AutoDeal Canada

Honda Accord 2016 for sale

1 vehicles available

Average Price

$17Β 889

From

$17Β 889

Listings

1

Frequently Asked Questions

01

How does the 2023+ Accord Hybrid compare to the Toyota Camry Hybrid for Canadian buyers?

Both vehicles return approximately 5.4 to 5.8 L/100 km in mixed use and both use two-motor hybrid systems. The Accord wins on driving engagement β€” sharper steering, more communicative chassis, and a suspension tune that rewards confident cornering. The Camry wins on long-term reliability track record (the HSD system has now accumulated 20+ years of Canadian data) and slightly more conservative styling that appeals to buyers who want the car to disappear into the background. The Accord's rear seat is class-leading for legroom. Resale values are roughly equivalent. For drivers who care about how the car feels to drive, the Accord is the better choice; for maximum predictability over a 12-year ownership horizon, the Camry holds a narrow edge.

02

Is the Accord 1.5L turbo from 2018-2022 a reliable used buy today?

Yes, with one caveat. The early 2017-2018 CR-V and Accord 1.5L turbos built for cold climates showed fuel dilution in the crankcase during short winter trips where the engine rarely reached full operating temperature. Honda Canada extended the powertrain warranty to six years/unlimited kilometres on affected VINs and released a calibration update. Post-update vehicles have shown no recurring issues. When evaluating a used 2018-2019 Accord 1.5T, confirm the update was applied through a Honda dealer record check and smell the dipstick immediately after pulling it β€” any strong gasoline odour signals a deeper inspection is needed before purchase.

03

Which Accord trim offers the best used-market value in 2026?

The Sport Hybrid or Touring from the 2021-2022 model year represents the sweet spot: the hybrid powertrain, Honda Sensing across all trims, wireless CarPlay, a 10.2-inch touchscreen and heated front seats, available in the used market at approximately 15-25% below original MSRP. The Touring adds a heads-up display, Bose 12-speaker audio and heated rear seats β€” worthwhile if the price gap is under $3,000. For the eleventh-generation (2023+), most examples still trade near new-car money on the used market. If budget is the primary constraint, the 2020-2022 Sport 2.0T is a rewarding driver's car at accessible used pricing.

04

Does the Accord hold up well as a daily driver on Canadian winter roads?

The Accord is front-wheel drive, which positions it behind AWD alternatives on unplowed rural roads but ahead of rear-wheel-drive competitors in practically every winter scenario. Equipped with four dedicated winter tires, the Accord handles Ontario and Quebec winter commuting without drama β€” the 14.7 cm ground clearance manages well-maintained city streets and typical suburban driveways. The Accord's weight distribution (approximately 60/40 front to rear) gives it stable, predictable handling on icy highways. For buyers who regularly drive unpaved cottage roads or park in outdoor lots that see overnight snowfall, AWD makes life easier. For urban and suburban Canadian use, winter tires on an FWD Accord cover the vast majority of scenarios.

05

Why does the Accord maintain such strong resale value compared to German mid-size sedans?

Honda's engineering philosophy β€” high-tolerance manufacturing, proven powertrain designs tested over multiple generations, and conservative technology adoption β€” produces vehicles that hold value precisely because the cost of ownership is predictable. A third-owner Accord at 180,000 km does not frighten informed buyers the way a same-vintage BMW 5 Series or Mercedes E-Class does. The hybrid powertrain has now proven itself across two Honda generations in Canada with minimal battery degradation reports. Combine that with dealer network density β€” Honda dealers exist in virtually every Canadian city above 20,000 population β€” and the resale arithmetic is straightforward.