Buyer's guide

15 min read

Honda Civic FD2

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1972-present
Market range
$2K–$90K
Engine
K20A
2.0L
Honda Civic Type R EK9
Honda Civic Type R EK9

Quick answer

The Honda Civic is a benchmark compact car with standout reliability, efficiency, and huge parts support. Values vary wildly by generation and trim—base commuters stay affordable, while Si/Type R and clean classics command strong premiums.

Background

Overview

The eighth-generation FD2 Civic Type R sedan (2007–2010) was JDM-only and reversed the Type R brief in two ways at once. First, it returned Type R to a four-door body style — the first Civic Type R sedan ever. Second, it brought the K20A back to its highest JDM-spec output: 225 PS at 8,000 rpm, with a 9,000 rpm redline indicator and revised intake, cams, and exhaust over the EP3's K20A. Chassis hardware included a Brembo front brake package, helical LSD, Recaro front seats, and a wheelbase 100 mm longer than the FN2 Euro hatch.

Today the FD2 is the Type R most often described by collectors as the JDM enthusiast's choice between EK9 and FK8. It's not 25-year-rule eligible in the United States until 2032 at the earliest, which keeps prices in Japan firm and supply outside Japan limited to grey-market routes (Canada at 15 years, Australia, the UK as a used import). For buyers in eligible markets, an unmodified one-owner FD2 with documented service history is the strongest position — the K20A tolerates abuse but punishes neglect with rod bearing failure and cam-chain tensioner wear.

Editorial notes

Key Takeaways

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.

  • Trim drives value: Si/Type R far above base LX/EX
  • Best buys: clean, stock cars with records and no rust
  • Hot segments: EG/EK, EM1 Si, FD2/FL5 Type R
  • Watch-outs: rust, mods, title issues, CVT neglect
  • Market: softening on average cars; top trims still firm
  • Running costs: low; parts and knowledge are abundant
From JDMBUYSELL

Find a Honda Civic for sale

Browse listings

Technical Specifications

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.

Engine Options

ChassisEngineDisplacementPower — JDMNotes
FD2 (JDM Type R)K20A2.0L225hp @ 8000rpmJDM rating; 159 lb-ft @ 6100rpm

Transmission Options

TypeRatiosAvailabilityNotes
4-speed Manualvaries1970s-1980s base modelsEarly Civics; market-dependent
5-speed ManualvariesMost generations/trimsWide/close ratios vary by engine/market
6-speed ManualvariesSi, Type R (varies by gen)Often includes helical LSD on Si/Type R
3-speed Automaticvaries1980s models (some)Early torque-converter automatic
4-speed Automaticvaries1990s-early 2000s (many trims)Hydraulic/electronic; market-dependent
5-speed Automaticvaries2006-2015 non-Si (many)R18/R18Z applications
CVTvariesHX (some), 10th/11th gen non-SiSteel belt; paddle sim ratios on some
e-CVT (i-MMD)N/AHybrid variants2-motor hybrid; fixed gearset coupling

Livability

Headroom
38.0"
Good front space; sunroof trims ~1"
Rear Seats
Usable for adults
Legroom good; center seat tight; low cushion
Cargo
12-15 cu ft
Sedan trunk good; hatch best; opening varies
From JDMBUYSELL

How to import a JDM car — complete guide

Read the guide

Should You Buy a Honda Civic FD2?

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.

Why You'll Love It

  • Strong reliability recordMany Civics exceed 200k miles with routine maintenance; broad shop familiarity reduces risk.
  • Low running costsExcellent fuel economy, affordable consumables, and plentiful used/new parts keep ownership cheap.
  • Huge parts & knowledge baseAftermarket and OEM support is massive; easy sourcing for repairs, upgrades, and restoration.
  • Resale value stabilityCivics depreciate slower than many compacts; Si/Type R trims often outperform the segment.
  • Broad trim/mission coverageFrom base commuter to Si/Type R track tool, there’s a Civic for nearly every buyer profile.
  • Efficient packagingStrong cabin and cargo utility for size, especially hatchbacks; practical daily-driver footprint.
  • Enthusiast-friendly platformsEG/EK/EP3/Si/Type R have deep tuning ecosystems; track support is extensive.
  • Safety and tech progressionLater gens offer modern crash performance and driver aids; good value as a used family car.

Why You Might Not

  • Modded examples are riskySwaps, boost kits, and cut wiring can hide poor work; stock, documented cars are safer buys.
  • Rust on older generationsEG/EK/EF and earlier can rust at quarters, floors, and subframes; repairs quickly exceed value.
  • Theft and fraud exposureOlder hatches/coupes are theft targets; VIN swaps and salvage rebuilds require extra diligence.
  • CVT maintenance sensitivityNeglected CVT fluid changes can lead to shudder and failure; service history matters greatly.
  • 1.5T oil dilution concernsSome 10th-gen 1.5T cars in cold/short-trip use show fuel dilution; verify updates and habits.
  • Type R pricing volatilityFK8/FL5 premiums can swing with supply and hype; overpay risk is real without comps.
  • Road noise in some trimsEconomy-focused trims can have higher NVH and thinner tires; touring trims improve this.
  • Insurance can be higherSi/Type R and older theft-prone gens can carry higher premiums than rivals.

Who Should NOT Buy This

  • Anyone who won't service CVT fluid every 25-30k
  • Short-trip drivers in cold climates (1.5T dilution)
  • Buyers expecting luxury-level cabin quiet
  • People who ignore rustproofing in salt states
  • Those needing AWD for snow or steep driveways
  • Drivers wanting strong towing capability
  • Owners who won't run premium parts/fluids
  • Anyone buying a heavily modded/tuned example
  • People who can't budget for AC system repairs
  • Drivers who hate infotainment glitches/updates
  • Those needing 3 adults in back regularly
  • Buyers who can't do frequent oil checks
  • Anyone needing high ground clearance
  • People who want a 'set and forget' turbo (1.5T)
  • Emissions-strict areas if car has any exhaust mods

Common Issues & Solutions

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.

IssueCauseSolutionEst. Cost
CVT judder/early failureNeglected HCF-2 fluid; belt/pulley wearDrain/fill x3; if persists, rebuild/replace CVT$300-4500
Manual 2nd/3rd synchro grindWorn synchros; aggressive shifting/low fluidFluid change; if grinding persists, trans rebuild$120-2500
Clutch slip or chatterWorn disc/pressure plate; oil contaminationReplace clutch kit; inspect rear main seal$900-2000
1.5T fuel dilution in oilShort trips/cold climate; DI enrichment strategy5k oil changes; longer drives; update ECU if avail$80-250
1.5T head gasket failureThermal stress/boost; detonation; cooling issuesReplace head gasket; machine head; update cooling$2200-4500
AC condenser leakThin condenser; stone damage; known weak designReplace condenser; evac/recharge; add screen$600-1200
AC compressor shaft seal leakSeal wear; contamination; low oil/refrigerantReplace compressor; flush; new drier; recharge$1200-2200
Intercooler icing/stumble (1.5T)Condensation in intercooler in cold humid tempsUpdated parts/TSB; drain; change driving pattern$0-800
DI intake valve carbon buildupDirect injection; short trips; low-quality fuelWalnut blast intake valves; add catch can optional$400-900
Timing chain stretch/rattlePoor oil maintenance; low oil; high mileageReplace chain/tensioner/guides; verify oiling$900-1800
Engine mount collapseRubber hydraulic mount wear; torque loadsReplace mounts; avoid cheap aftermarket mounts$250-900
EPS rack/column clunkInternal lash; bushing wear; torque sensor issuesReplace rack or column; align; update software$900-2200
Wheel bearing hummingBearing wear; impact damage; water intrusionReplace hub/bearing assembly; torque to spec$250-650
Brake caliper slide seizureDry slide pins; torn boots; road saltService slides; replace caliper if seized$150-600
Warped rotors/pulsationPad deposits from overheating; cheap rotorsQuality rotors/pads; proper bed-in procedure$250-700
VSA/ABS light (wheel sensor)Wheel speed sensor failure; tone ring corrosionReplace sensor; clean/replace tone ring if needed$200-700
Sunroof drain leaksClogged drains; disconnected drain tubesClear drains; reseat tubes; dry interior thoroughly$100-500
Infotainment freezing/rebootsSoftware bugs; failing head unit; weak batteryUpdate firmware; load test battery; replace unit$0-1200
Door lock actuator failureMotor wear; moisture intrusionReplace actuator; verify latch alignment$200-500
Window regulator slow/failsCable wear; dry channels; motor wearReplace regulator/motor; lube window channels$250-600
Rust at rockers/jack pointsRoad salt; clogged drains; poor prior repairsCut/weld metal; undercoat; avoid filler-only fixes$800-4000
Rear subframe corrosionSalt exposure; neglected underbody washingReplace subframe/arms; align; rustproof annually$1200-3500
Brake line corrosion leaksSalt; aged coating; trapped moistureReplace hard lines; bleed system; inspect all lines$600-2000
Misfire under loadWorn plugs/coils; injector issues; carbon buildupPlugs/coils; injector clean; walnut blast if DI$150-1200
Catalyst efficiency codesAging cat; oil burning; exhaust leaks upstreamFix oil use/leaks; replace cat with OEM-quality$400-2200
Oil consumption (some engines)Ring wear; PCV issues; extended oil intervalsPCV service; compression test; rebuild if severe$50-3500
Cooling fan failureFan motor wear; relay failure; connector heatReplace fan assembly/relay; verify temp switch logic$250-700

Differences between JDM & USDM

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

Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist

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.

Critical Priority

High Priority

Medium Priority

Low Priority

Generation History

1st Gen (SB1/SB2) (1972-1979)

  • Lightweight economy icon; simple carb engines
  • Early CVCC tech improved emissions and MPG
  • Collector niche; rust is the main killer

2nd Gen (SL/SS/SR) (1980-1983)

  • More space and refinement; still very light
  • CVCC continued; strong economy reputation
  • Survivors rare; originality drives value

3rd Gen (EF) (1984-1987)

  • Crisp hatch styling; huge tuner following
  • Si trims appear; early EFI becomes common
  • Rust and wiring age are common issues

4th Gen (ED/EE/EF) (1988-1991)

  • Double-wishbone front; sharp handling baseline
  • Si/CRX era overlap; strong aftermarket support
  • Clean, unmodified cars now premium

5th Gen (EG) (1992-1995)

  • Golden-era chassis; double-wishbone all around
  • VTEC performance trims; iconic hatch/coupe
  • Rust and theft risk; mods affect value heavily

6th Gen (EK/EM1) (1996-2000)

  • Refined EG formula; strong daily+track balance
  • US Si (EM1) becomes a blue-chip modern classic
  • B-series swaps common; stock examples premium

7th Gen (ES/EP) (2001-2005)

  • More comfort; some models lose double-wishbone
  • EP3 Si hatch (K20) becomes enthusiast pick
  • Auto trans and interior wear are common

8th Gen (FA/FG/FD) (2006-2011)

  • Modern design; strong economy and reliability
  • Si gets K20Z3; high-rev character
  • Clearcoat and cracked dashboards seen

9th Gen (FB/FG) (2012-2015)

  • More mature; improved NVH and comfort
  • Si uses K24; torque up, revs down
  • Early model criticism; later refresh improved

10th Gen (FC/FK) (2016-2021)

  • Turbo era: 1.5T/2.0 NA; big efficiency gains
  • Type R FK8 becomes global benchmark
  • 1.5T oil dilution concerns in cold climates

11th Gen (FE/FL) (2022-Present)

  • Cleaner design; improved chassis and interior
  • Type R FL5: limited supply, strong premiums
  • Hybrid (non-US early) boosts efficiency abroad
From JDMBUYSELL

Find a verified JDM dealer near you

View dealers

Market Data

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.

Production Numbers & Rarity

VariantYearsUnits builtNotes
EK9 Type R (Japan)1997–200011,375JDM only; red Type R badges
EK9 Type R (EDM)1997–20018,000European market; different spec

Rarest variant: Civic Type R Mugen

Motorsport Heritage

B16B: highest-revving Honda production engine (8,400 rpm)EK9 Type R: 1 per dealer allocation in Japan
SeriesYearsResultCar
British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) - support/production class1997–2000Class participation; Civic platform used in production-class eventsHonda Civic (EK-era)

Sources: BTCC historical records

Original MSRP & Pricing

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.

How It Compares

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.

FeatureFD2Toyota Corolla E210Mazda3 BP
Base powerCivic 2.0 NA: 158 hpCorolla 2.0: 169 hpMazda3 2.5: 191 hp
Turbo powerCivic 1.5T: 174-180 hpElantra 1.6T: 201 hpJetta 1.5T: 158 hp
Performance trimCivic Si: ~200 hpElantra N: 276 hpGTI: 241 hp
Halo model powerType R: 306-315 hpGR Corolla: 300 hp AWDWRX: 271 hp AWD
Drivetrain layoutFWD (most); Type R FWDAWD (GR Corolla)AWD (WRX)
Transmission6MT (Si/Type R); CVT/auto6MT/8DCT (Elantra N)6MT/DSG (GTI)
Fuel economy focusStrong MPG; light footprintHybrid leader optionEfficient but pricier
Reliability perceptionHigh; broad parts supportHigh; hybrid provenGood; more complex turbo/DCT
Used value retentionAbove average; Si/Type R strongStrong; less enthusiast premiumGTI varies by maintenance
Tuner ecosystemMassive (EG/EK/K-series/Type R)Strong but smallerGrowing; warranty-sensitive
Track durabilityType R excellent; Si goodVery strong; cooling robustStrong; AWD heat management
Cabin spaceClass-leading rear legroom (many gens)Good; more conservativeTighter rear; upscale feel
Ride/handling balanceBest-in-class steering feel (often)Comfort-first tuningSporty chassis benchmark

Comparable Alternatives

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.

Toyota Corolla

Reliability-first compact; hybrid option; lower theft risk

Mazda3

More premium cabin; strong NA power; sharp handling

VW Golf GTI

Hot-hatch torque and DSG option; higher upkeep but fast

Hyundai Elantra N

Track-ready value; big power; DCT option; firmer ride

Subaru WRX

AWD traction and tuning; higher fuel use; rally vibe

In Pictures

Honda Civic Type R EK9
Honda Civic Type R EK9
Honda Civic — JDMBUYSELL ultimate guide hero image
Honda Civic — the editorial article hero image from the original JDMBUYSELL guide.FlickrImage by Gábor Lengyel
Honda Civic in white, side three-quarter view
Stock-appearing Honda Civic in white — representative of the clean-driver demographic that holds value today.EditorialImage by JDMBUYSELL editorial
1000-horsepower Honda Civic built by humbleperformance
1000-horsepower Civic build by humbleperformance — illustrative of the extreme end of the B-series and K-series tuning ceiling.Third partyImage by humbleperformance
From JDMBUYSELL

Browse JDM listings from dealers and private sellers worldwide

Browse all listings

The Buyer's Read

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.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Civic generations are best for enthusiasts?
Top picks: EG/EK for light chassis, EP3/8th Si for K-series, and FK8/FL5 Type R for track capability.
What trims hold value the best?
Si and Type R lead. Clean, stock EM1 Si, EP3, 8th Si, and FK8/FL5 command the strongest premiums.
What are the biggest red flags when buying used?
Avoid heavy mods, poor wiring, rust, missing VIN tags, salvage titles, and no maintenance records—especially on CVT cars.
Is the Civic CVT reliable?
Generally yes if serviced. Prioritize documented CVT fluid changes and smooth engagement; shudder or flare is a warning sign.
What about 10th-gen 1.5T oil dilution?
Some cold/short-trip use can cause fuel dilution. Look for dealer updates, consistent oil changes, and owners who drove longer trips.
Are older Civics good collector cars now?
Yes in the right spec. Stock, rust-free EG/EK/EM1 cars are increasingly collectible; modified examples trade at discounts.
How do Civic Si and Type R differ for buyers?
Si is the daily sweet spot (cost, comfort, fun). Type R is track-focused with higher running costs and stronger resale.
What should I budget for maintenance and repairs?
Base Civics are low-cost. Budget more for Type R tires/brakes, and for older cars expect suspension, bushings, and rust mitigation.

12 sources cited below

Sources & References

Sources (12)
  1. Honda Civic — model overview (article source) — JDMBUYSELLVerified
  2. Honda Civic — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  3. Honda Civic Type R — generation-by-generation overview — WikipediaVerified
  4. Honda B engine family — B16A, B16B, B18C technical reference — WikipediaVerified
  5. Honda K engine family — K20A technical reference — WikipediaVerified
  6. Honda D engine family — D-series reference for non-Type R Civics — WikipediaVerified
  7. Honda Civic (sixth generation) — EK chassis including EK9 Type R — WikipediaVerified
  8. Honda Civic (seventh generation) — EP chassis including EP3 Type R — WikipediaVerified
  9. Honda Civic (eighth generation) — FD/FN chassis including FD2 and FN2 Type R — WikipediaVerified
  10. Honda Civic Type R — Japanese encyclopedic overview — Wikipedia (Japanese)Verified
  11. Honda Civic Type R — Bring a Trailer auction archive — Bring a TrailerVerified
  12. Honda-Tech — model-specific owner and tuning forums — Honda-TechVerified

Sources last verified:

Market & demand on JDMBUYSELL

Reported sold prices and buyer-inquiry trend for the Honda Civic FD2 on the JDMBUYSELL marketplace.

Source:/api/market-data/honda/civic/fd2.json· Sold prices aggregated from listings marked sold by private-party sellers on JDMBUYSELL — seller-reported, not verified hammer prices. Inquiry counts are distinct buyer-to-seller conversations referencing at least one listing for this chassis.

Report a correction

Spotted something wrong on this page? Tell us and we'll review.