Behold, the Honda Accord Coupe Liveth - Briefly, and Cheaply

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

Although it seemed hard to believe, we were under the impression up until a few weeks before the 10th-generation Honda Accord’s launch, that the 2018 Honda Accord would spawn yet another Honda Accord coupe.

On July 14, 2017, we learned the Honda Accord coupe would die an honorable death. The 10th-generation Accord sedan, according to Honda, will hold sufficient appeal for those former Accord coupe buyers — Accordians, who made up roughly 5 percent of Honda’s midsize clientele.

But the Honda Accord coupe, while futureless, isn’t dead yet. There are more than 5,000 on dealer lots across the United States right now. And according to CarsDirect, they’re pretty cheap.

Honda Civic vs. Honda Accord. That is the question.

Do you want the smaller, nimbler, more efficient Civic coupe with its surprisingly useful rear seat and more distinct exterior design? Or do you want the larger, more American, more capacious, collector classic Accord coupe? It won’t be a decision you make on financial grounds, because they’re going out the door at the same price.

Granted, this is a story we should have covered yesterday when considering the plentiful array of discontinued new cars still present in new car showrooms across America: Chrysler 200s and Infiniti QX70s and Volkswagen CCs and Hyundai Azeras. The Accord, despite our constant coverage (TTAC’s audience eats it up; it’s the most common vehicle owned by TTAC’s B&B) was sadly left out of the mix.

CarsDirect says the Accord LX-S coupe can be leased for $189 per month over three years with $2,399 down. That’s an effective monthly cost of $256 — just two bucks extra per month compared with the 1.5T EX version of its little brother, despite the significant MSRP differential. The $25,000 Accord LX-S coupe is supposed to be $2,575 more than the Civic 1.5T EX coupe.

Leasing customers aren’t the only ones who will benefit from American Honda’s desire to sell off remaining Accord coupes. In a un-Honda-like move, CarsDirect says the Accord’s financing rates over five years are way down at 0.9 percent; 1.9 percent over six years.

Nationwide selection of Accord coupes remains varied. Roughly half of the Accord coupes in stock are mid-grade EX-L models, according to Cars.com. There are nearly 2,000 V6-engined examples remaining, more than 300 Accord coupes with manual transmission, and 51 manual-shift V6-powered Accord coupes.

[Images: Honda]

Timothy Cain is a contributing analyst at The Truth About Cars and Autofocus.ca and the founder and former editor of GoodCarBadCar.net. Follow on Twitter @timcaincars.

Timothy Cain
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  • A4kev A4kev on Jul 29, 2017

    Accords are excellent reasonably fun cars to drive, they're brutally reliable if your a reasonable owner.The coupe just adds a bit of spice if you don't need the rear doors.Honda's MT is a joy to manipulate.

  • CarPerson CarPerson on Jul 31, 2017

    Disappointed to see the Honda Coupe go. It was to be the 2018 replacement for the 2007. No, a Honda sedan will not be considered at any price. We have a few years before the 335i gets replaced. BMW has shown no indication coupes will be dropped from their lineup. Consider what has occurred on the safety front this past ten years and it makes driving a 10yr old car close to irresponsible. Recently drove the older neighbors on a 3-day trip in their new Subaru. Several drivers tried to crash us. Outback out foxed them all.

  • GS340Pete I see a lot of these on the road. I can't remember the last time I saw one on my local Chevy dealership's lot. They've never in my memory had a few lined up with balloons. Short sighted to kill it off? Perhaps. But I certainly think the rows of $65k and up trucks is short sighted. That's going to bite soon. Looks like they're piling up already.And what about the Trax? Malibu or Trax? Gotta be honest, I'd pick the Trax.Although it should have 50 more HP IMHO. And why are so many preaching doom about the 'wet belt' engine?RIP, Malibu. Ride the highway in the sky with the Impala (talk about short sighted.)
  • ToolGuy GM didn't care about these and you shouldn't either. 😉
  • FreedMike Yet another GM Deadly Sin: trot out something in what was a very competitive and important market segment that hadn't been restyled in 11 model years, and was based on a platform that was over 20 years old, and expect people would be dumb enough to buy it over a Corolla or Civic (or a Focus, for that matter).
  • TheMrFreeze Makes you wonder if he's seeing something with Stellantis he doesn't like and wanted out as a result. As somebody with three FCA vehicles in their driveway, Stellantis is sounding more and more like DaimlerChrysler 2024 🤬
  • Theflyersfan The official car of someone saying "You sure there's nothing else available?" at the rental car counter.
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