fh

These are obviously small changes, and the average customer isn’t going to care that much about a seat net, armrests, or a glovebox lock, so in that way, BMW’s TCR engineers did a good job.

Still, as I’m sure many diehard enthusiasts have experienced when going from an early build car to a later one — not having a feature that you had before, or giving up on quality even a tiny bit when you’ve gotten used to the early vehicle, is a tough pill to swallow.

With that said, I have noticed that earlier-built cars tend to have better fit and finish than later ones, though that’s more anecdotal (though it’s worth mentioning that tooling does wear out over time). With that said, despite TCR, if I had to choose between a first model-year vehicle and a final, I’d choose a final. Not only have some of the big design flaws been fixed so the automaker can avoid more costly warranty claims, but in order to remain competitive, oftentimes there are new features added in over the years, or some once-optional features becomes standard. My 2021 BMW i3S, for example, has fancy Adaptive Headlights that weren’t available on early cars, it has Apple Carplay that wasn’t available on early cars, it has a new iDrive system that early cars didn’t have, and it’s a Sport Model, which wasn’t an option before 2018.

So there’s definitely more to gain and more to avoid when you choose a final model-year vehicle over a first. TCRs, if done correctly, are things you should be able to deal with.

118 thoughts on “Why You Maybe Shouldn’t Buy A First Model-Year Car Or A Final Model-Year Car

  1. I bought a very early FR-S in May or June of 2012. Thing was recalled constantly. Everything from the tail lights to a replacement engine at ~40k miles after a catastrophic failure in traffic.

    All in all, I’d absolutely buy it again.

  2. I bought a very early FR-S in May or June of 2012. Thing was recalled constantly. Everything from the tail lights to a replacement engine at ~40k miles after a catastrophic failure in traffic.

    All in all, I’d absolutely buy it again.

  3. A buddy of mine is notorious for buying first model year vehicles. He has plenty of experience dealing with warranty departments. Ironically, he bought a second year Bronco sport and that was the one that got hit with all the recalls and TSBs. And now he traded that in for a Wrangler 4xe.. so yeah, we’ll see how that goes.

    I picked up a last model year 2022 Colorado ZR2, diesel extended cab as those options were going away for the 3rd gen. So far it’s been solid other than one NOx sensor replaced under warranty at 16k miles.

  4. A buddy of mine is notorious for buying first model year vehicles. He has plenty of experience dealing with warranty departments. Ironically, he bought a second year Bronco sport and that was the one that got hit with all the recalls and TSBs. And now he traded that in for a Wrangler 4xe.. so yeah, we’ll see how that goes.

    I picked up a last model year 2022 Colorado ZR2, diesel extended cab as those options were going away for the 3rd gen. So far it’s been solid other than one NOx sensor replaced under warranty at 16k miles.

  5. Although Ford excels at TCR (removing intelligent access from rear doors of the Fusion and Edge as they’re coming to the end of their lifecycles, for example), we experienced no growing pains with our 2015 Mustang, even though the 2.3L 4 banger was new.

    Our 2017 Fusion Sport, on the other hand, just loved draining its battery on a daily basis. Took months for Ford to determine the problem was the audio control module. It was fine after that significant clusterfuck, though.

  6. Although Ford excels at TCR (removing intelligent access from rear doors of the Fusion and Edge as they’re coming to the end of their lifecycles, for example), we experienced no growing pains with our 2015 Mustang, even though the 2.3L 4 banger was new.

    Our 2017 Fusion Sport, on the other hand, just loved draining its battery on a daily basis. Took months for Ford to determine the problem was the audio control module. It was fine after that significant clusterfuck, though.

  7. This is just in reference to the Mustang. The late model years are the best years of the S550 Mustang GT. They have the best version of the 5.0 Coyote and multiple other additions that make it the best of the S550 generation. I bought my base 2022 Mustang GT in April 2023. This was just before the S650 Mustang was about to be on showroom floors. I got a really good deal on it. Now this car was sitting on the lot for 6 months. No one wants just a base manual Mustang GT. I am an exception to the rule. Dealer took 5500 off MSRP and it was 0% APR for 60 months. My buddy got a 2023 GT with active exhaust and 301A package for a very similar deal. So when buying at the end of the model run you can actually get a good deal. Most manufactures will give very good financial incentives and dealers will also do anything to move that old model year. With the Mustang, Ford may have done some cost saving. It may be hard for me to find with a just a base model with no gimmicks. But they also added a lot of features to late model years.

  8. Is it still a TCR if it doesn’t reduce the cost of the part, but may reduce warranty repairs?

    I can see that with the lock as a straight savings on the component.

    On the seatback pockets, I can absolutely imagine people jamming water bottles in the seatback nets and stretching them out of shape. Just ditch the pockets and you get rid of customer complaints and warranty repairs. It’s not like it’s a free change, they’d still have to design and tool a new seatback and go through whatever hassles there are in changing bills of material and spare parts inventory.

    I can see the same thing for the armrest materials. Leather may be quick to stain when used on a touch surface.

    1. The leather holds up better than the white leatherette (which stains due to its color). And the seatback netting would not be eligible for warranty repairs — to me, it’s likely one of those “nobody used it anyway since it’s kind of an afterthought feature, so let’s cut it.”

      1. Yes, but is the synthetic material easier to clean ?

        If these seatbacks are only used in this low volume model, I can’t imagine much savings after paying off the tooling. Could have been a supplier issue where the net was no longer available and deleting it was cheaper than re-sourcing it.

  9. This is just in reference to the Mustang. The late model years are the best years of the S550 Mustang GT. They have the best version of the 5.0 Coyote and multiple other additions that make it the best of the S550 generation. I bought my base 2022 Mustang GT in April 2023. This was just before the S650 Mustang was about to be on showroom floors. I got a really good deal on it. Now this car was sitting on the lot for 6 months. No one wants just a base manual Mustang GT. I am an exception to the rule. Dealer took 5500 off MSRP and it was 0% APR for 60 months. My buddy got a 2023 GT with active exhaust and 301A package for a very similar deal. So when buying at the end of the model run you can actually get a good deal. Most manufactures will give very good financial incentives and dealers will also do anything to move that old model year. With the Mustang, Ford may have done some cost saving. It may be hard for me to find with a just a base model with no gimmicks. But they also added a lot of features to late model years.

  10. Is it still a TCR if it doesn’t reduce the cost of the part, but may reduce warranty repairs?

    I can see that with the lock as a straight savings on the component.

    On the seatback pockets, I can absolutely imagine people jamming water bottles in the seatback nets and stretching them out of shape. Just ditch the pockets and you get rid of customer complaints and warranty repairs. It’s not like it’s a free change, they’d still have to design and tool a new seatback and go through whatever hassles there are in changing bills of material and spare parts inventory.

    I can see the same thing for the armrest materials. Leather may be quick to stain when used on a touch surface.

    1. The leather holds up better than the white leatherette (which stains due to its color). And the seatback netting would not be eligible for warranty repairs — to me, it’s likely one of those “nobody used it anyway since it’s kind of an afterthought feature, so let’s cut it.”

      1. Yes, but is the synthetic material easier to clean ?

        If these seatbacks are only used in this low volume model, I can’t imagine much savings after paying off the tooling. Could have been a supplier issue where the net was no longer available and deleting it was cheaper than re-sourcing it.

  11. My parents purchased a 2001 Town & Country used in the early 2000’s. They liked it so much they purchased a new 2005 version with Stow ‘n Go. The 2005 van was nothing but problems for them. They sold their 2001 to friends who took it over 250k before the tranny failed. I remember a bunch of little features being missing in the 05 as well as poorer fit and finish.
    I think Ford likes to thin out the metal in their cars as they age. I’ve noticed later F150’s and Escapes with more body rust on them than older models.

  12. My parents purchased a 2001 Town & Country used in the early 2000’s. They liked it so much they purchased a new 2005 version with Stow ‘n Go. The 2005 van was nothing but problems for them. They sold their 2001 to friends who took it over 250k before the tranny failed. I remember a bunch of little features being missing in the 05 as well as poorer fit and finish.
    I think Ford likes to thin out the metal in their cars as they age. I’ve noticed later F150’s and Escapes with more body rust on them than older models.

  13. From your stats, you shouldn’t by the first 3 model years of a new car/truck. It would seem to take a few years additional development to get the bugs worked out.

    1. It depends when the OEM finds the problem. If it’s when the first year owners have their cars fail there’s a delay while you get the warranty data, then design a fix (I’ve spent six months on the design phase for a fix, and it’s not fun having daily progress meetings), tooling for new parts, then validate the fix (this can take months or years depending on if it needs climatic validation and doesn’t pass first time), then introduce the fix.

      2-3 years is a fair reaction time. If they actually fix it after a year it’s either a very simple problem or they knew about it before production.

  14. From your stats, you shouldn’t by the first 3 model years of a new car/truck. It would seem to take a few years additional development to get the bugs worked out.

    1. It depends when the OEM finds the problem. If it’s when the first year owners have their cars fail there’s a delay while you get the warranty data, then design a fix (I’ve spent six months on the design phase for a fix, and it’s not fun having daily progress meetings), tooling for new parts, then validate the fix (this can take months or years depending on if it needs climatic validation and doesn’t pass first time), then introduce the fix.

      2-3 years is a fair reaction time. If they actually fix it after a year it’s either a very simple problem or they knew about it before production.

  15. I bought a ’10 Focus, as I knew the first gen was ending production in a year and I didn’t want a screen.

    But talk about cheapening out like this – one of the things I really remember is that the front seatbelt mounting point at the driver’s side has no cover or anything on it; just a big ‘ole bolt. Intriguingly, the passenger side one is nicely covered by this integrated set of plastic.

    Noticing this, I brought it into the dealer from whom I bought it (I minutely checked the car over in my first few days of ownership) to get it fixed under warranty. They spent awhile trying to figure it out, searching the part to eventually figure out that’s how it came from the factory.

    I get it, as the driver may never actually notice as they won’t see it from their usual vantage points, but it was a little surprising. Dealer later told me I was the only one who’d flagged this.

    1. The worst victim of cost reduction I ever ran across was the interior of the facelifted XJ Cherokee, when the added airbags for 1995(? by memory – I could be off a year either way). My family owned a 1991 Laredo which was a lovely truck in every way. We test drove a ’95, and the difference in interior quality was night and day. I remember specifically asking what was wrong with the back seat – it felt like I was riding on an eighth of an inch of foam stretched over some overtaxed springs, bouncy and cheap. I had literally just stepped out of the back seat of our 91; the difference was stark.
      I would love to pick up a reasonably un-thrashed XJ as a ‘new classic’, but based on the above experience I wouldn’t ever touch a post-1994 one, and the pre-91 non-HO engines aren’t anything you’d want, either, so I have a pretty narrow year model range I’d be willing to get, and they’re getting awfully thin on the ground, alas.

      1. In ’91, my father was riding around in a Grand Wagoneer which he loved. He eventually replaced it with a ’93 Cherokee, and then (IIRC) a ’96 – he was always vaguely disappointed with the last one!

      2. Interesting, I’ve owned an ’89 and a ’96 (or maybe it was a ’95, last model year for “old” interior but with a boring chrysler corporate airbag wheel) and a ’00. I agree the early ones have a better built interior (and better looking imo), and probably better seats. I did find that the later one was noticeably quieter on the highway though-enough so that I might still lean that way if I were to ever buy another one-though the ’96 did have all terrains and a manual transmission which may have played a part in being noisier. I also like the facelifted XJ exterior styling better but that’s purely personal taste.

    2. Call me crazy, but I don’t see anything wrong with exposed bolt heads and wouldn’t mind seeing an automaker embrace it throughout the cabin.

      1. And to be fair, I did a few years later replace the pretty-but-problematic jacketed lug nuts with plain, uncovered regular ones, so I guess I did mellow a bit…

  16. I bought a ’10 Focus, as I knew the first gen was ending production in a year and I didn’t want a screen.

    But talk about cheapening out like this – one of the things I really remember is that the front seatbelt mounting point at the driver’s side has no cover or anything on it; just a big ‘ole bolt. Intriguingly, the passenger side one is nicely covered by this integrated set of plastic.

    Noticing this, I brought it into the dealer from whom I bought it (I minutely checked the car over in my first few days of ownership) to get it fixed under warranty. They spent awhile trying to figure it out, searching the part to eventually figure out that’s how it came from the factory.

    I get it, as the driver may never actually notice as they won’t see it from their usual vantage points, but it was a little surprising. Dealer later told me I was the only one who’d flagged this.

    1. The worst victim of cost reduction I ever ran across was the interior of the facelifted XJ Cherokee, when the added airbags for 1995(? by memory – I could be off a year either way). My family owned a 1991 Laredo which was a lovely truck in every way. We test drove a ’95, and the difference in interior quality was night and day. I remember specifically asking what was wrong with the back seat – it felt like I was riding on an eighth of an inch of foam stretched over some overtaxed springs, bouncy and cheap. I had literally just stepped out of the back seat of our 91; the difference was stark.
      I would love to pick up a reasonably un-thrashed XJ as a ‘new classic’, but based on the above experience I wouldn’t ever touch a post-1994 one, and the pre-91 non-HO engines aren’t anything you’d want, either, so I have a pretty narrow year model range I’d be willing to get, and they’re getting awfully thin on the ground, alas.

      1. In ’91, my father was riding around in a Grand Wagoneer which he loved. He eventually replaced it with a ’93 Cherokee, and then (IIRC) a ’96 – he was always vaguely disappointed with the last one!

      2. Interesting, I’ve owned an ’89 and a ’96 (or maybe it was a ’95, last model year for “old” interior but with a boring chrysler corporate airbag wheel) and a ’00. I agree the early ones have a better built interior (and better looking imo), and probably better seats. I did find that the later one was noticeably quieter on the highway though-enough so that I might still lean that way if I were to ever buy another one-though the ’96 did have all terrains and a manual transmission which may have played a part in being noisier. I also like the facelifted XJ exterior styling better but that’s purely personal taste.

    2. Call me crazy, but I don’t see anything wrong with exposed bolt heads and wouldn’t mind seeing an automaker embrace it throughout the cabin.

      1. And to be fair, I did a few years later replace the pretty-but-problematic jacketed lug nuts with plain, uncovered regular ones, so I guess I did mellow a bit…

  17. I’ve dealt with that on both sides of the coin. The Lincoln I bought used was a first year 2017 which had a lot of teething problems, most of which have been repaired by the previous owners, although the rearview camera is still foggy after being replaced multiple times.

    I worked on a program where they cost saved all the locator dowels on the PTU except one. This allowed you to tilt the PTU up and down by several millimeters before bolting it in. The OEM came to us with a PTU gear noise issue. We found you could turn the noise on and off by tilting the PTU up and down. All the noisy vehicles were from the same shift where the line worker would install the PTUs by hand instead of using the jig. The OEM still tried to blame the supplier of course.

    One side effect of having these scheduled cost save targets throughout a vehicle program is suppliers will sometimes design stuff into the part at the beginning of the program that they can easily remove later to hit these targets.

  18. I’ve dealt with that on both sides of the coin. The Lincoln I bought used was a first year 2017 which had a lot of teething problems, most of which have been repaired by the previous owners, although the rearview camera is still foggy after being replaced multiple times.

    I worked on a program where they cost saved all the locator dowels on the PTU except one. This allowed you to tilt the PTU up and down by several millimeters before bolting it in. The OEM came to us with a PTU gear noise issue. We found you could turn the noise on and off by tilting the PTU up and down. All the noisy vehicles were from the same shift where the line worker would install the PTUs by hand instead of using the jig. The OEM still tried to blame the supplier of course.

    One side effect of having these scheduled cost save targets throughout a vehicle program is suppliers will sometimes design stuff into the part at the beginning of the program that they can easily remove later to hit these targets.

  19. This take holds up. The 1901 Curved Dash Oldsmobile had an engine that had cooling issues that were addressed with improvements in 1905. Then again, 1906 introduced a version with a straight-up dashboard. I mean, who wants to buy a Curved Dash Oldsmobile without a Curved Dash? Get it together, Ransom.

  20. This take holds up. The 1901 Curved Dash Oldsmobile had an engine that had cooling issues that were addressed with improvements in 1905. Then again, 1906 introduced a version with a straight-up dashboard. I mean, who wants to buy a Curved Dash Oldsmobile without a Curved Dash? Get it together, Ransom.

  21. The time to decide if you buy a last year model is when the next model is announced and you can see if you like it or not and are willing to wait a couple of years. Sometimes the prior version retains things that the new model omits that are important to you.

    1. And those “last year” cars tend to get pretty heavy discounts/incentives as the first year “next gen” cars are on their way in, so with some careful timing, you can get a solid deal on what is likely the best version of the car you want- assuming you don’t get wooed by all the new-ness and improved-ness of the incoming next-gen one.

      1. Good point, we’ve been shopping for a Mazda CX5 for my wife and it’s got to be at the end of its product life cycle, been wondering if the dealer will start discounting the outgoing generation.

  22. The time to decide if you buy a last year model is when the next model is announced and you can see if you like it or not and are willing to wait a couple of years. Sometimes the prior version retains things that the new model omits that are important to you.

    1. And those “last year” cars tend to get pretty heavy discounts/incentives as the first year “next gen” cars are on their way in, so with some careful timing, you can get a solid deal on what is likely the best version of the car you want- assuming you don’t get wooed by all the new-ness and improved-ness of the incoming next-gen one.

      1. Good point, we’ve been shopping for a Mazda CX5 for my wife and it’s got to be at the end of its product life cycle, been wondering if the dealer will start discounting the outgoing generation.

  23. My GT86 is a first year car, so had the valve spring recall, and subsequent catastrophic cam cover failure from botched assembly that dumped all the oil out down the right hand side of the car. It’s years later now, but I’m still waiting for something else to go horribly wrong.

    My other car was only made for two years. It’s a late first year/ early last year, so I guess I’m boned either way.

  24. My GT86 is a first year car, so had the valve spring recall, and subsequent catastrophic cam cover failure from botched assembly that dumped all the oil out down the right hand side of the car. It’s years later now, but I’m still waiting for something else to go horribly wrong.

    My other car was only made for two years. It’s a late first year/ early last year, so I guess I’m boned either way.

  25. I wanted a 350Z so bad I ordered it 6 months before they went on sale. As far as I know I had the first one on the road in Florida. The early cars had track rods that were too long so it was impossible to align the front end properly. The Nissan solution was new track rods. Oh no. Wait. That would have been helpful. The Nissan solution was free tires while it was under warranty. I got about 8000 miles out of a set. It was sold before the warranty expired…

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