toolbar powered by Conduit
Search
CPD banner

 

Tax & fuel calculator
 
 

Nissan Qashqai is best used car you can buy, say analysts

publication date: Dec 24, 2011
 | 
author/source: Robin Roberts
Download Print Send a summary of this page to someone via email.
The Nissan Qashqai has been voted ‘Used Car of the Year' for the 2nd year running by CAP, the UK's independent benchmark used car pricing experts.

Points were awarded by the judging panel based on CAP's criteria of excellence in  affordability and practicality of ownership, trusted reputation, retail popularity and innovative impact on motor industry.
Second hand value is first class for Qashqai

The Qashqai was chosen from a strong shortlist of Citroen DS3,  Vauxhall Zafira, Fiat 500, Ford Fiesta and Renault Clio.

Unlike other car awards, the CAP Used Car of the Year is designed to acknowledge all-round excellence from the perspective of everyone touched by the vehicle, including private owners, company car drivers, fleet operators and even used car dealers themselves.

The Qashqai scores highly in every area of CAP's judging criteria and delivers significant benefits to everyone in the chain of supply, from dealers to owners and drivers.

Judging panel chairman Mark Bulmer, Editor of CAP Black Book - the industry's independent benchmark guide to used car trade values - summed up the Qashqai's ongoing success as a used car saying,"It is a great all-rounder that is perfect for its purpose, delivering on style as well as practicality for the motorist and providing a great retail proposition for used car dealers."

The CAP panel noted that even on the question of depreciation, the Qashqai is a consistently strong proposition that tends to outperform the general market.


Download the Wheels Within Wales toolbar for your quickest way to keep in touch with everything that's happening on Welsh roads and in showrooms or use our RSS feed for the headlines you will not want to miss


toolbar powered by Conduit

 


Warranty direct gif file
 
Welsh travel services