Are Hybrid Cars Worth It?
Is a gas-electric hybrid vehicle worth buying? Well, that’s a matter of personal preference. From a cost standpoint, though, many hybrids do pay back their price premiums over the course of a few years.
Government Incentives and Tax Breaks for Hybrid Vehicles
Today, there are north of 200 variants of gas-electric hybrids sold in the U.S. for the 2025 model year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. This list contains a variety of cars, from the Ford F-150 to the parallel-hybrid Prius. The EPA’s list is broken out to every possible trim (for instance, the front-wheel drive Honda CR-V hybrid and the all-wheel drive versions each count as individual variants). We’re ignoring vehicles that the EPA labels “mild hybrids,” whose small electric motor largely serves the function of a start-stop system.
Unlike their plug-in-hybrid (PHEV) peers, run-of-the-mill hybrids are not eligible for the federal government’s electric vehicle incentives, an incentive that currently only applies to the somewhat confusingly named Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid and is set to phase out in the coming months. Even so, interest in hybrids continues to climb, and the options available to consumers today span nearly every vehicle size, category, and price point.
Making the Decision: Is a Hybrid Car Right for You?
For compact and mid-size cars and SUVs, a hybrid option is usually worth the additional upfront cost over their gas-only counterparts. Take Honda, which offers hybrid versions of popular models like the Civic compact sedan and CR-V compact SUV. In each case, going the hybrid route adds a couple of thousand dollars to the bottom line. Still, the percentage increase in price is a comparative fraction of the estimated percentage increase in fuel efficiency these vehicles return. And in each instance, the hybrids even offer more overall power and torque (and standard equipment) than the entry-level four-cylinder engines that motivate the strictly gas-powered models.
For instance, the 2025 Civic Sport gasser stickers for $27,400, or $2700 less than the gas-electric Civic Sport Hybrid. Using the EPA combined rating of 34 mpg for the gas-only Civic Sport and the Civic Sport Hybrid’s 49 mpg nets an annual fuel savings of $400 per year by going the gas-electric route, according to the EPA. While individuals who rarely hold onto vehicles for more than a couple of years may be better off putting their money behind the gas-only Civic, those who hold onto their car for years will find the hybrid makes up for its initial upfront costs over the gas model in just over six years.
The gas-electric 2025 Ford Maverick, meanwhile, nets 38 mpg EPA combined in front-wheel-drive guise and 37 mpg with all-wheel drive. With a base price of $29,840, the front-drive Maverick hybrid actually undercuts the cheapest all-wheel-drive-only gas-powered Maverick by $125. Go apples to apples, though, by picking an all-wheel-drive Maverick hybrid, and you’re looking at a price premium of $2095. That sum to nab the little Ford pickup’s gas-electric powertrain represents about an 8 percent price increase over the gas-powered Maverick. But the hybrid’s 12 mpg greater EPA combined figure represents an almost 39 percent increase in fuel efficiency. In the case of the entry-level XL trim with all-wheel drive, the hybrid’s upcharge pays for itself after a little over three years when using the estimated annual fuel cost figures provided by the EPA.
Hybrid Car Maintenance
Maintaining a hybrid car is a lot like that of a gas one. That’s because there’s still a gas engine employed for propulsion. In other words, you’ll still need to regularly change your hybrid car’s engine oil and keep an eye on fluid levels.
Even so, the addition of an electric drive motor and the use of regenerative braking means the friction brake pads and rotors of hybrid vehicles tend to last longer than those of strictly gasoline-fed cars and trucks.
Run-of-the-mill hybrid battery packs generally have a low rate of failure because, unlike EV batteries, these packs are not deep-cycled (whereby the battery is fully charged, drained, and recharged regularly). Typically, hybrids keep their batteries at a relatively constant state of charge and temperature. Most automakers back their hybrid batteries for a minimum of eight years or 100,000 miles, which includes the inverter and computer modules.
Though replacing a hybrid’s battery pack is costly, it’s not always prohibitively so. RepairPal estimates the cost of parts and labor for a new battery pack in a 2012 Toyota Prius runs around $5000, or in the same ballpark as the cost of replacing the engine of a 2012 Toyota Corolla. That said, the larger unit in a 2012 Prius Plug-In Hybrid runs an estimated $10,000–$12,000. In either instance, that’s a lot less than the price of buying a new car.
Keep in mind, however, that the cost of replacing the battery pack of an out-of-warranty hybrid may exceed the actual value of the vehicle itself. If that’s the case, then you’re likely better off ditching your old hybrid and purchasing a new or used one instead.
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