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374 Honda CR-V cars for sale

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Discover your ideal used Honda CR-V from our wide network of quality Honda dealerships.

Honda CR-V2.0 i-MMD Hybrid EX 5dr eCVT

2023
12,340 miles
Hybrid

£29,300

or £396 mo
Good price
Delivery

*Representative example: Contract Length: 48 months, 47 Monthly Payments: £395.30, Customer Deposit: £4,395.00, Total Deposit: £4,395.00, Optional Final Payment: £16,540.00, Total Charge For Credit: £10,214.10, Total Amount Payable: £39,514.10, Representative APR: 12.90%, Interest Rate (Fixed): 12.87%, Excess Mileage Charge: 0.00ppm, Mileage Per Annum: 10,000

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About Honda CR-V cars on heycar

What is the most popular colour for Honda CR-V ?

Black

What is the most popular gearbox for Honda CR-V ?

Automatic

What is the most popular fuel type for Honda CR-V ?

Hybrid

What is the most popular engine for Honda CR-V ?

2.0

What is the average mileage for Honda CR-V ?

21092

How many Honda CR-V cars are available for sale?

348

Used Honda CR-V for sale: everything you need to know


Honda was one of the first companies to realise the potential of offering a vehicle that looked like an off-roader but drove more like a car, and launched the first Honda CR-V in 1995 to capitalise on it. The sixth generation CR-V launched in 2023, but we’re concentrating on the popular fifth-generation as a used model, sold between 2016 and 2022.


The CR-V’s practicality, comfort, and wide range of engines offered over the years mean there should be a little something for everyone, and the maker has an enviable reputation for reliability, so the CR-V makes a lot of sense for a vehicle you might be intending to hang onto for many years.


The Toyota RAV4 beat the original CR-V to market and that car is now in its fifth generation, and remains a compelling alternative to the Honda. Other road-biased SUVs you might consider include the Skoda Kodiaq and its VW Group cousins, the stylish Peugeot 5008, and the equally stylish Mazda CX-5.


Should you buy a Honda CR-V?


Honda clearly had foresight when it launched the original CR-V in 1995. Today, family SUVs like it virtually dominate the roads, and while the CR-V isn’t a best-seller in the UK it does huge numbers in countries like the United States. The fifth-generation car we’re looking at here was sold between 2016 and 2021, with a few facelifts and model updates along the way, and is a familiar sight on the used market.


Those updates over time were mostly to the CR-V’s engine range and to its equipment levels. Your budget will largely dictate which version you’ll be looking at, but in brief earlier cars were a mixture of turbocharged diesels and naturally-aspirated petrol engines, while a turbo petrol and a hybrid came in later, the hybrid eventually being the only model on sale.


All engines are refined, the hybrid in particular, even if the CVT automatic sees the revs rise and stay there under harder acceleration. When it’s not revving away you’ll likely get silence, with the electric motor doing most of the work at lower speeds. The ride quality is similarly relaxing and while some rivals offer a sharper drive, you may not mind for family use.


The interior is practical, and Honda is a master of rear seats that flip perfectly flat for a wide, open load area. It’s well-built too, another strong suit of the Japanese company. It’s a shame the infotainment system is a little dated, even in later models - and earlier models lack even more features.


As far as alternatives go, the Toyota RAV4 has long been the CR-V’s key rival. It too has mostly been offered as a hybrid for a while now and has similarly excellent reliability. The Mazda CX-5 is another sturdy SUV and is a little more entertaining to drive, while a Peugeot 5008 offers more style. The key players in this segment now though are the Volkswagen Tiguan Allspace, Skoda Kodiaq, and SEAT Tarraco - all feel high quality, drive well, and are usefully practical.


A Honda CR-V not for you? We've got 1000s of used cars for sale to suit all budgets and needs


What’s the best used Honda CR-V model to buy?


If you’re looking at later CR-V models then the hybrid makes the most sense, for its combination of performance and economy, and its slightly later Euro 6d emissions standards are likely to remain relevant for longer than the regular Euro 6 of earlier cars. Among those earlier models, the regular 1.6-litre diesel has decent performance and is frugal too, though you’ll need the more powerful model if you want all-wheel drive.


For specification, the mid-range SE and SR models probably make the most sense, though as a used buy, there’s no reason not to go for the high-spec EX or the Sport Line if you find a good deal.


Used Honda CR-V fuel economy and performance


  • Honda CR-V 1.5 VTEC Turbo: Offered from 2017 before being phased out in 2020, the turbocharged 1.5-litre petrol made 173PS in manual form and 193PS with the CVT automatic. The manual was still quicker, at 9.8 seconds versus 10 seconds from 0-62mph, and more frugal too at 36.2mpg to the CVT’s 32.5mpg, both on the later WLTP test.
  • Honda CR-V 1.6 i-DTEC 120: The 1.6-litre turbodiesel was offered from launch and dropped from the range in 2019. In its single-turbo form it made 120PS, and was front-wheel drive and manual only. 0-62mph took 11.2 seconds and did 64.2mpg combined on the older NEDC test cycle.
  • Honda CR-V 1.6 i-DTEC 160: Honda also offered a twin-turbocharged version of the 1.6 diesel, which made 160PS and was all-wheel drive, with manual and automatic gearbox options. The manual reached 0-62mph in 9.6 seconds and did 57.7mpg (NEDC) and the auto in 10 seconds and 55.4mpg.
  • Honda CR-V 2.0 i-VTEC: A conventional 2-litre petrol was offered between 2016 and 2019, in either front-drive manual, or all-wheel drive manual or auto forms. It made 155PS and in its lightest front-driven form, covered 0-62mph in 10 seconds. Combined NEDC economy for the same model was up to 39.2mpg.
  • Honda CR-V 2.0 i-MMD Hybrid: The only engine option in the CR-V from 2020 to the new model’s launch in 2022 (but offered from 2019), the 2-litre hybrid combined 145PS of engine power with 184PS from an electric motor, though no total system output was quoted. It was the quickest CR-V, with 0-62mph in 8.6 seconds in two-wheel drive form (all-wheel drive was available), while combined WLTP economy was 42.8mpg.


What used Honda CR-V trim levels are available?


Despite significant changes to the engine range over the years, Honda’s trim level names remained fairly consistent between 2016 and 2022. Actual equipment levels did vary, and the car’s look, feel and equipment levels were updated at each minor model change and facelift, but broadly speaking you’re looking at S badging for entry-level models and EX for top-of-the-range cars. For simplicity, we’re listing equipment for later 2020-on models below.

  • The Honda CR-V S was offered in front-wheel drive form only, and came with 18-inch alloy wheels, LED auto headlights, electrically adjustable and heated door mirrors, adaptive cruise control, keyless entry and start, fabric upholstery, manual height and electric lumbar driver seat adjustment, climate control, a 5-inch audio display screen with eight speaker audio, and a USB connection.
  • The Honda CR-V SE had front- and all-wheel drive options, auto wipers, dual-zone climate control, front and rear parking sensors, a rear-view camera, privacy glass, a leather steering wheel, a 7-inch touchscreen infotainment system with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, 9-speaker audio, and four USB inputs.
  • The Honda CR-V SR added roof rails, leather seats, heated front seats with electric lumbar adjustment and manual height adjustment, ambient lighting, and active cornering lights.
  • The Honda CR-V EX was offered in AWD only, and had a panoramic opening glass roof, a head-up display, heated steering wheel, rear heated seats, wireless charging, a hands-free power tailgate, and 8-way electric seat adjustment for the driver.
  • The Honda CR-V Sport Line was as-per SE trim (and front-wheel drive only), but added dark-painted 18-inch alloy wheels, black embossed leather trim, a sports exterior package, smoked rear lights, a dark wood-effect dashboard accent, and piano black interior door handles.


Used Honda CR-V dimensions and boot size


The Honda CR-V’s dimensions are:

  • Length: 4600mm
  • Width: 1855mm (without mirrors), 2117mm (with mirrors)
  • Height: 1679mm (1689mm AWD)

The Honda CR-V’s boot size is:

  • 589 litres (497 litres Hybrid)
  • 1146 litres with the rear seats folded (to window line, 1059 litres Hybrid)


Used Honda CR-V road tax


The fifth-generation CR-V wasn’t expensive enough (unlike the latest version) to attract a Vehicle Excise Duty surcharge, so for all versions registered after April 2017 you’ll be looking at a flat rate of VED: either £170 per year for hybrids, or £180 per year for the petrol and diesel models. Prior to this date, VED was based on CO2 emissions, making the front-wheel drive 1.6 diesel cheapest with its 115g/km, only £35 per year at current rates.


How much is it to insure a Honda CR-V?


Among the latest hybrid models, the cheapest CR-V to insure is the basic S-trim model, in group 22. While this is more expensive than some equivalents - an entry-level Ford Kuga starts in group 10 - it also doesn’t go up much with higher trim levels, topping out at group 24 in EX trim, or group 25 with the 1.5 turbo, also in EX trim.


Read our full Honda CR-V review