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2007
Toyota Yaris

Starts at:
$14,250
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Available trims

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  • 3dr HB Man (Natl)
    Starts at
    $11,150
    34 City / 40 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Manual Base (Natl)
    Starts at
    $12,025
    34 City / 40 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Manual Base (SE)
    Starts at
    $12,025
    34 City / 40 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Manual Base (GS)
    Starts at
    $12,025
    34 City / 40 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 3dr HB Auto (Natl)
    Starts at
    $12,050
    34 City / 39 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Auto Base (Natl)
    Starts at
    $12,750
    34 City / 39 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Auto Base (GS)
    Starts at
    $12,750
    34 City / 39 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Auto Base (SE)
    Starts at
    $12,750
    34 City / 39 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Man S (Natl)
    Starts at
    $13,525
    34 City / 40 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Man S (SE)
    Starts at
    $13,525
    34 City / 40 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Man S (GS)
    Starts at
    $13,525
    34 City / 40 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Auto S (Natl)
    Starts at
    $14,250
    34 City / 39 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Auto S (GS)
    Starts at
    $14,250
    34 City / 39 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn Auto S (SE)
    Starts at
    $14,250
    34 City / 39 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris 2007 Toyota Yaris

Notable features

New to U.S. in 2007
Stubby design, miniscule overhangs
Three feet shorter in length, but 1 inch taller, than Camry
Hatchback or sedan

The good & the bad

The good

Lowest-priced Toyota
Side-curtain, side-impact airbags available
Rear seat splits, slides fore and aft

The bad

Center-mounted instrument cluster

Expert 2007 Toyota Yaris review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Dan Neil
Full article
our expert's take


TOYOTA Motor Corp. is the colossus of roads. It is, or soon will be, the largest car company in the world. Its worldwide sales are up year after year, as are its profits, as are its stock prices. In the U.S., the world’s largest car market, Toyota’s sales rose an astonishing 12.5% in 2006, grabbing even more market share from the oxygen-starved domestics. To meet the demand, the company is putting down factories and expanding facilities in this country like it was playing automotive Monopoly.

The company builds Lexus, the best-selling luxury brand in the U.S. It builds the Prius, the hybrid shuttlecraft with more green cachet than macrobiotic tofu. It created Scion, which in three years went from a Scrabble word to the last word in Gen-Y branding.

So is this the company that can do no wrong? Not really.

I give you the Toyota Yaris, a surprisingly routine and summarily undelightful B-class subcompact that feels as mailed-in as if it had a stamp on it. Cute? Sure, in an entomological way, i.e., it kind of looks like a bug you’d pin to a corkboard.

Cheap? Oh yes, to a fault. The $11,530 MSRP (with delivery) can’t make room for things like a radio/CD/MP3, anti-lock brakes, rear-window wiper or rear fogger, or split-folding rear seat. Our test car had another $3,210 of options: alloy wheels, power windows and doors, four-speaker audio with CD/MP3 player, ABS, front side-air bags, side curtain air bags. But up against other recent B-class urban runabouts – the Honda Fit, the Nissan Versa – the Yaris is less car for more money. And tinny. Compared with the sealed and muffled character of the Honda Fit, this thing’s got more ring-a-ding than Frank Sinatra at Caesars Palace.

Perhaps I’m just reacting to the wind shear. In the midst of Toyota’s triumphal march across America – including a go at NASCAR racing and a full-court press in the full-size pickup segment (Tundra), both at the emotional heart of American car culture – the Yaris seems puny. Excellence has become so routine that, when one of Toyota’s cars goes so far amiss, you have to wonder if this is the first thread of an unraveling Toyota mystique.

But wait, it’s only one car, right? Isn’t it a huge inductive overreach to judge something as vast as a global car company on the basis of one model? And yet, cars don’t work that way. Because they are products of huge collaborative systems involving everything from supplier networks to lunchroom politics, cars are definitely expressive, irreducible sums of the companies that make them.

It isn’t about bashing. Toyota is not immune to the same entropic forces that affect any large and successful organization, or nation, at the top of its game. Do you think Toyota’s execs, engineers and workers are somehow smarter than those of GM? They aren’t. Given time, the dialectics of decline will take hold at Toyota just as they have in Detroit. The unraveling has to start somewhere.

Which makes me eye the Yaris with suspicion. The Yaris came to our shores last year as a replacement for the Echo, which itself didn’t inspire much Klingon love poetry. Like a couple of the Scion models, the Yaris is a transplant from the Japanese domestic market. It has been stretched and widened a bit for the U.S. market, though you might find that hard to believe in the backseat, which is about as roomy as a piece of Hartmann luggage. The rear seat is on sliders, but I can’t imagine why you’d want less legroom. The car comes as either a sedan or three-door hatchback, the latter being the incredibly cute one.

Sitting sideways under the beamish little hood is a 1.5-liter, 106-hp four-cylinder engine dressed with Toyota’s faultless variable valve timing heads. The engine sends its 103 pound-feet of torque (at a brisk 4,200 rpm) through either a five-speed manual or four-speed automatic transmission. At 2,290 pounds, this thing’s a flyweight. The payoff comes in the car’s 34/40 city/highway mpg. The great, suffering payback is in general drivability. The engine – having negligible low-speed torque – busts a gut on anything like a hill, and the gear spacing is such that you have to put it in first gear and flog the huskies for all they’re worth. Flogged huskies do not a pleasant sound make.

Toyota went slightly mad on the dieting. The Yaris sounds so hollow and reverberant you wonder if it shouldn’t have just kept the Echo name. Meanwhile, the car tends to dance around in high winds and generally feels unsettled at highway speeds.

As for handling, it has some. Actually, for a little car, the Yaris has some pretty acute body roll and lean. It reminds me of the old Jackie Stewart exercise in which he put a ball in a bowl affixed to the hood of a car to demonstrate the effects of smooth driving. Except in this case, the Yaris is the ball.

It’s not all bad. The build quality is excellent. The interior (with plastic fixtures inspired by a Super Soaker) is modern and easy to use. The upholstery is nice. That’s all I’ve got.

The irony is, of course, that Toyota made its bones in the U.S. market making cheap, superlative compacts. But the Yaris, after the Echo, suggests the company is losing its common touch. Have I been too hard on the world’s biggest, and arguably best, car company? Don’t worry. I think it will survive.

*

——————————————————————————– dan.neil@latimes.com

*

2007 Toyota Yaris 3-Door Liftback

Base price: $11,530

Price, as tested: $14,740

Powertrain: 1.5-liter, DOHC four-cylinder with variable valve timing; five-speed transmission; front-wheel drive.

Horsepower: 106 at 6,000 rpm

Torque: 103 pound-feet at 4,200 rpm

Curb weight: 2,290 pounds

0-60 mph: 10 seconds

Wheelbase: 96.9 inches

Overall length: 150.6 inches

EPA fuel economy: 34 miles per gallon city, 40 mpg highway

Final thoughts: A giant stubs its toe.

2007 Toyota Yaris review: Our expert's take
By Dan Neil


TOYOTA Motor Corp. is the colossus of roads. It is, or soon will be, the largest car company in the world. Its worldwide sales are up year after year, as are its profits, as are its stock prices. In the U.S., the world’s largest car market, Toyota’s sales rose an astonishing 12.5% in 2006, grabbing even more market share from the oxygen-starved domestics. To meet the demand, the company is putting down factories and expanding facilities in this country like it was playing automotive Monopoly.

The company builds Lexus, the best-selling luxury brand in the U.S. It builds the Prius, the hybrid shuttlecraft with more green cachet than macrobiotic tofu. It created Scion, which in three years went from a Scrabble word to the last word in Gen-Y branding.

So is this the company that can do no wrong? Not really.

I give you the Toyota Yaris, a surprisingly routine and summarily undelightful B-class subcompact that feels as mailed-in as if it had a stamp on it. Cute? Sure, in an entomological way, i.e., it kind of looks like a bug you’d pin to a corkboard.

Cheap? Oh yes, to a fault. The $11,530 MSRP (with delivery) can’t make room for things like a radio/CD/MP3, anti-lock brakes, rear-window wiper or rear fogger, or split-folding rear seat. Our test car had another $3,210 of options: alloy wheels, power windows and doors, four-speaker audio with CD/MP3 player, ABS, front side-air bags, side curtain air bags. But up against other recent B-class urban runabouts – the Honda Fit, the Nissan Versa – the Yaris is less car for more money. And tinny. Compared with the sealed and muffled character of the Honda Fit, this thing’s got more ring-a-ding than Frank Sinatra at Caesars Palace.

Perhaps I’m just reacting to the wind shear. In the midst of Toyota’s triumphal march across America – including a go at NASCAR racing and a full-court press in the full-size pickup segment (Tundra), both at the emotional heart of American car culture – the Yaris seems puny. Excellence has become so routine that, when one of Toyota’s cars goes so far amiss, you have to wonder if this is the first thread of an unraveling Toyota mystique.

But wait, it’s only one car, right? Isn’t it a huge inductive overreach to judge something as vast as a global car company on the basis of one model? And yet, cars don’t work that way. Because they are products of huge collaborative systems involving everything from supplier networks to lunchroom politics, cars are definitely expressive, irreducible sums of the companies that make them.

It isn’t about bashing. Toyota is not immune to the same entropic forces that affect any large and successful organization, or nation, at the top of its game. Do you think Toyota’s execs, engineers and workers are somehow smarter than those of GM? They aren’t. Given time, the dialectics of decline will take hold at Toyota just as they have in Detroit. The unraveling has to start somewhere.

Which makes me eye the Yaris with suspicion. The Yaris came to our shores last year as a replacement for the Echo, which itself didn’t inspire much Klingon love poetry. Like a couple of the Scion models, the Yaris is a transplant from the Japanese domestic market. It has been stretched and widened a bit for the U.S. market, though you might find that hard to believe in the backseat, which is about as roomy as a piece of Hartmann luggage. The rear seat is on sliders, but I can’t imagine why you’d want less legroom. The car comes as either a sedan or three-door hatchback, the latter being the incredibly cute one.

Sitting sideways under the beamish little hood is a 1.5-liter, 106-hp four-cylinder engine dressed with Toyota’s faultless variable valve timing heads. The engine sends its 103 pound-feet of torque (at a brisk 4,200 rpm) through either a five-speed manual or four-speed automatic transmission. At 2,290 pounds, this thing’s a flyweight. The payoff comes in the car’s 34/40 city/highway mpg. The great, suffering payback is in general drivability. The engine – having negligible low-speed torque – busts a gut on anything like a hill, and the gear spacing is such that you have to put it in first gear and flog the huskies for all they’re worth. Flogged huskies do not a pleasant sound make.

Toyota went slightly mad on the dieting. The Yaris sounds so hollow and reverberant you wonder if it shouldn’t have just kept the Echo name. Meanwhile, the car tends to dance around in high winds and generally feels unsettled at highway speeds.

As for handling, it has some. Actually, for a little car, the Yaris has some pretty acute body roll and lean. It reminds me of the old Jackie Stewart exercise in which he put a ball in a bowl affixed to the hood of a car to demonstrate the effects of smooth driving. Except in this case, the Yaris is the ball.

It’s not all bad. The build quality is excellent. The interior (with plastic fixtures inspired by a Super Soaker) is modern and easy to use. The upholstery is nice. That’s all I’ve got.

The irony is, of course, that Toyota made its bones in the U.S. market making cheap, superlative compacts. But the Yaris, after the Echo, suggests the company is losing its common touch. Have I been too hard on the world’s biggest, and arguably best, car company? Don’t worry. I think it will survive.

*

——————————————————————————– dan.neil@latimes.com

*

2007 Toyota Yaris 3-Door Liftback

Base price: $11,530

Price, as tested: $14,740

Powertrain: 1.5-liter, DOHC four-cylinder with variable valve timing; five-speed transmission; front-wheel drive.

Horsepower: 106 at 6,000 rpm

Torque: 103 pound-feet at 4,200 rpm

Curb weight: 2,290 pounds

0-60 mph: 10 seconds

Wheelbase: 96.9 inches

Overall length: 150.6 inches

EPA fuel economy: 34 miles per gallon city, 40 mpg highway

Final thoughts: A giant stubs its toe.

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2007 Toyota Yaris base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Frontal driver
4/5
Frontal passenger
4/5
Nhtsa rollover rating
4/5
Side driver
3/5
Side rear passenger
3/5

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
3 years / 36,000 miles
Corrosion
5 years
Powertrain
5 years / 60,000 miles

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
7 years / less than 85,000 miles
Basic
12 months / 12, 000 miles
Dealer certification
160- or 174-point inspections

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Consumer reviews

4.6 / 5
Based on 141 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.2
Interior 4.1
Performance 4.1
Value 4.7
Exterior 4.3
Reliability 4.8

Most recent

  • My filipina wife and I bought our 2007 Toyota yaris Sedan

    My filipina wife and I bought our 2007 Toyota yaris Sedan in 2007 and it's been running great ever since! We thank GOD for it everyday. Starts good (interstate battery) and runs well. We are grateful for it! Hope and pray it lasts another two to five years or more. It's not luxury, it's not flashy, it's not high maintenance, it's just a reliable little vehicle. GOD is good!
    • Purchased a New car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 4.0
    Interior 3.0
    Performance 4.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 4.0
    Reliability 5.0
    0 people out of 0 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • Total Reliability!

    I've had my 2007 Yaris since I bought it new and have have had to put very little money into it's mechanical upkeep; just a new fan belt and transmission flush and the usual tires and batteries! I change my own oil and rotate my own tires so very cost efficient; I love this car!
    • Purchased a New car
    • Used for Having fun
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 4.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 4.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 4.0
    Reliability 5.0
    9 people out of 10 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • best value, very reliable

    Purchased it new has 240k miles and still runs great. It burns oil like most older Toyotas. Nothing fancy or exciting about it just does what it is supposed to do, which is be an economical reliable transportation. I'll never buy an American made car or any other brand other than Toyota. Best car maker hands down.
    • Purchased a New car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 5.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 4.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 4.0
    Reliability 5.0
    5 people out of 5 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • Yaris a Good and Reliable Vehicle

    I have owned my Toyota 2007 Yaris since it was new. It is, now, 2023 and my car has had no brake changes, no tune ups, no major repairs of any kind. I had Corollas in the past and thought the Yaris was a better and a cheaper car. The Yaris and my Ford Truck have proven to be the most reliable and longest lasting vehicles I have ever owned in my 46 years of driving. I still recommend a Yaris to anyone who want a low maintenance, well built, long lasting, inexpensive car to get around town. Bravo! Toyota — Bravo, Yaris.
    • Purchased a New car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 3.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 4.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 5.0
    Reliability 5.0
    6 people out of 6 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • I. LOVE. THIS. CAR.

    I have a '07, 2 dr. hatchback, only owner(48, white, female). This is by far the most dependable car I have ever owned. She turns on a dime, I can get through traffic jams and situations that no other car can, and I can squeeze into the smallest of spots- especially parallel parking. In 16 years of ownership I have had just a few repairs but most were maintenance: Brakes- x 2 Rotors/drums - x 1 Coils/spark plugs- x 1 (I will be doing again soon) Serpentine belt- x 3 (this seems to be common & I easily replace it myself) CV Joint- x 1 And a few air filters. Last month I replaced the headlights and it was incredibly easy. The front end popped off and on easy-peasy & she looks 10yrs younger! (the equivalent to Botox) The interior is near perfect, even after 3 teenagers and 4 grandchildren. I have filled that car to the brim with stuff for moving, etc, and people are always amazed how much will fit and very surprised at how roomy the back seating is. The body has minimal, small dents and got its first scratches 6 months ago (arrrgh!) Only 139,650 miles. I am embarrassed to admit that it was only today I learned the trunk transforms into a pet cargo (face palm).
    • Purchased a New car
    • Used for Transporting family
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 4.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 5.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 4.0
    Reliability 5.0
    4 people out of 4 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • Best car ever

    At the beginning, I did´t like it very much. But the years have past and it has proved to be a very reliable car and gives out great mileage. I just love it.
    • Purchased a Used car
    • Used for Transporting family
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 4.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 5.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 4.0
    Reliability 5.0
    5 people out of 5 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • Yaris for Doordashing!

    I bought a used 2007 Yaris to use for Doordash. The car was made for dashing! Great gas milage! Easy to park due to it's small size. The car I bought need brakes all the way around. The rears were useless (frozen) and really needed attention. Other than that, no issues! Ice cold air conditioning, great heater, AM and FM radio with CD player. This car has 5 spd., manual transmission. For me, the only thing lacking is, cruise control. Based on other reviews, I plan on driving this car for a long time. Right now it has 174,398 miles on it.... Will I see 300,000? I hope so!
    • Purchased a Used car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 4.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 4.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 5.0
    Reliability 5.0
    5 people out of 5 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • First car & still going strong

    I am under the impression this is a states website, but figure I’ll add my 2 cents in. I currently own a 2007 Toyota Yaris hatchback. Blue! With some hints of rust along the wheel wells. I bought this car in 2009, was used, I was told it was in an accident and they no longer wanted it. It had 60,000 km / 37280 miles on it at the time of purchase and currently 290,000 km/180200 miles. This is the one thing in my life over the last 11 years that’s given me stability, safety, comfort and reliability. At first I thought it was ugly and did not anticipate on keeping it all that long. As time has passed, I am realising that this car is worth every penny. In fact, can’t put a price on her. Moved homes several times, packed her full to the brim — Very spacious Issues: Exhaust! I am currently on my 3rd incident where the pipe has cracked right in the middle, over 11 years I expected this maybe once or twice but three times, a bit upsetting. Rust! I have noticed that the wheel well areas are rusting and the break lines have superficial rust as well, but again nothing of concern, I just worry it will spread and become more problematic. Shocks/suspension slightly rusted as well, but again superficial. ABS break lights always on: since I got the car, I can’t seem to figure out why. Hand break: not working.. either it’s my own doing because of the lack of maintenance or time/lack of using it. Alternator: had to replace at 250,000 km/402336 miles which I am told is not unreasonable. $500 CAN in total. Truck: jammed shut, does not open from the outside, only inside manually. Tried to fix with WD40 but no luck. Transmission flush, oil changes, breaks and wheel bearings which I feel is regular routine maintenance. I have NOT maintained her as well as I could have, truth be told, I feel I have neglected her. Even saying so, she’s running like a dream and is yet to not start when I put the key in the ignition. Even in -20 temperatures. I never fear that she will not start. I did no anti-rust or any preventative measures, I do not know if this would have made a difference. Handles very well in the snow. I have terrible winters here & have driven up north in one of the worst storms and she got me 1 hr up north in white out conditions.. slippy roadways, poor conditions but never feared. I have spun out on the highway only once and was able to regain control quickly and efficiently and avoided a collision. Accelerates efficiently enough to merge safely onto the highway. Does not like going too much over 120km/hr or 75 miles/hour, is loud and starts to shake, but I have comfortably got up to 140km/hr (sorry for the police here) and she drove just fine, it’s sustainable as well for a distance. I know I neglected her being ill experienced with car maintenance, as this is my first car, but regardless she has never let me down. If you want a reliable and relatively low maintenance vehicle, this is the one for you. Currently she needs a new wheel barring, front shaft, and exhaust. I am debating on what to do, the mechanic said beside those three things she is in full working order with no foreseeable concerns. Mechanically she is sound. Fuel efficient, spacious, reliable, inexpensive, few trips to the mechanic over 11 years. 10/10 I do recommend, will not let you down.
    • Purchased a Used car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 5.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 4.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 3.0
    Reliability 5.0
    15 people out of 15 found this review helpful. Did you?
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  • one of the best cars I have owned

    I got this car when it was a year old and said it was the best until today. I have never seen a car rust so bad in this area and when it let go I went for a ride thank God my grandkids weren't there. The back broke loose with no warning.when I was getting it towed the truck driver just shock his y ead and said Totota should of done something adout these cars long ago.He said he's seen quit a few just like this and some people didn't make it through it.As it stands now I g Ave NE car can't drive mine because the back wheel is in the trunk it's rusted so bad it would have to be all replaced to be safe and how safe would I feel driving it. After all of this Toyota just turns there back on you dob't return phone calls to me not 1 of them will give me a answer. But when we want to buy a car from them it's a different story now they come running with bells on........
    • Purchased a Used car
    • Used for Transporting family
    • Does not recommend this car
    Comfort 4.0
    Interior 4.0
    Performance 5.0
    Value 2.0
    Exterior 3.0
    Reliability 4.0
    4 people out of 7 found this review helpful. Did you?
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  • Most Reliable Car I've Owned

    This car met all my needs. It has plenty of leg room in the front and the back. The Yaris is a very reliable car.
    • Purchased a New car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 5.0
    Interior 5.0
    Performance 5.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 5.0
    Reliability 5.0
    5 people out of 6 found this review helpful. Did you?
    Yes No
  • Still driving at 240,066 miles ...

    I purchased this car to saved on gas while commuting when gas price was reaching over $4 per gallon. I did not expect this car to continue operating after 13 years of driving, but wow was I wrong.
    • Purchased a Used car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 3.0
    Interior 3.0
    Performance 3.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 3.0
    Reliability 5.0
    2 people out of 2 found this review helpful. Did you?
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  • 35 MPG, Reliable, Fun to Drive

    Fun to Drive with wider tires than stock. Really light. 2,300 lbs vs most cars topping the scales at 3,500-4,500 pounds. It's a really nice car. 35 MPG and super practical. Oh, and it's a Toyota, so it always starts.
    • Purchased a Used car
    • Used for Commuting
    • Does recommend this car
    Comfort 4.0
    Interior 3.0
    Performance 5.0
    Value 5.0
    Exterior 4.0
    Reliability 5.0
    2 people out of 2 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2007 Toyota Yaris?

The 2007 Toyota Yaris is available in 3 trim levels:

  • (2 styles)
  • Base (6 styles)
  • S (6 styles)

What is the MPG of the 2007 Toyota Yaris?

The 2007 Toyota Yaris offers up to 34 MPG in city driving and 40 MPG on the highway. These figures are based on EPA mileage ratings and are for comparison purposes only. The actual mileage will vary depending on vehicle options, trim level, driving conditions, driving habits, vehicle maintenance, and other factors.

What are some similar vehicles and competitors of the 2007 Toyota Yaris?

The 2007 Toyota Yaris compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2007 Toyota Yaris reliable?

The 2007 Toyota Yaris has an average reliability rating of 4.8 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2007 Toyota Yaris owners.

Is the 2007 Toyota Yaris a good Hatchback?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2007 Toyota Yaris. 93.6% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.6 / 5
Based on 141 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.2
  • Interior: 4.1
  • Performance: 4.1
  • Value: 4.7
  • Exterior: 4.3
  • Reliability: 4.8

Toyota Yaris history

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