2009 Honda Fit: The Fuel Economy Test Drive

2009 Honda Fit

The 2009 Honda Fit five-door sport is indeed go. I had a Revolution Orange number this week, and I tooled around town quite happily. There was enough punch for merging onto the highway, and it was as easy to park as a Mini Cooper. It was also impossible to park it in, though a UPS truck tried its hardest outside the coffee shop. Those short, rounded front corners can skirt just about anything.

The test car I had was fitted with a nav system that flipped open to reveal the slot for the CD player. Creature comforts were few, but it did have power windows and door locks. I’m not sure the little wing at the top of the hatchback kept the rear tires stuck to the road, but it added to the car’s sporty looks.

Surprisingly, the car didn’t live up to its EPA fuel economy estimates while it was in my hands. I’m not a crazed driver, but I also didn’t make an effort to drive in a fuel-friendly way (the Fit doesn’t have the eco-nanny feature that the new Insight has). There was an mpg minder in the dash, but it was small and I didn’t pay a whole lot of attention to it.

Honda Fit Speedo and MPG

After a week of mostly in-town driving, I got 22.1 mpg. The EPA estimates the car a 27 mpg city, 33 highway. I fell far short of its combined rating of 30 mpg, probably thanks to the 30-minute traffic jam I ran into outside Adidas headquarters. All that idling wrecked my mileage.

  • 2009 Honda Fit Sport
  • As tested, $19,430, including destination charge
  • 1.5L gasoline engine rated 27 mpg city, 33 mpg highway
  • 6.1 tons of carbon dioxide emitted annually

Images by Kristen Hall-Geisler.

This car was provided for review by the manufacturer at no cost to the reviewer.

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  1. hank’s avatar

    i have a 2009 fit. as you noted, in-town driving fuel efficiency isn’t very good at all….. but add a little space between traffic lights and things improve a lot.

    in my first 5000 miles, i’ve averaged 31 mpg…. and that includes 42 traffic lights on my daily round-trip commute.

    with the winter cold easing here in nj., general gas mileage has also gone up.

  2. khg’s avatar

    I’m sure that not crawling along at 5 mph for half an hour would have helped my overall mileage. That traffic jam was a fluke; I wonder if my mpgs would have been similar to yours without it?

    Kristen Hall-Geisler
    GoodGreenCars.com