2014 Honda Civic: Reliability, Recalls, Known Issues & Cost to Own
Data last updated 2026-07-04 · sources listed throughout · based on public NHTSA data
First CVT year of the 9th gen: dependable and frugal, but some owners report CVT judder and the Takata airbag recall applies. 3 known issue patterns are documented below, with frequency and the mileage windows where they typically appear. New, the 2014 Honda Civic ranged from $18,190 to $22,990 depending on trim (base MSRP, before options and destination).
This listing
Context from the listing you were viewing, not a market-price judgement.
First CVT year of the 9th gen: dependable and frugal, but some owners report CVT judder and the Takata airbag recall applies.
Sources (1)
- autoblog.comhttps://www.autoblog.com/features/most-reliable-honda-civic-years-and-models
Known issues
-
Subject to the Takata airbag inflator recall: the inflator can rupture and spray metal fragments when deployed; confirm the recall repair has been completed.
widespread · 52 NHTSA complaints · other
-
Powertrain complaints center on the newly introduced CVT, which can judder or jerk at highway speed.
commonly reported · 98 NHTSA complaints · transmission
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Electrical and infotainment faults are reported, including Display Audio freezes, Bluetooth/connectivity dropouts, and battery drain.
occasional · 28 NHTSA complaints · electrical
Based on public NHTSA complaint data and AI synthesis: patterns, not guarantees.
Sources (2)
- api.nhtsa.govhttps://api.nhtsa.gov/complaints/complaintsByVehicle?make=honda&model=civic&m…
- autoblog.comhttps://www.autoblog.com/features/most-reliable-honda-civic-years-and-models
Recalls & safety
Recall history hasn't been loaded for this model year yet.
Whether a recall is still open on a specific car depends on its VIN. Check it free at NHTSA's VIN lookup (nhtsa.gov/recalls), or ask the seller for proof the repair was done.
Pros & cons
Pros
- Excellent fuel economy and low running costs
- Among the most reliable Civic years with strong resale value
- Good crash-safety scores
- Roomy cabin for a compact and easy, cheap to maintain
Cons
- Cabin materials and road noise were criticized, worst at the 2012 launch
- 2014-2015 CVT can judder or jerk, especially at highway speed
- Modest power from the 1.8L engine
- Takata airbag inflator recall affects these years; verify the fix was done
Trims & original pricing
| Trim | Original base MSRP | New today | Engine | MPG |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LX | $18,190 | $24,695 | 1.8L I4 | — |
| HF | $19,940 | discontinued | 1.8L I4 | — |
| EX Coupe | $20,290 | discontinued | 1.8L I4 | — |
| EX | $21,090 | discontinued | 1.8L I4 | — |
| EX-L Coupe | $22,540 | discontinued | 1.8L I4 | — |
| EX-L | $22,740 | discontinued | 1.8L I4 | — |
| Si Coupe | $22,790 | discontinued | 2.4L I4 | — |
| Si | $22,990 | $31,495 | 2.4L I4 | — |
Prices are base MSRP for each trim's standard configuration. Options, packages, and destination charges added to what original buyers actually paid.
Sources (3)
- iseecars.comhttps://www.iseecars.com/car/2014-honda-civic-price
- fueleconomy.govhttps://www.fueleconomy.gov/ws/rest/vehicle/menu/options?year=2014&make=Honda…
- iseecars.comhttps://www.iseecars.com/car/honda-civic-price
Depreciation
Move your cursor along the line to see the estimated value for any year.
This listing sits above the typical depreciation curve. Common for heavily-optioned cars and for 2021-2023 model years (pandemic-era pricing); the curve is anchored at base MSRP, which excludes options.
Curve anchored at the entry-trim base MSRP ($18,190). Higher trims started higher (up to $22,990), and options added more.
The curve's data ends 10 years in, so the line levels off after that. Treat the tail as a floor, not a forecast: asking prices for older cars depend mostly on condition, mileage, and the current market, and often sit well above it.
Sources (2)
- caredge.comhttps://caredge.com/honda/civic/depreciation
- iseecars.comhttps://www.iseecars.com/car/honda-civic/resale-value
Cost to own
| Routine maintenance | ≈ $350–400/yr |
| Expected lifespan | ~200k miles |
National-average estimates based on public data. Your costs vary by region, driver, and condition.
Sources (1)
- repairpal.comhttps://repairpal.com/reliability/honda/civic
Frequently asked questions
What problems does the 2014 Honda Civic have?
Documented issue patterns include: Subject to the Takata airbag inflator recall: the inflator can rupture and spray metal fragments when deployed; confirm the recall repair has been completed; Powertrain complaints center on the newly introduced CVT, which can judder or jerk at highway speed; Electrical and infotainment faults are reported, including Display Audio freezes, Bluetooth/connectivity dropouts, and battery drain. Frequency is based on public NHTSA complaint data: patterns, not guarantees.
Is the 2014 Honda Civic reliable?
First CVT year of the 9th gen: dependable and frugal, but some owners report CVT judder and the Takata airbag recall applies.
How much did the 2014 Honda Civic cost new?
Between $18,190 and $22,990 depending on trim. Those are base MSRPs for each trim's standard configuration; options, packages, and destination charges added to what original buyers actually paid.
Is the Honda Civic expensive to maintain?
Estimated routine maintenance runs about $350–400/year.
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Estimates are based on public data: patterns, not guarantees. CarVitals is not affiliated with NHTSA, CarMax, AutoTrader, or Cars.com. Issue frequencies come from public NHTSA complaint data, which has no denominator, so they describe reporting patterns, not failure probabilities. Always have a used car inspected before buying. How we build these reports.