2017 Honda Fit — Carivo review Representative photo — may show another model year
Hatchback

2017 Honda Fit

Independent review & score by Carivo

Price Range $15,322–$19,927
Fuel Economy 27 MPG
Seating 5 passengers
Category Hatchback
Est. Annual Fuel $1,944/yr
The 2017 Honda Fit scores 7.6/10 at Carivo, ranking #29 of 99 hatchbacks and an estimated $1,944/year fuel cost.

Key Specifications — 2017 Honda Fit

Engine1.5L 4-Cylinder
TransmissionAutomatic (AV-S7)
DrivetrainFront-Wheel Drive
Fuel TypeRegular
City / Hwy MPG32 / 37 MPG
Combined MPG34 MPG
Est. Annual Fuel Cost$1,850
CO₂ Emissions260 g/mi
Seating Capacity5 passengers
Body StyleHatchback
Base Price$15,322–$19,927

Source: EPA FuelEconomy.gov & manufacturer data. Figures reflect base trim; actual specs vary by trim level.

About the 2017 Honda Fit

Our scoring places the 2017 Honda Fit at 7.6/10 overall, which translates to a Recommended rating for this hatchback. Its strongest dimension is Reliability at 8.6/10, while Performance at 6.3/10 is where it trails the competition most noticeably. It's a solid all-rounder that delivers across most dimensions without obvious deal-breakers.

Reliability and safety are the two dimensions that matter most for long-term ownership costs. At 8.6/10, reliability is one of this hatchback's best cards — few vehicles in our database score higher on this dimension. The safety score of 7.7/10 is solid mid-pack territory. If advanced driver aids matter to you, compare standard equipment carefully and verify ratings at nhtsa.gov.

Performance at 6.3/10 is a genuine liability and a score that should factor heavily into any buying decision. The powertrain and chassis dynamics trail class rivals by a meaningful margin — don't overlook it. Technology scores 6.8/10 — the infotainment and driver-assist features feel dated against current-generation rivals. This is worth weighing if you prioritize connected features or modern safety tech.

Priced from $15,322–$19,927, 27 MPG, seating 5, the Honda Fit sits in the budget-friendly tier of the hatchback market. Value is where it presses its advantage — 8.0/10, meaning the feature set and quality outrun the asking price. At 9 years old, resale value, parts availability, and whether a successor model has improved on its weak points are all worth investigating before committing.

Our take: The 2017 Honda Fit is a solid, well-rounded hatchback that covers the essentials without obvious deal-breakers. The main caveat is technology and performance — worth checking if those dimensions are priorities for you. For most buyers in this segment, it's a safe, dependable choice.

Carivo scores are our own editorial assessment, informed by NHTSA safety and recall records, EPA fuel-economy figures, and manufacturer-published specifications. Scores are reviewed periodically and updated when new data becomes available. See our full methodology →

How It Ranks Among Hatchbacks

The 2017 Honda Fit ranks #29 of 99 hatchbacks in the Carivo database — better than 72% of the segment. Its 7.6/10 overall score is 0.2 points above the segment average of 7.4/10. Its $15,322 starting price undercuts the segment's median of $23,280 by about 34%.

Rankings are recalculated as new vehicles and scores are added. See the full Hatchback ranking →

5-Year Cost Snapshot — 2017 Honda Fit

Fuel (75,000 miles)~$9,720 ($1,944/year at $3.50/gal)
InsuranceVaries widely by driver and state — always quote the exact trim before buying

We only print costs we can compute from sourced data (EPA fuel economy, NHTSA recalls). We don't estimate maintenance or depreciation — anyone who gives you one number for those is guessing.

Which Fit Year Should You Buy?

Across the Fit model years we've scored, the 2017 holds its position — we didn't find an older year that delivers similar scores for meaningfully less money.

YearScoreStarting price (MSRP when new)
2020 7.8/10$17,067 Read review →
2019 7.7/10$16,485 Read review →
2018 7.6/10$15,903 Read review →
2017 (this review) 7.6/10$15,322
2016 7.6/10$14,740 Read review →
2015 7.5/10$14,158 Read review →

Pros & Cons — 2017 Honda Fit

✓ What it does well

  • Proven long-term reliability — lower unplanned repair costs than class average
  • Strong safety ratings from NHTSA and independent testers
  • Good overall value; holds its own against pricier alternatives in the segment
  • Accessible entry price makes it one of the more affordable options in the category

✗ Where it falls short

  • Performance is a genuine liability — well below class rivals and worth factoring into any decision
  • Tech suite is functional but lags behind segment-best options; some features cost extra

Common Questions — 2017 Honda Fit

Is the 2017 Honda Fit reliable?

We rate the 2017 Honda Fit's reliability 8.6/10 — one of the stronger records in its class.

Is the 2017 Honda Fit worth buying?

It scores 7.6/10 overall, ranking #29 of 99 hatchbacks in our database (better than 72% of the segment). A solid choice for most buyers — compare it against the segment leaders before deciding.

How much does the 2017 Honda Fit cost?

The 2017 Honda Fit starts at $15,322 and ranges up to $19,927 across trims (MSRP when new). At 27 MPG, expect roughly $1,944/year in fuel at 15,000 miles/year.

Which Fit years should you avoid?

No standout weak years: across the 6 Fit model years we've scored, every year lands within half a point of the best (7.8/10). Pick on price and condition rather than year.

Owner Essentials — Honda Fit

Practical extras owners actually buy. These are Amazon search links — as an Amazon Associate, Carivo earns from qualifying purchases at no cost to you.

All-weather floor mats → Dash cam → OBD2 scanner → Phone mount →

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More Honda Reviews

Explore the full lineup of Honda models scored by Carivo — ranked by overall score across reliability, safety, value, performance, and technology.