2016
Toyota Prius c

Starts at:
$21,785
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New 2016 Toyota Prius c
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 5dr HB One (Natl)
    Starts at
    $19,560
    53 City / 46 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    60 month/60,000 miles
    Warranty
    Gas/Electric I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr HB Two (Natl)
    Starts at
    $20,360
    53 City / 46 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    60 month/60,000 miles
    Warranty
    Gas/Electric I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr HB Persona Series (Natl)
    Starts at
    $21,355
    53 City / 46 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    60 month/60,000 miles
    Warranty
    Gas/Electric I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr HB Three (Natl)
    Starts at
    $21,785
    53 City / 46 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    60 month/60,000 miles
    Warranty
    Gas/Electric I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr HB Four (Natl)
    Starts at
    $24,495
    53 City / 46 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    60 month/60,000 miles
    Warranty
    Gas/Electric I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c 2016 Toyota Prius c

Notable features

New active safety features available
New Special Edition limited to 1,500 units
Smallest Prius version
Gas/electric hybrid
50-mpg combined EPA rating
Seats up to five

The good & the bad

The good

Fuel economy
Lower price than regular Prius
Hatchback versatility
Easy-to-use multimedia system

The bad

Highway acceleration
Road noise
Unnatural-feeling brakes
Backup camera only available on top trim level

Expert 2016 Toyota Prius c review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Jennifer Geiger
Full article
our expert's take

Editor’s note: This review was written in July 2015 about the 2015 Toyota Prius c. Little of substance has changed with this year’s model. To see what’s new for 2016, click here, or check out a side-by-side comparison of the two model years.

If affordability and high mileage trump everything else on your car priority list, look no further than the 2015 Toyota Prius c, though you’ll have to put up with some unpleasant highway manners.

Slotting below the regular Prius hatchback and the larger Prius v wagon, the subcompact Prius c got restyled for 2015 with a lightly revised face, more interior trim options and a newly standard 6.1-inch multimedia system. Compare the 2014 and 2015 models here.

Vehicles that come close to matching the c’s fuel economy are few, but include the Honda Civic Hybrid and Volkswagen Jetta Hybrid. Compare them here.

Exterior & Styling
If the Prius c’s designers were aiming for an angry Asian carp look, they hooked it. For 2015, the hatchback got a sharper face, with a menacing LED headlight design and gaping hexagon grille. Attractive it is not. To pile on, there are a few new exterior colors that will get you laughed at, pulled over or both (luckily it’s also available in more sedate colors). Toyota calls the new colors eye-catching, but my test car’s Tangerine Splash Pearl paint — a $395 option — was eye-popping in terms of both color and price. The other new colors are Electric Lime Metallic and Sparkling Sea Metallic.

How It Drives
The Prius c has the highest fuel economy of any car without a plug. It’s EPA-rated at 53/46/50 mpg city/highway/combined, besting the Civic Hybrid (44/47/45), Jetta Hybrid (42/48/45) and even the city rating of the regular Prius (51/48/50). The c’s ratings aren’t just pie-in-the-sky numbers, either. During a 186-mile trip of mostly highway driving, I got 47.6 mpg driving normally.

To maximize fuel economy, drivers can put the car in Eco mode, which alters acceleration and climate output settings to save energy. I found takeoffs annoyingly slow in this mode. EV mode allows the car to run on battery power, but it’s not very useful since it can only do this for up to half a mile and at very low speeds.

The city is the Prius c’s natural habitat, where it returns its best mileage and is the most comfortable. It maneuvers well in tight spaces, and power from the tiny 1.5-liter four-cylinder is adequate. The car’s automatic stop-start system is smooth, unobtrusively shutting down at every stop with minimal shudder upon restarting. Lacking smoothness, though, are the regenerative brakes, which capture braking energy and send it to the battery. The pedal requires more pressure than you’d expect, so smooth stops take practice.

The c is less pleasant on the highway due in large part to road noise — a loud, constant companion that sucks the fun out of a highway cruise — and a lack of power. Highway merging and passing require a lot of planning, patience and pedal-stomping. Steering feel is also unnervingly light at speed; with a curb weight around 2,500 pounds, even a light breeze tosses the car around, requiring a wrestling match with the steering wheel.

Interior
New standard features in my top-trim test car, the Prius c four, include two-tone fabric seats, a moonroof, glossy black interior paneling and chrome trim, but they do little to mask the no-frills air of the cabin. It’s black-plastic overload, with too many patterns and textures combining for an overall mismatched design.

The front seats are cozily bolstered and comfortable — they don’t look or feel as budget grade as the rest of the interior — but padding is lacking elsewhere in the cabin. The door panel armrest could use more cushiness. So too could the center console armrest, which gets a triple strike: It’s also set too far back to comfortably use and it’s not adjustable.

In back, headroom is adequate but legroom isn’t generous; both the Jetta Hybrid and Civic Hybrid offer a good deal more. The c’s outboard seats are deep set and very comfortable, but the middle position isn’t a real option. It’s much narrower than the outboard seats and raised, so the passenger sits on an uncomfortable hump.

Families thinking of the Prius c as a second car will find enough legroom for a booster and a forward-facing child-safety seat, but a rear-facing car seat is a no-go. There’s not enough room to install one and comfortably accommodate a front-seat passenger. The Jetta and Civic do not have this problem. Read more in our Car Seat Check.

Ergonomics & Electronics
Toyota’s Entune multimedia system is newly standard, and extra features like local weather and a live radar weather map are handy. The system’s 6.1-inch touch-screen is responsive, and the menu structure is straightforward. Changing the audio presets and inputting a destination in the optional navigation system was easy, but the buttons on the screen are very small. Clearly marked home and back buttons are easy to find, however. Thankfully, not all controls have been absorbed by the touch-screen: Volume and tuning knobs flank the screen.

Below that is a large climate-control dial that’s very well placed for easy use while driving. The temperature settings can be adjusted using the traditional climate controls or buttons on the steering wheel.

Cargo & Storage
The center console box loses more points for being very tiny, though the glove box is large. Above that is a handy device tray, complete with aux and USB inputs.

In back, storage is minimal — and I hope your passengers don’t get thirsty: There’s only one seatback pocket and one flimsy cupholder that pops out of the center console. There aren’t even any bottleholders in the rear doors.

In back, the c’s hatchback body style makes this subcompact roomier than its larger sedan competitors. With 17.1 cubic feet of space in the cargo area, it offers more than either the Civic Hybrid (10.7) or the Jetta Hybrid (11.3). I fit about a dozen grocery bags in the back during one trip and a small stroller during another.

Safety
The 2015 Toyota Prius c is an Insurance Institute for Highway Safety Top Safety Pick, earning an acceptable score in the small front overlap test and good scores in all other tests. It had previously earned a poor score in the small front overlap test, and only models built after May qualify for the higher rating. Check your vehicle’s build date on a sticker on the driver-side doorjamb. In National Highway Traffic Safety Administration testing, the Prius c received four out of five stars in all the agency’s tests.

Nine airbags are standard, including a driver’s knee airbag, but a backup camera is only standard on the top trim level. It’s unavailable on other models. Common safety features, like a blind spot monitoring system and lane departure warning system, are not offered. Click here for a list of safety features.

Value in Its Class
The 2015 Toyota Prius c starts at about $20,000, but common extras like cruise control, the center console storage box/armrest, a cargo cover and a 60/40-split folding rear seat are not standard. Competitors cost more, but they’re also better equipped.

In terms of mileage and affordability, the Prius c is a very compelling car, but its discomforting safety ratings should be a factor shoppers consider carefully.

email  
News Editor
Jennifer Geiger

News Editor Jennifer Geiger joined the automotive industry in 2003, much to the delight of her Corvette-obsessed dad. Jennifer is an expert reviewer, certified car-seat technician and mom of three. She wears a lot of hats — many of them while driving a minivan.

2016 Toyota Prius c review: Our expert's take
By Jennifer Geiger

Editor’s note: This review was written in July 2015 about the 2015 Toyota Prius c. Little of substance has changed with this year’s model. To see what’s new for 2016, click here, or check out a side-by-side comparison of the two model years.

If affordability and high mileage trump everything else on your car priority list, look no further than the 2015 Toyota Prius c, though you’ll have to put up with some unpleasant highway manners.

Slotting below the regular Prius hatchback and the larger Prius v wagon, the subcompact Prius c got restyled for 2015 with a lightly revised face, more interior trim options and a newly standard 6.1-inch multimedia system. Compare the 2014 and 2015 models here.

Vehicles that come close to matching the c’s fuel economy are few, but include the Honda Civic Hybrid and Volkswagen Jetta Hybrid. Compare them here.

Exterior & Styling
If the Prius c’s designers were aiming for an angry Asian carp look, they hooked it. For 2015, the hatchback got a sharper face, with a menacing LED headlight design and gaping hexagon grille. Attractive it is not. To pile on, there are a few new exterior colors that will get you laughed at, pulled over or both (luckily it’s also available in more sedate colors). Toyota calls the new colors eye-catching, but my test car’s Tangerine Splash Pearl paint — a $395 option — was eye-popping in terms of both color and price. The other new colors are Electric Lime Metallic and Sparkling Sea Metallic.

How It Drives
The Prius c has the highest fuel economy of any car without a plug. It’s EPA-rated at 53/46/50 mpg city/highway/combined, besting the Civic Hybrid (44/47/45), Jetta Hybrid (42/48/45) and even the city rating of the regular Prius (51/48/50). The c’s ratings aren’t just pie-in-the-sky numbers, either. During a 186-mile trip of mostly highway driving, I got 47.6 mpg driving normally.

To maximize fuel economy, drivers can put the car in Eco mode, which alters acceleration and climate output settings to save energy. I found takeoffs annoyingly slow in this mode. EV mode allows the car to run on battery power, but it’s not very useful since it can only do this for up to half a mile and at very low speeds.

The city is the Prius c’s natural habitat, where it returns its best mileage and is the most comfortable. It maneuvers well in tight spaces, and power from the tiny 1.5-liter four-cylinder is adequate. The car’s automatic stop-start system is smooth, unobtrusively shutting down at every stop with minimal shudder upon restarting. Lacking smoothness, though, are the regenerative brakes, which capture braking energy and send it to the battery. The pedal requires more pressure than you’d expect, so smooth stops take practice.

The c is less pleasant on the highway due in large part to road noise — a loud, constant companion that sucks the fun out of a highway cruise — and a lack of power. Highway merging and passing require a lot of planning, patience and pedal-stomping. Steering feel is also unnervingly light at speed; with a curb weight around 2,500 pounds, even a light breeze tosses the car around, requiring a wrestling match with the steering wheel.

Interior
New standard features in my top-trim test car, the Prius c four, include two-tone fabric seats, a moonroof, glossy black interior paneling and chrome trim, but they do little to mask the no-frills air of the cabin. It’s black-plastic overload, with too many patterns and textures combining for an overall mismatched design.

The front seats are cozily bolstered and comfortable — they don’t look or feel as budget grade as the rest of the interior — but padding is lacking elsewhere in the cabin. The door panel armrest could use more cushiness. So too could the center console armrest, which gets a triple strike: It’s also set too far back to comfortably use and it’s not adjustable.

In back, headroom is adequate but legroom isn’t generous; both the Jetta Hybrid and Civic Hybrid offer a good deal more. The c’s outboard seats are deep set and very comfortable, but the middle position isn’t a real option. It’s much narrower than the outboard seats and raised, so the passenger sits on an uncomfortable hump.

Families thinking of the Prius c as a second car will find enough legroom for a booster and a forward-facing child-safety seat, but a rear-facing car seat is a no-go. There’s not enough room to install one and comfortably accommodate a front-seat passenger. The Jetta and Civic do not have this problem. Read more in our Car Seat Check.

Ergonomics & Electronics
Toyota’s Entune multimedia system is newly standard, and extra features like local weather and a live radar weather map are handy. The system’s 6.1-inch touch-screen is responsive, and the menu structure is straightforward. Changing the audio presets and inputting a destination in the optional navigation system was easy, but the buttons on the screen are very small. Clearly marked home and back buttons are easy to find, however. Thankfully, not all controls have been absorbed by the touch-screen: Volume and tuning knobs flank the screen.

Below that is a large climate-control dial that’s very well placed for easy use while driving. The temperature settings can be adjusted using the traditional climate controls or buttons on the steering wheel.

Cargo & Storage
The center console box loses more points for being very tiny, though the glove box is large. Above that is a handy device tray, complete with aux and USB inputs.

In back, storage is minimal — and I hope your passengers don’t get thirsty: There’s only one seatback pocket and one flimsy cupholder that pops out of the center console. There aren’t even any bottleholders in the rear doors.

In back, the c’s hatchback body style makes this subcompact roomier than its larger sedan competitors. With 17.1 cubic feet of space in the cargo area, it offers more than either the Civic Hybrid (10.7) or the Jetta Hybrid (11.3). I fit about a dozen grocery bags in the back during one trip and a small stroller during another.

Safety
The 2015 Toyota Prius c is an Insurance Institute for Highway Safety Top Safety Pick, earning an acceptable score in the small front overlap test and good scores in all other tests. It had previously earned a poor score in the small front overlap test, and only models built after May qualify for the higher rating. Check your vehicle’s build date on a sticker on the driver-side doorjamb. In National Highway Traffic Safety Administration testing, the Prius c received four out of five stars in all the agency’s tests.

Nine airbags are standard, including a driver’s knee airbag, but a backup camera is only standard on the top trim level. It’s unavailable on other models. Common safety features, like a blind spot monitoring system and lane departure warning system, are not offered. Click here for a list of safety features.

Value in Its Class
The 2015 Toyota Prius c starts at about $20,000, but common extras like cruise control, the center console storage box/armrest, a cargo cover and a 60/40-split folding rear seat are not standard. Competitors cost more, but they’re also better equipped.

In terms of mileage and affordability, the Prius c is a very compelling car, but its discomforting safety ratings should be a factor shoppers consider carefully.

email  

Safety review

Based on the 2016 Toyota Prius c base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Combined side rating front seat
4/5
Combined side rating rear seat
4/5
Overall side crash rating
4/5
Rollover rating
4/5
Side barrier rating
4/5
Side barrier rating driver
4/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
4/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
5/5
11.8%
Risk of rollover
11.8%
Risk of rollover

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
3 years / 36,000 miles
Corrosion
5 years
Powertrain
5 years / 60,000 miles
Battery
8 years / 100,000 miles
Maintenance
2 years / 25,000 miles
Roadside Assistance
2 years

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

4.8 / 5
Based on 31 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.6
Interior 4.5
Performance 4.7
Value 4.8
Exterior 4.7
Reliability 4.9

Most recent

One of the best cars ever

I daily the prius C 2 and it's just the perfect car. It's small and light enough to just zip through traffic and the instant torque from the electric engine can get you where you need to go quick. The handling is tight and responsive and the wheel is nice and smooth. Nimble, light, and forgiving is how I would describe the drive feel. The car can fit quite a bit of cargo for its size if the seats are folded down. I moved all of my stuff cross country in it and honesty could have fit more than I brougt. Otherwise, it can comfortably move 3 passengers + driver without much issue. The only thing it can't do is haul a bunch of luggage and people at the same time. When you baby it, you'll get mpg near 50, so fuel costs are a nonissue. It's never broken down and never had any issues that weren't my fault. It's the perfect car and I would recommend it to anyone who was open minded about driving a small car.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
4 people out of 5 found this review helpful. Did you?
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Fits my needs at this time

Nothing fancy, but I wasn’t looking for fancy. I did not want anything too large, but the hatchback gives me more possibilities in a small car. It handles really nicely and has good acceleration. Getting over 50 miles to the gallon is also a plus.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Transporting family
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 5.0
Value 4.0
Exterior 4.0
Reliability 4.0
2 people out of 2 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2016 Toyota Prius c?

The 2016 Toyota Prius c is available in 5 trim levels:

  • Four (1 style)
  • One (1 style)
  • Persona Series (1 style)
  • Three (1 style)
  • Two (1 style)

What is the MPG of the 2016 Toyota Prius c?

The 2016 Toyota Prius c offers up to 53 MPG in city driving and 46 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 2016 Toyota Prius c?

The 2016 Toyota Prius c compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2016 Toyota Prius c reliable?

The 2016 Toyota Prius c has an average reliability rating of 4.9 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2016 Toyota Prius c owners.

Is the 2016 Toyota Prius c a good Hatchback?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2016 Toyota Prius c. 100.0% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.8 / 5
Based on 31 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.6
  • Interior: 4.5
  • Performance: 4.7
  • Value: 4.8
  • Exterior: 4.7
  • Reliability: 4.9

Toyota Prius c history

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