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Honda Civic 1991 MPG and fuel economy



Honda Civic MPG (Miles per Gallon)


Vehicle Model Combined MPG City MPG Highway MPG Fuel Cost Drive Type Energy Impact Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Honda Civic 1991 Automatic 4-spd 27 25 31 1900 Front-Wheel Drive 12 329
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 29 27 33 1800 Front-Wheel Drive 11 306
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 27 24 30 1900 Front-Wheel Drive 12 329
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 43 40 47 1200 Front-Wheel Drive 7 206
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 39 36 44 1350 Front-Wheel Drive 8 227
Honda Civic 1991 Automatic 4-spd 26 24 30 2000 Front-Wheel Drive 12 341
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 4-spd 30 28 33 1750 Front-Wheel Drive 10 296
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 29 27 32 1800 Front-Wheel Drive 11 306
Honda Civic 1991 Automatic 4-spd 23 21 26 2250 Front-Wheel Drive 14 386
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 26 24 29 2000 Front-Wheel Drive 12 341
Honda Civic 1991 Automatic 4-spd 26 24 29 2000 Front-Wheel Drive 12 341
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 29 27 32 1800 Front-Wheel Drive 11 306
Honda Civic 1991 Automatic 4-spd 23 22 25 2250 4-Wheel or All-Wheel 14 386
Honda Civic 1991 Manual 5-spd 22 21 24 2350 4-Wheel or All-Wheel 14 403

Cars with similar combined MPG

Vehicle Model
Dodge Shadow 1991

Tips for more fuel-efficient Driving

  • Drive Sensibly: Aggressive driving (speeding, rapid acceleration and braking) wastes gas. It can lower your gas mileage by 33% at highway speeds and by 5% around town. Sensible driving is also safer for you and others, so you may save more than gas money.
  • Fuel economy feedback devices: Driver feedback devices can help you drive more efficiently. A recent study suggests that they can help the average driver improve fuel economy by about 3% and that those using them to save fuel can improve gas mileage by about 10%.
  • Observe the Speed Limit: While each vehicle reaches its optimal fuel economy at a different speed (or range of speeds), gas mileage usually decreases rapidly at speeds above 50 mph. You can assume that each 5 mph you drive over 50 mph is like paying an additional $0.24 per gallon for gas.
  • Remove Excess Weight: Hauling cargo on your roof increases aerodynamic drag (wind resistance) and lowers fuel economy. A large, blunt roof-top cargo box, for example, can reduce fuel economy by around 2% to 8% in city driving, 6% to 17% on the highway, and 10% to 25% at Interstate speeds (65 mph to 75 mph).

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