Best & worst years to buy a used Honda Accord

Not every Honda Accord is created equal — the same model can have a very different track record depending on the year. Using official NHTSA owner-complaint data, here's how each Honda Accord model year we track stacks up, cleanest to worst.

Honda Accord — used car reliability by year
Representative photo of a Honda Accord. Credit: Bull-Doser via Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).
Cleanest record ✓209 owner complaints · 4 recalls
Most complaints ⚠1,787 owner complaints · 6 recalls
Read this as a starting signal, not a verdict. Complaint volume is also driven by how many were sold and how old the car is. A first-year redesign often shows the most complaints. Always check the exact VIN and get a pre-purchase inspection.

Every Honda Accord year, ranked

Owner complaints and recalls on file with NHTSA for each model year. Click any year for its full free report.

YearComplaint volumeComplaintsRecalls
2013
1,417 5
2014
969 4
2015
592 5
2016
587 4
2017
523 3
2018 Avoid
1,787 6
2019
643 6
2020
334 5
2021 Best pick
209 4

Check a specific Honda Accord

Model-level data tells you what to expect; a VIN check tells you what actually happened to that car. Both are free.

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Frequently asked

What is the best year to buy a used Honda Accord?

Among the model years we track, the 2021 Honda Accord has the fewest owner complaints on file with NHTSA (209). Complaint volume isn't the whole story — always check the specific VIN and get an inspection — but it's a strong starting signal for the cleanest year.

Which Honda Accord year should I avoid?

The 2018 Honda Accord has the most owner complaints in our data (1,787). That partly reflects how many were sold and how long they've been on the road, so treat it as a "look harder here" flag rather than an automatic no.

How many recalls does the Honda Accord have?

Recall counts vary by year — see the table above, where each year links to its full recall and complaint report. Recall repairs are free at a franchised dealer, so always ask the seller whether the work was completed.

← See all models ranked by reliability

Data source: U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA.gov). Informational only — not mechanical or purchase advice.