Maybe not quite that much, especially if it’s a used unit, which CCN will very occasionally do. Nobody is arguing that it would be and is better to perform proper maintenance. Another question is whether the car should have been purchased used in this fashion. Kschachn tells us he has the same engine just short of 500k
The Toyota Car Care Nut influenced a car purchase I made to buy a 2008 Toyota Corolla CE.
He mentioned that the 2003 to 2008 Toyota Corolla was a better generation than the 2009+ years,
and he called the 2008 Toyota Corolla a golden oldie and a hidden gem, where no matter how may miles you buy it as a used car, you can still put another 100k to 150k miles on it.
I also confirmed in the Reddit Forums that many original owners have taken the car to the dreaded 299,999 odometer stuck issue, with only a few repairs like having to replace starter, and the alternator (for example) and regular maintenance.
I bought the car with 60,000 miles on it for only $4,000 from the original owners (an elderly couple that were getting too old to drive it).
I plan to drive it 20k miles a year as a commuter car, and then after retirement to keep it and go on long trips with it.
It gets 40 MPG on the highway if you drive it with a gentle foot and maintain the speed limit.
Also, on the Reddit forums, the 2003-2008 Toyota Corolla owners mentioned that these cars are still very reliable
between the 200k mile to 300k mile range, and they didn't hesitate taking these cars on long trips with that mileage.
This was an important takeaway for me, to rate cars based on how reliable they are in the 200k to 300k mile range.
Most other car brands would become too cost prohibitive to keep past 200k as the expensive repairs would be constantly hitting you.
Toyota seems to be the most reliable car between 200k and 300k miles.