2000 Ford Focus 25/34
1999 Chevrolet Metro 34/42
1998 Hyundai Accent 28/36
1997 Daewoo Lanos 23/33
1996 Toyota Camry 23/31
1995 Mustang Coupe 20/30
1994 Ford Escort 26/34
1993 Ford Festiva 30/38
1992 Mitsubishi Mirage 27/33
1991 Nissan Sentra 25/35
1990 Honda CRX 24/30
Honda Civic Honda Civic Hybrid Prius Nissan Versa Toyota Corolla
Some cars that get 30 miles per gallon include the Ford Focus, Chevrolet Cruze and the Acura ILX Hybrid. Each car considered is 201r3. Other years may also get the same gas rate.
At 30 mpg, a little over 6 gallons. At 20 mpg, a little over 9 gallons.
Modern cars can provide the driver 30-40 mpg. Also, in today's economy, it is a better investment to buy a car with higher fuel efficiency.
Top 5 Most Fuel Efficient American Cars: Ford Escape Hybrid – 36 mpg city / 31 mpg highway Chevy Aveo – 26 mpg city / 35 mpg highway Ford Focus – 26 mpg city / 34 mpg highway Chevy Cobalt – 25 mpg city / 34 mpg highway Ford Fusion – 24 mpg city / 32 mpg highway Top 5 Most Fuel Efficient Japanese Cars: Honda Insight – 60 mpg city / 66 mpg highway Toyota Prius – 60 mpg city / 51 mpg highway Honda Civic Hybrid – 49 mpg city / 51 highway Toyota Corolla – 32 mpg city / 41 mpg highway Toyota Matrix – 30 mpg city / 36 mpg highway
Typically a "fuel-efficient" car will get at least an average of 30 MPG. Anything below that is not considered fuel-efficient. Anything under 20 MPG is labeled a "gas guzzler."
30 mpg
Unfortunately, it remains below 20 MPG and is only slowly advancing toward the acceptable point of 30 MPG. Routine maintenance lapses most often leads to increased fuel consumption, as does training to drive efficiently,
10-15mpg 50 years ago. However, 25 years ago, cars got 30+mpg quite easily....
30 mpg = 7.841 L/100km
30 -35 mpg
30 mpg hwy