| If you drive long distance all the time, ditch this car and buy a new one. You need a reliable car. If this thing will let go in the middle of nowhere, let alone in the winter it can cost your life. Nothing NO car savings are worth it. |
| I have an 07 Pilot with 140k and no problems yet other than A/C not working |
| My 2005 Honda Pilot is at 170,000 miles. I'm having all the fluids changed today for $520. Based on these posts it should be money well spent. |
| I have a 2006 Pilot, just hit 235,233 miles. Runs Great. Good power, torque, acceleration and braking. Handles very well. I bought it new in 06' and have never had a major problem. Live in So. Cal. Mostly freeway driving, a number of 300+ mile trips to the desert pulling watercraft, the local mountains for skiing, etc. Other than regular maintenance (oil, fluids, belts, filters, etc.), replaced timing belt once at 80K miles (precaution), water pump at about 210K miles and the alternator recently at about 225K miles. I've had the front-end aligned a few times over the years and have had the tranny flushed a few times since hitting 100k miles. Great vehicle, no question about it. |
| My 2003 Honda Pilot is at 270,000 miles. I hope to make 300,000 tho my mechanic warns me to let it rest for 30 minutes every 200 miles on road trips! Says it's great for local driving! |
| I read this and bought a Pilot last week end. Hoping it will last me a long time. It now has all of 25 miles on it. |
| My 2008 has 264,700. I plan on getting to half a million...then driving it off a cliff and dying with it. |
| 2006 Honda Pilot: 192,000 miles. Engine light comes on every few weeks and stays on for a while before disappearing. Other than that, no mechanical issues to report since I replaced the timing chain a few years ago. When this one leaves me stranded I'll buy another, maybe 5 year old model. Perfect for my needs: 2 kids, 3 rental properties, a band, not driving a minivan. |
| Bought 2004 Honda Pilot new, first oil change at 50 miles to get metal shavings out, now has 304,000. Rides like a dream, has really cushy comfortable seats. Have changed timing belt twice. Religiously change oil. I love this car. Might get a Honda Passport if I have to replace. |
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Honda’s are pretty good but Volvo and Chevy both have owners with over one million miles. No Honda in history of company has hit one million
https://www.google.com/amp/s/axleadvisor.com/highest-mileage-cars-ever/%3famp |
Literally the third car on that list was a Honda.
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| You just jinxed it! Anyway, new Pilot will be less trouble than other Honda vehicles because it doesn't have that effed up cvt transmission. |
That was random list of cars over one million miles. The official list of top ten highest Mileage cars in the world has ZERO Japanese cars on list. Volvo takes 2 of top three spots. Chevy and Mercedes. has two spots each. Ford/Lincoln same company has two spots and Plymouth and Volkswagen has a spot each. Volvo gives owners a free new car at three million miles and Mercedes a free new car at two million miles. There is a Ford on List I was super impressed with owner bought it new and first four years drove it 250,000 a year, he hit one million in four years with no problems. |
| My dad would say "you're just braking it in". Noneed to pre-emptively get a new one. |
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My 2006 Honda Pilot is at 215,000 and still runs perfect.
Replacing the headlights soon for $150.00 to clean her look up a bit and adding 4 new tires. I'm on the road the road to 250k and hopefully 300k!
When she finally goes, it will be hard not to go out and buy another Pilot. Such great SUVs. |