The Fiat 500 city car’s consistently strong value as a used vehicle has secured it an historic overall win in Cap HPI’s first ever data-driven Used Car of the Year Awards.
The affordable Italian hatchback landed the used car valuations expert’s top accolade after securing victory in its ‘city car’ category, with Mercedes’ V-Class MPV gaining a Highly Commended award as the German carmaker joined Toyota in each landing a brace of category wins in the inaugural event.
Trophies are now being etched to officially recognise the prolonged appeal of OEMs’ award-winning models in the awards run in partnership with AM and its sister title Fleet News.
Cap HPI’s award winners were determined by residual value performance linked to new car registration volumes to ensure they reward market segment winners that “truly performed the best” over the course of 2022.
And Cap HPI director of valuations Derren Martin said: “There were some truly impressive performances in there and it is great to see the winning cars, that the market data dictates are the best out there, gaining awards.
“The Fiat 500 represents great value to buyers and its win in the inaugural Cap HPI Used Car of the Year awards is testament to its constant appeal among buyers searching for an affordable city car.”
Here is the full list of category winners and the rationale for their win:
City Car category and overall Cap HPI Car of the Year winner – Fiat 500
Supermini – VW Polo
Lower Medium – Toyota Corolla
Upper Medium – VW Passat
Executive – Mercedes-Benz E-Class
MPV – Mercedes-Benz V-Class
SUV – Toyota C-HR
Battery Electric – Hyundai Kona
Cap HPI said the methodology enabled it to determine which models had performed the best in terms of used values, without giving undue weight to vehicles which are only available in very low volumes.
The awards launch comes in a year that saw used car values stabilise after a record 29% rise in 2021.
In 2022 Cap HPI’s data showed that the average used car declined by just 3.1% in value at its benchmark three years, 60,000-mile benchmark.
The period ended with a widely publicised decline in used electric vehicle (EV) values, as production volumes began to recover, and consumer demand softened as a result of rising energy bills.
Martin said: “The team at Cap HPI spend every day analysing live market data to deliver the most accurate vehicle valuations to the market and we think there’s real value in crunching the numbers to run an annual awards event.”