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2010 Toyota Camry vs 2010 Honda Accord

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Reliability Side-by-Side

2010

Toyota Camry

/ 100
Analysis Pending

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2010

Honda Accord

/ 100
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Cost of Ownership

Line Item2010 Toyota Camry2010 Honda Accord
Annual Maintenance
Moderate Repairs
MPG (City/Hwy)19-22 / 28-3219-21 / 29-31
MSRP (New)$19,720$20,360

Major-failure risk and insurance outlook for each vehicle are in their full reliability reports.

Biggest Risks on Each

2010 Toyota Camry

Engine & drivetrain

Electronics & infotainment

Wear items (brakes, suspension)

Specific failure patterns, mileages, and repair costs unlock with the full reliability report.

2010 Honda Accord

Engine & drivetrain

Electronics & infotainment

Wear items (brakes, suspension)

Specific failure patterns, mileages, and repair costs unlock with the full reliability report.

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7-system breakdown, mileage danger zones, repair costs, and expert verdict for each vehicle.

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Editorial Take

The 2010 Toyota Camry and 2010 Honda Accord are commonly compared because they were two of the highest-volume midsize sedans in the U.S., with reputations for practicality, strong resale value, and long service life. Shoppers cross-shop them when they want a comfortable daily driver that can handle commuting, family duty, and road trips without drama. The Camry typically appeals to buyers prioritizing a softer ride, simpler controls, and a long-running reliability image, while the Accord tends to attract drivers who care more about steering feel, chassis balance, and a slightly more upscale driving experience. Key decision factors usually come down to powertrain choice (4-cylinder vs V6), real-world fuel economy, cabin space, and which model’s known issues you’re more comfortable managing. HEAD-TO-

Reliability & Common Issues

2010 TOYOTA CAMRY:

Value & Cost of Ownership

NEW PRICING (WHEN NEW) - Camry typically undercut the Accord by a few hundred dollars at the base level (roughly $19.7k vs $20.3k), though real transaction prices varied widely with incentives and trim. USED MARKET PRICES (TODAY’S TYPICAL RANGE) Prices vary heavily by region, mileage, trim, and condition, but a realistic ballpark for clean-title examples: - 2010 Camry: commonly around $6,000–$10,500 for 120k–180k miles; higher for low-mileage or well-kept V6/XLE trims. - 2010 Accord sedan: commonly around $6,500–$11,500 for 120k–180k miles; higher for EX-L and V6 models in strong condition. Accords often command a slight premium due to demand and driving feel, but Camry values remain very strong.

Parts & Accessories for These Vehicles

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