Toyota Corolla
Reliability-first compact; hybrid option; lower theft risk
Buyer's guide
15 min read
Buyer's guide & specs
Background
The Honda Civic has been in continuous production since 1972, spanning base economy hatches through JDM-only homologation specials. The B16A-powered EG6 SiR-II and the seam-welded EK9 Type R define the 1990s VTEC era; the EP3 and FD2 Type R brought the K20A from 2001 onward, with the FN2 as the Europe-only variant. Across every generation the JDM Civic and its USDM counterpart share a body but diverge on engines, trim availability, and Type R eligibility.
Honda introduced VTEC on the 1989 B16A — 1.6 litres, DOHC, 160 PS in JDM tune at 7,000–8,000 rpm. The B16A first appeared in the 1989 Integra XSi, then migrated into the Civic SiR (EF8/EF9) the same year.
Across the 1990s the B-series family expanded — B18C in the Integra Type R, B16B in the EK9 Civic Type R, B20B in CR-V applications — all sharing the 81.0 mm bore family and the same VTEC head architecture. Tuners gravitated to it for three reasons: rev ceilings past 8,000 rpm, abundant Honda parts crossover between Civic and Integra, and head-port geometry that responded to forced induction without exotic internals.
The K-series replacement (K20A in the EP3, K20A in the FD2) brought thicker sleeves and a stronger block — easier to make big power on, harder to package in older Civic bays without subframe work. B-series Civics define the 1990s tuner aesthetic; K-series Civics define the late-2000s track-day era.
The 1997 EK9 Civic Type R is the template every later Civic Type R has been measured against. Honda took the sixth-generation EK4 SiR hatch, seam-welded the chassis at key load paths, and hand-ported the B16B head to 185 PS — 115.6 PS per litre, the highest specific output of any 1.6-litre N/A production engine at the time. The package included a close-ratio 5-speed gearbox, a helical LSD, Recaro front seats, a Momo wheel, and a target weight of 1,040 kg.
Production ran from August 1997 to August 2000, JDM-only, with a 1998 Type Rx variant adding air conditioning and audio for buyers who needed a daily-usable Type R. That narrow, focused brief is what the EK9 is still measured against.
The EP3 (K20A, 215 PS, five-door hatch), FD2 (K20A, 225 PS, JDM-only sedan, 2007–2010), and FN2 (K20Z4, 198 hp, Europe-built hatch, 2007–2011) each worked from the EK9 blueprint in different directions — re-arguing whether Type R should be a stripped homologation car or a usable enthusiast daily.
Editorial notes
Quick read
Constants
Chassis history
The Civic has been in continuous production since 1972, so the generation you pick matters more than almost anything else. The SB1 first-gen ran a 1.2 litre making around 50 hp and arrived right as the 1973 oil crisis hit. The fourth-gen EF brought the first VTEC Civic in 1989. The fifth-gen EG6 and sixth-gen EK4 are the SiR cars most tuners grew up around. The EK9 of 1997 is where the Civic became a Type R for the first time. After that the EP3, FD2 and FN2 split the Type R brief three different ways depending on where you live.
EG6 Civic SiR-II (B16A; 1991–1995)
EP3 Civic Type R (K20A; 2001–2005)
FD2 Civic Type R (K20A, JDM sedan; 2007–2011)
Buyer's call
The Civic is one of those cars where the strong points and the weak points haven't really changed in 50 years. Honda built it to be cheap, reliable and easy to fix, and the trade-offs are the same now as they were in 1972. The good bits are the engines, the parts supply and the running costs. The rough bits are the interiors and the brakes.
Reliability
The Civic is mechanically tough. Most of the trouble comes from age, not the engineering. The rear axle rusts. The interior trim falls off. The electrical components fail one at a time as the car gets older. The 2002 to 2007 cars eat engine mounts. None of these are deal breakers if the seller has paperwork showing the work was done.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| CVT judder/early failure | Neglected HCF-2 fluid; belt/pulley wear | Drain/fill x3; if persists, rebuild/replace CVT | $300-4500 |
| Manual 2nd/3rd synchro grind | Worn synchros; aggressive shifting/low fluid | Fluid change; if grinding persists, trans rebuild | $120-2500 |
| Clutch slip or chatter | Worn disc/pressure plate; oil contamination | Replace clutch kit; inspect rear main seal | $900-2000 |
| 1.5T fuel dilution in oil | Short trips/cold climate; DI enrichment strategy | 5k oil changes; longer drives; update ECU if avail | $80-250 |
| 1.5T head gasket failure | Thermal stress/boost; detonation; cooling issues | Replace head gasket; machine head; update cooling | $2200-4500 |
| AC condenser leak | Thin condenser; stone damage; known weak design | Replace condenser; evac/recharge; add screen | $600-1200 |
| AC compressor shaft seal leak | Seal wear; contamination; low oil/refrigerant | Replace compressor; flush; new drier; recharge | $1200-2200 |
| Intercooler icing/stumble (1.5T) | Condensation in intercooler in cold humid temps | Updated parts/TSB; drain; change driving pattern | $0-800 |
| DI intake valve carbon buildup | Direct injection; short trips; low-quality fuel | Walnut blast intake valves; add catch can optional | $400-900 |
| Timing chain stretch/rattle | Poor oil maintenance; low oil; high mileage | Replace chain/tensioner/guides; verify oiling | $900-1800 |
| Engine mount collapse | Rubber hydraulic mount wear; torque loads | Replace mounts; avoid cheap aftermarket mounts | $250-900 |
| EPS rack/column clunk | Internal lash; bushing wear; torque sensor issues | Replace rack or column; align; update software | $900-2200 |
| Wheel bearing humming | Bearing wear; impact damage; water intrusion | Replace hub/bearing assembly; torque to spec | $250-650 |
| Brake caliper slide seizure | Dry slide pins; torn boots; road salt | Service slides; replace caliper if seized | $150-600 |
| Warped rotors/pulsation | Pad deposits from overheating; cheap rotors | Quality rotors/pads; proper bed-in procedure | $250-700 |
| VSA/ABS light (wheel sensor) | Wheel speed sensor failure; tone ring corrosion | Replace sensor; clean/replace tone ring if needed | $200-700 |
| Sunroof drain leaks | Clogged drains; disconnected drain tubes | Clear drains; reseat tubes; dry interior thoroughly | $100-500 |
| Infotainment freezing/reboots | Software bugs; failing head unit; weak battery | Update firmware; load test battery; replace unit | $0-1200 |
| Door lock actuator failure | Motor wear; moisture intrusion | Replace actuator; verify latch alignment | $200-500 |
| Window regulator slow/fails | Cable wear; dry channels; motor wear | Replace regulator/motor; lube window channels | $250-600 |
| Rust at rockers/jack points | Road salt; clogged drains; poor prior repairs | Cut/weld metal; undercoat; avoid filler-only fixes | $800-4000 |
| Rear subframe corrosion | Salt exposure; neglected underbody washing | Replace subframe/arms; align; rustproof annually | $1200-3500 |
| Brake line corrosion leaks | Salt; aged coating; trapped moisture | Replace hard lines; bleed system; inspect all lines | $600-2000 |
| Misfire under load | Worn plugs/coils; injector issues; carbon buildup | Plugs/coils; injector clean; walnut blast if DI | $150-1200 |
| Catalyst efficiency codes | Aging cat; oil burning; exhaust leaks upstream | Fix oil use/leaks; replace cat with OEM-quality | $400-2200 |
| Oil consumption (some engines) | Ring wear; PCV issues; extended oil intervals | PCV service; compression test; rebuild if severe | $50-3500 |
| Cooling fan failure | Fan motor wear; relay failure; connector heat | Replace fan assembly/relay; verify temp switch logic | $250-700 |
Market
Across every Civic generation, the JDM and USDM cars share a body but split on drivetrain and trim. The USDM Civic Si historically ran SOHC D-series engines (D16A6, D16Z6, D16Y8) while the JDM Civic SiR received DOHC VTEC B-series engines (B16A, B16A2, B16B). The Civic Type R was JDM-only for the EK9 (1997–2000) and FD2 (2007–2010); the EP3 Type R (2001–2005) shipped globally including a JDM variant; the FN2 Type R (2007–2011) was Europe-only. The USDM never received an EK9, FD2, or FN2 Type R from the factory — every Type R in the U.S. before the FK8 (2017–2021) is a private import under the 25-year rule. JDM Civics also got body styles the U.S. market skipped: the Civic Ferio sedan, the five-door wagon Shuttle (1.5–1.6L 4WD variants), and the three-door EG6/EK4 SiR hatch in trim levels with closer-ratio gearing and helical LSDs as standard.
Why You Should NOT Buy a 90's Honda Civic — EK Hatch Breakdown
Specs
The Civic has run almost every layout Honda ever shipped in a compact car. The early cars used the EB and ED 1.2 and 1.3 litre engines. The fourth and fifth gens introduced the B-series VTEC. The seventh and eighth gens moved to the K-series. The gearbox went from a 2-speed automatic in 1972 to a 6-speed manual by the EP3. For most enthusiast Civics what you actually care about is the engine code and whether it's the JDM tune.
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SB1/SG/SH/SS | EH (CVCC) | 1.5L | estimated | N/A | CVCC stratified charge; varies by market |
| AG/AH/AJ/AK | EW4 | 1.5L | 91hp @ 5500rpm | N/A | PGM-FI; Civic Si (US) |
| EC/ED/EE/EF | D15B2 | 1.5L | 92hp @ 6000rpm | N/A | SOHC 16V; US DX/LX (typical) |
| EC/ED/EE/EF | D16A6 | 1.6L | 108hp @ 6000rpm | N/A | SOHC 16V; US Si |
| EF8/EF9 (JDM) | B16A | 1.6L | 158hp @ 7600rpm | N/A | DOHC VTEC; JDM SiR |
| EG/EH/EJ | D15B8 | 1.5L | 70hp @ 5500rpm | N/A | 8-valve; US CX |
| EG/EH/EJ | D15Z1 | 1.5L | 92hp @ 5500rpm | N/A | VTEC-E lean burn; US VX |
| EG/EH/EJ | D15B7 | 1.5L | 102hp @ 5900rpm | N/A | SOHC 16V; US DX/LX |
| EG/EH/EJ | D16Z6 | 1.6L | 125hp @ 6600rpm | N/A | SOHC VTEC; US EX/Si |
| EG6/EG9 (JDM) | B16A | 1.6L | 168hp @ 7800rpm | N/A | DOHC VTEC; JDM SiR (Gen2 B16A) |
| EJ/EK/EM | D16Y7 | 1.6L | 106hp @ 6200rpm | N/A | SOHC 16V; US DX/LX/CX |
| EJ/EK/EM | D16Y8 | 1.6L | 127hp @ 6600rpm | N/A | SOHC VTEC; US EX |
| EJ/EK/EM | D16Y5 | 1.6L | 115hp @ 5600rpm | N/A | VTEC-E lean burn; US HX |
| EM1 (US Si) | B16A2 | 1.6L | 160hp @ 7600rpm | N/A | DOHC VTEC; US 1999-2000 Si |
| EK9 (JDM Type R) | B16B | 1.6L | 182hp @ 8200rpm | N/A | DOHC VTEC; hand-assembled; 8400rpm redline |
| ES/EM (sedan/coupe) | D17A1 | 1.7L | 115hp @ 6100rpm | N/A | SOHC 16V; US DX/LX |
| ES/EM (EX) | D17A2 | 1.7L | 127hp @ 6300rpm | N/A | SOHC VTEC; US EX |
| ES (HX) | D17A6 | 1.7L | 117hp @ 6100rpm | N/A | VTEC-E; US HX |
| EP3 (US Si) | K20A3 | 2.0L | 160hp @ 6500rpm | N/A | DOHC i-VTEC; 5MT |
| FA/FG (US/CA) | R18A1 | 1.8L | 140hp @ 6300rpm | N/A | SOHC i-VTEC; 128 lb-ft @ 4300rpm |
| FA5/FG2 (Si) | K20Z3 | 2.0L | 197hp @ 7800rpm | N/A | DOHC i-VTEC; 139 lb-ft @ 6200rpm |
| FD2 (JDM Type R) | K20A | 2.0L | 225hp @ 8000rpm | N/A | JDM rating; 159 lb-ft @ 6100rpm |
| FN2 (EU Type R) | K20Z4 | 2.0L | 201hp @ 7800rpm | N/A | EU rating; 142 lb-ft @ 5600rpm |
| FB/FG (US/CA) | R18Z1 | 1.8L | 143hp @ 6500rpm | N/A | SOHC i-VTEC; 129 lb-ft @ 4300rpm |
| FB6/FG4 (Si) | K24Z7 | 2.4L | 201hp @ 7000rpm | N/A | DOHC i-VTEC; 170 lb-ft @ 4400rpm |
| FK2 (Type R) | K20C1 | 2.0L | 306hp @ 6500rpm | estimated | Turbo; 295 lb-ft @ 2500-4500rpm |
| FC/FK (2.0 NA) | K20C2 | 2.0L | 158hp @ 6500rpm | N/A | NA; 138 lb-ft @ 4200rpm |
| FC/FK (1.5T) | L15B7 | 1.5L | 174hp @ 6000rpm | estimated | Turbo; 162 lb-ft @ 1700-5500rpm (CVT) |
| FC1 (Si) | L15B7 | 1.5L | 205hp @ 5700rpm | estimated | Si tune; 192 lb-ft @ 2100-5000rpm |
| FK8 (Type R) | K20C1 | 2.0L | 306hp @ 6500rpm | estimated | US spec; 295 lb-ft @ 2500-4500rpm |
| FE (2.0 NA) | K20C2 | 2.0L | 158hp @ 6500rpm | N/A | NA; 138 lb-ft @ 4200rpm |
| FE (1.5T) | L15CA | 1.5L | 180hp @ 6000rpm | estimated | Turbo; 177 lb-ft @ 1700-4500rpm |
| FE1 (Si) | L15CA | 1.5L | 200hp @ 6000rpm | estimated | Si tune; 192 lb-ft @ 1800-5000rpm |
| FL5 (Type R) | K20C1 | 2.0L | 315hp @ 6500rpm | estimated | US spec; 310 lb-ft @ 2600-4000rpm |
| FE/FL (Hybrid) | LFC i-MMD | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | 2-motor hybrid; output varies by market |
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4-speed Manual | varies | 1970s-1980s base models | Early Civics; market-dependent |
| 5-speed Manual | varies | Most generations/trims | Wide/close ratios vary by engine/market |
| 6-speed Manual | varies | Si, Type R (varies by gen) | Often includes helical LSD on Si/Type R |
| 3-speed Automatic | varies | 1980s models (some) | Early torque-converter automatic |
| 4-speed Automatic | varies | 1990s-early 2000s (many trims) | Hydraulic/electronic; market-dependent |
| 5-speed Automatic | varies | 2006-2015 non-Si (many) | R18/R18Z applications |
| CVT | varies | HX (some), 10th/11th gen non-Si | Steel belt; paddle sim ratios on some |
| e-CVT (i-MMD) | N/A | Hybrid variants | 2-motor hybrid; fixed gearset coupling |
Lineup
JDM Civic trims went through a lot of names over the years. The SiR is the VTEC trim. The Si is the lesser sporty trim. The DX and LX are the daily driver versions. The Type R is the homologated one with the seam welds, the LSD and the Recaros. Most of what looks like a different model is really just a different trim level on the same chassis.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st (SB1/SG/SH/SS, 1972-1979) | Civic (Std) | EB/ED/EF/EG I4 | Base trim, 2dr/3dr, manual steering, drum rear |
| 1st (SB1/SG/SH/SS, 1972-1979) | Civic (DX/Deluxe) | EB/ED/EF/EG I4 | Upgraded interior, more trim, optional 2AT |
| 1st (SB1/SG/SH/SS, 1972-1979) | Civic CVCC | EH I4 CVCC | CVCC emissions, improved economy, higher output |
| 1st (SB1/SG/SH/SS, 1972-1979) | Civic Wagon | EB/ED/EF/EG I4 | Wagon body, higher cargo, optional 2AT |
| 2nd (SL/SS/SR/ST/VC, 1979-1983) | Civic (Std) | EJ/EM I4 | Base trim, 3dr/5dr, lighter body, drum rear |
| 2nd (SL/SS/SR/ST/VC, 1979-1983) | Civic (DX) | EJ/EM I4 | Better interior, more equipment, optional 2AT |
| 2nd (SL/SS/SR/ST/VC, 1979-1983) | Civic (GL) | EJ/EM I4 | More luxury trim, tach, upgraded upholstery |
| 2nd (SL/SS/SR/ST/VC, 1979-1983) | Civic Wagon | EJ/EM I4 | Wagon body, higher GVW, optional 2AT |
| 2nd (SL/SS/SR/ST/VC, 1979-1983) | Civic 1500/1500S | EM 1.5 I4 | Higher output 1.5L, sportier gearing, trim |
| 3rd (AG/AH/AJ/AK, 1983-1987) | Civic (Std) | EW1/EW3 I4 | Base trim, 3dr/4dr/5dr, optional 3AT |
| 3rd (AG/AH/AJ/AK, 1983-1987) | Civic (DX) | EW1/EW3 I4 | More equipment, better interior, optional 3AT |
| 3rd (AG/AH/AJ/AK, 1983-1987) | Civic (LX) | EW1/EW3 I4 | More luxury, power options, upgraded trim |
| 3rd (AG/AH/AJ/AK, 1983-1987) | Civic Si | EW4 1.5 PGM-FI | PGM-FI, sport suspension, tach, 5MT |
| 3rd (AG/AH/AJ/AK, 1983-1987) | Civic Wagon | EW1/EW3 I4 | Wagon body, higher cargo, optional 3AT |
| 4th (EC/ED/EE/EF, 1987-1991) | Civic STD | D13B/D15B I4 | Base trim, 3dr/4dr, manual windows, 4MT/5MT |
| 4th (EC/ED/EE/EF, 1987-1991) | Civic DX | D15B2 I4 | Better interior, 5MT/4AT, optional A/C |
| 4th (EC/ED/EE/EF, 1987-1991) | Civic LX | D15B2 I4 | Power options, upgraded trim, 4AT available |
| 4th (EC/ED/EE/EF, 1987-1991) | Civic Si | D16A6 I4 | SOHC 16V, sport suspension, 5MT, 4-wheel discs* |
| 4th (EC/ED/EE/EF, 1987-1991) | Civic SiR (JDM) | B16A I4 DOHC VTEC | DOHC VTEC, 5MT, sport suspension, 4-wheel discs |
| 4th (EC/ED/EE/EF, 1987-1991) | Civic Wagon (Wagovan/RT4WD) | D15B2/D16A6 I4 | Wagon, optional RT4WD, taller roof, cargo focus |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic CX (US) | D15B8 I4 | Lightweight, base equipment, 5MT, no power options |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic VX (US) | D15Z1 VTEC-E | VTEC-E economy, lean burn, lightweight wheels |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic DX | D15B7 I4 | Mainstream trim, 5MT/4AT, basic power options |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic LX | D15B7 I4 | More comfort, power windows/locks, 4AT available |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic EX (US) | D16Z6 SOHC VTEC | SOHC VTEC, sunroof, rear sway bar, 5MT/4AT |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic Si (US/Canada) | D16Z6 SOHC VTEC | Sport trim, SOHC VTEC, 4-wheel discs (varies) |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic SiR/SiR II (JDM) | B16A DOHC VTEC | DOHC VTEC, 5MT, LSD (some), 4-wheel discs |
| 5th (EG/EH/EJ, 1991-1995) | Civic Ferio (JDM sedan) | D/B-series I4 | Sedan variant, JDM equipment, multiple grades |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic CX (US hatch) | D16Y7 I4 | Base hatch, lightweight, 5MT, minimal options |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic DX | D16Y7 I4 | Value trim, 5MT/4AT, basic equipment |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic LX | D16Y7 I4 | Comfort trim, power options, 4AT available |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic EX (US) | D16Y8 SOHC VTEC | SOHC VTEC, sunroof, rear discs (some), 5MT/4AT |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic HX (US) | D16Y5 VTEC-E | VTEC-E economy, lean burn, special gearing |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic Si (US 1999-2000) | B16A2 DOHC VTEC | DOHC VTEC, 5MT, 4-wheel discs, sport seats |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic SiR (Canada) | B16A2 DOHC VTEC | DOHC VTEC, 5MT, ABS option, 4-wheel discs |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic Type R (EK9, JDM) | B16B DOHC VTEC | Hand-built B16B, LSD, seam welds, 5MT close ratio |
| 6th (EJ/EK/EM, 1995-2000) | Civic Ferio (JDM sedan) | D/B-series I4 | Sedan grades incl. VTi/Vi-RS, optional 4WD (some) |
| 7th (ES/EM/EP, 2000-2005) | Civic DX (US) | D17A1 I4 | Base sedan/coupe, 5MT/4AT, basic equipment |
| 7th (ES/EM/EP, 2000-2005) | Civic LX (US) | D17A1 I4 | Comfort trim, 4AT common, power options |
| 7th (ES/EM/EP, 2000-2005) | Civic EX (US) | D17A2 SOHC VTEC | SOHC VTEC, sunroof, 5MT/4AT |
| 7th (ES/EM/EP, 2000-2005) | Civic HX (US) | D17A6 VTEC-E | VTEC-E economy, CVT (some), special gearing |
| 7th (ES/EM/EP, 2000-2005) | Civic Si (US EP3) | K20A3 DOHC i-VTEC | K-series, 5MT, sport suspension, hatchback |
| 7th (ES/EM/EP, 2000-2005) | Civic Type R (EP3, EU/JP) | K20A/K20A2 DOHC i-VTEC | High-output K20, 6MT, LSD (some), Brembo (some) |
| 8th (FA/FG/FN, 2005-2011) | Civic DX | R18A1 I4 | Base sedan/coupe, 5MT/5AT, basic equipment |
| 8th (FA/FG/FN, 2005-2011) | Civic LX | R18A1 I4 | Comfort trim, 5AT common, power options |
| 8th (FA/FG/FN, 2005-2011) | Civic EX | R18A1 I4 | Sunroof, upgraded wheels, 5MT/5AT |
| 8th (FA/FG/FN, 2005-2011) | Civic Si (FG2/FA5) | K20Z3 DOHC i-VTEC | 197hp K20, 6MT LSD, sport suspension, 4-wheel discs |
| 8th (FA/FG/FN, 2005-2011) | Civic Hybrid | LDA IMA hybrid | IMA hybrid, CVT, economy focus, regen braking |
| 8th (FA/FG/FN, 2005-2011) | Civic Type R (FD2, JDM) | K20A DOHC i-VTEC | 225ps K20, 6MT LSD, Brembo, seam welds |
| 8th (FA/FG/FN, 2005-2011) | Civic Type R (FN2, EU) | K20Z4 DOHC i-VTEC | 201hp K20, 6MT, sport suspension, hatch |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic DX (Canada) | R18Z1 I4 | Base trim, 5MT/5AT, basic equipment |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic LX | R18Z1 I4 | Comfort trim, 5AT common, power options |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic EX | R18Z1 I4 | Sunroof, upgraded audio, 5AT |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic EX-L | R18Z1 I4 | Leather, heated seats (some), 5AT |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic HF (US) | R18Z1 I4 | Aero/low rolling resistance, economy gearing, 5AT |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic Si | K24Z7 DOHC i-VTEC | 201hp K24, 6MT LSD, sport suspension, 4-wheel discs |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic Hybrid (some mkts) | LDA IMA hybrid | IMA hybrid, CVT, economy focus |
| 9th (FB/FG/FK, 2011-2015) | Civic Type R (FK2, EU 2015) | K20C1 2.0 Turbo | 306hp turbo, 6MT, Brembo, helical LSD |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic LX | K20C2 2.0 NA | 2.0 NA, CVT/6MT (some), Honda Sensing (some) |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic Sport | K20C2 2.0 NA | Sport styling, paddle CVT (some), larger wheels |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic EX | L15B7 1.5 Turbo | 1.5T, sunroof, Honda Sensing (some), CVT |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic EX-T (early US) | L15B7 1.5 Turbo | 1.5T, sunroof, heated seats, CVT |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic EX-L | L15B7 1.5 Turbo | Leather, 1.5T, CVT, upgraded audio |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic Touring | L15B7 1.5 Turbo | LED headlamps, premium audio, 1.5T, CVT |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic Si (FC1/FC3) | L15B7 1.5 Turbo | 6MT, helical LSD, adaptive dampers (some), sport seats |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic Type R (FK8) | K20C1 2.0 Turbo | 306hp turbo, 6MT, Brembo, adaptive dampers |
| 10th (FC/FK/FK8/FE?*, 2015-2021) | Civic Hatchback (Sport Touring) | L15B7 1.5 Turbo | Hatch, leather, LED, 1.5T, CVT/6MT (some) |
| 11th (FE/FL, 2021-present) | Civic LX | K20C2 2.0 NA | 2.0 NA, CVT, Honda Sensing std |
| 11th (FE/FL, 2021-present) | Civic Sport | K20C2 2.0 NA | Sport styling, CVT/6MT (Canada), larger wheels |
| 11th (FE/FL, 2021-present) | Civic EX (US) | L15CA 1.5 Turbo | 1.5T, sunroof, heated seats, CVT |
| 11th (FE/FL, 2021-present) | Civic Touring (US) | L15CA 1.5 Turbo | Leather, Bose, LED, 1.5T, CVT |
| 11th (FE/FL, 2021-present) | Civic Si (FE1) | L15CA 1.5 Turbo | 6MT, helical LSD, adaptive dampers, sport seats |
| 11th (FE/FL, 2021-present) | Civic Type R (FL5) | K20C1 2.0 Turbo | 315hp turbo, 6MT, Brembo, dual-axis strut |
| 11th (FE/FL, 2021-present) | Civic Hybrid (NA) | LFC i-MMD hybrid | 2-motor hybrid, e-CVT, high mpg, regen braking |
Pricing
Civic prices spread further than almost any other JDM model. You can get a project shell for under $2,000 and a clean low-mile EK9 Type R for over $50,000. The number that matters is the trim. A base DX with 200,000 km is a different car from a documented EK9 with the original Recaros, and the market knows it.
Original MSRP: ¥1,995,000 at launch in 1997. JDM launch MSRP of the 1997 Honda Civic Type R (EK9) was ¥1,995,000. The EP3 Type R launched at approximately ¥2,200,000 in 2001; the 2007 FD2 Type R sedan launched at ¥2,835,000.
Today's market range: $1,500 to $90,000 (median ~$18,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.
Mainstream Civics have normalized after the used-car spike, with clean low-mile cars still firm. Enthusiast trims (Si/Type R) remain resilient; top-condition stock EG/EK/EM1 and FL5 trade at strong premiums, while heavily modified cars soften.
Inspect
Walk this checklist with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no paperwork backing them up. Rear axle rust is the one Civic-specific check that catches people out. Ten minutes at idle and a 30 minute drive will tell you most of what you need to know about the rest.
Cross-shop
If the Civic isn't the right car, the natural alternatives depend on what you actually want. The Integra Type R is the closer-to-track sibling with the B18C. The Toyota AE86 gives you rear-wheel drive at a similar price. The Nissan Pulsar GTI-R gives you AWD and a turbo for the people who think VTEC isn't enough.
Reliability-first compact; hybrid option; lower theft risk
More premium cabin; strong NA power; sharp handling
Hot-hatch torque and DSG option; higher upkeep but fast
Track-ready value; big power; DCT option; firmer ride
AWD traction and tuning; higher fuel use; rally vibe
Compare
Among the JDM hot hatches the Civic is the cheapest to own, the easiest to fix and the one with the biggest aftermarket. The Integra is closer to a track car, the Pulsar GTI-R is faster in a straight line, and the AE86 is the only one of them that's rear-wheel drive. The Civic wins on parts and running costs. The others win on novelty.
| Feature | Honda Civic | Toyota Corolla E210 | Mazda3 BP |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base power | Civic 2.0 NA: 158 hp | Corolla 2.0: 169 hp | Mazda3 2.5: 191 hp |
| Turbo power | Civic 1.5T: 174-180 hp | Elantra 1.6T: 201 hp | Jetta 1.5T: 158 hp |
| Performance trim | Civic Si: ~200 hp | Elantra N: 276 hp | GTI: 241 hp |
| Halo model power | Type R: 306-315 hp | GR Corolla: 300 hp AWD | WRX: 271 hp AWD |
| Drivetrain layout | FWD (most); Type R FWD | AWD (GR Corolla) | AWD (WRX) |
| Transmission | 6MT (Si/Type R); CVT/auto | 6MT/8DCT (Elantra N) | 6MT/DSG (GTI) |
| Fuel economy focus | Strong MPG; light footprint | Hybrid leader option | Efficient but pricier |
| Reliability perception | High; broad parts support | High; hybrid proven | Good; more complex turbo/DCT |
| Used value retention | Above average; Si/Type R strong | Strong; less enthusiast premium | GTI varies by maintenance |
| Tuner ecosystem | Massive (EG/EK/K-series/Type R) | Strong but smaller | Growing; warranty-sensitive |
| Track durability | Type R excellent; Si good | Very strong; cooling robust | Strong; AWD heat management |
| Cabin space | Class-leading rear legroom (many gens) | Good; more conservative | Tighter rear; upscale feel |
| Ride/handling balance | Best-in-class steering feel (often) | Comfort-first tuning | Sporty chassis benchmark |
Gallery
Drivetrain
Editorial
Start by deciding what the car is for. A daily-driver EG or EK hatch with the D-series engine is the cheapest way in — clean examples still come in under $8,000 and leave room for a B-series swap later. A Type R is a separate purchase decision with a separate price floor.
If you want VTEC from day one, look at an EG6 SiR-II or EK4 SiR with the B16A. Budget $12,000 to $20,000 for a clean, documented example. Skip anything heavily modified unless the paperwork shows who did the work — a bad Civic build can cost more to undo than a stock car costs to buy.
The Type R question branches three ways. The EK9 has been US-legal under the 25-year rule since 2022 and clean examples are climbing. The EP3 is the practical pick — five-door hatch, K20A, global supply. The FD2 sedan is the JDM collector's choice but remains grey-market in the US until 2032 at the earliest; the FN2 is Europe-only and most North American buyers skip it.
The one generation to approach carefully is the 2001 to 2005 seventh-gen. CVT problems and a long recall list mark the automatic models. The Si and EP3 Type R are manual K20A cars and are not affected — the CVT models are the ones that failed.
FAQ
Citations
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