Looking At Buying an 8 Year Old Hybrid

Asked by TikPandora Aug 20, 2019 at 07:52 PM about the 2011 Ford Fusion Hybrid FWD

Question type: Shopping & Pricing

So, I'm looking to buy a new car and a local
dealership just got in two 2011 Ford Fusion
Hybrids. I don't have a lot of extra cash and the
$8500 asking price is quite eye-catching with
40,000 miles each. I've heard horror stories about
Hybrid batteries and don't really have $2500 to
spend within the next few years. Is the battery
thing overhyped, or am I crazy for even looking at
them?

1 Answer

700

It might have happened already, and/or will happen within the next year, The car's High voltage batter counter age will approach the 9 year mark. The system which controls the Hybrid powertrain to have the car run properly in EV mode, will become non-existent. Forcing the gasoline engine to come on more frequently, which basically becomes more like a regular car. This issue can be fixed, by resetting the battery age counter with an IDS tool from the dealership, or you cen perform the fix yourself. The problem is, not many dealers know about this issue or refuses to do the fix. Since you are buying the car from them, tell them to reset the battery age to 1 year or 0 year. So the car functions on EV mode as the vehicle is designed for many more years, Here is the link on how to fix this issue: https://www.fordfusionforum.com/topic/19361-my-instructions-on-restoring-the-hybrid-ev- function-on-the-ford-fusion-hybrid-approaching-the-89-years-mark/ Good luck

1 people found this helpful.

Your Answer:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    GuruL5TQM
    Reputation
    890
  • #2
    Allen Chan
    Reputation
    700
  • #3
    Árpád Kun
    Reputation
    600
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Ford Fusion
30 Great Deals out of 446 listings starting at $3,900
Used Toyota Camry Hybrid
11 Great Deals out of 200 listings starting at $7,990
Used Ford Escape Hybrid
14 Great Deals out of 680 listings starting at $7,990
Used Toyota Prius
14 Great Deals out of 196 listings starting at $2,028
Used Toyota Camry
44 Great Deals out of 1,134 listings starting at $4,795
Used Honda Accord
57 Great Deals out of 961 listings starting at $2,995
Used Honda Civic
192 Great Deals out of 4,047 listings starting at $440
Used Hyundai Elantra
164 Great Deals out of 3,045 listings starting at $1,995
Used Hyundai Sonata Hybrid
11 Great Deals out of 91 listings starting at $5,995
Used Ford F-150
325 Great Deals out of 13,693 listings starting at $3,800

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.