The largest consumer survey among car owners, American Consumer Reports, has named BMW the best car brand.

Subaru, Mini, Lexus and Honda also made top five. And at the bottom we find Jaguar, Jeep and Land Rover.

BMW is usually at the top when Consumer Reports presents its annual ranking of car brands (third last year). But 2023 is actually the first time that the German brand ends up at the very top.

The ranking itself is based on four factors in which the brands are rated. It is about safety, reliability, rigorous test drives and customer satisfaction. The latter point is based on surveys where Consumer Report’s members were asked if they would consider buying a car from the same brand again if given the chance.

Consumer Reports rankinglist 2023:

  1. BMW
  2. Subaru
  3. Mini
  4. Lexus
  5. Honda
  6. Toyota
  7. Genesis
  8. Mazda
  9. Audi
  10. Kia
  11. Acura
  12. Buick
  13. Hyundai
  14. Porsche
  15. Dodge
  16. Lincoln
  17. Tesla
  18. Infiniti
  19. Volkswagen
  20. Volvo
  21. Nissan
  22. Ford
  23. Ford
  24. Chevrolet
  25. Chrysler
  26. Mercedes
  27. GMC
  28. Mitsubishi
  29. Alfa Romeo
  30. Jaguar
  31. Jeep
  32. Land Rover

Breaking News

The Deal is now done: UK and EU have reached an agreement on Northern Ireland trade rules.

UK PM Rishi Sunak & Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, have agreed a deal on the Northern Ireland Protocol at a crucial summit.

It has been a long journey and still the UK Parliament, House of Commons, will have to approved the agreement. To do that all key stakeholders need to accept.

Last week, South Africa was put on a ‘grey list’ by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) for falling short of certain international standards for the combating of money laundering and other serious financial crimes. In a public letter the RSA President comments on this directmy to the people of the republic.

’The FATF is a global body that aims to tackle global money laundering and terrorist financing. South Africa has been a member of FATF for the last 20 years due to our commitment to fight these criminal activities both at home and across the world’.

’The listing of South Africa as a ‘jurisdiction under increased monitoring’ – commonly known as grey listing – has caused much concern about the state of our financial institutions, law enforcement agencies and investment environment. The situation is concerning but less dire than some people suggest’.

”As a country that both values and enforces the rule of law, the grey listing is an opportunity for us to tighten our controls & improve our response to organised crime. This will ultimately place us on a stronger footing to effectively fight these crimes”

Cyril Ramphosa, President

In the letter he says: ’

As a country we welcome the intensified monitoring by FATF. We have a focused action plan in place to address the remaining deficiencies identified by the FATF. Most of these deficiencies relate to the implementation of our laws. For example, we need to be able to demonstrate, among other things, an increase in the investigation and prosecution of serious and complex money-laundering and terrorism financing, an increase in mutual legal assistance requests to other countries, an increase in the use of financial intelligence by law enforcement agencies, and the effective implementation of targeted financial sanctions.

Our action plan to address these deficiencies is aligned with the work we are doing to implement the recommendations of the State Capture Commission as outlined in our submission to Parliament in October last year. 

As a country that both values and enforces the rule of law, the grey listing is an opportunity for us to tighten our controls and improve our response to organised crime. This will ultimately place us on a stronger footing to effectively fight these damaging and dangerous crimes’.