2007-2009 Volkswagen Rabbit

2007-2009 Volkswagen Rabbit

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Photos by -Autonet.ca
GLEN WOODCOCK
Published: 02 09 2011

“Drivers wanted"

History
The Mk5 Volkswagen Golf went on sale in Europe in 2003, but didn’t come to North America until June 2006, as a 2007 model. In fact, you could say it didn’t come here at all because in Canada and the U.S., VW reverted to calling it the Rabbit, a nameplate that hadn’t been used since the mid-1980s. Rabbit was available in several trim levels starting at less than $20,000 for the base three-door version. A $1,600 Sport Package was added for 2009 that included 17-inch wheels, tuned suspension, an electronic stabilization program (ESP), bi-xenon headlamps and heated seats. In 2007, it was named Best New Small Car over $18,000 by the Automobile Journalists Association of Canada.

Search for a used vehicle for the 2007-2009 Volkswagen Rabbit

The good stuff
For a long time, VW’s advertising slogan was “Drivers wanted,” a not-so-subtle suggestion that its cars were really fun when you got behind the wheel. And they were, the Rabbit being no exception. In a July 2009 road test of a five-door Rabbit I wrote: “Acceleration is decent - 0-100 in 8.0 seconds - but as good as it is in a straight line, handling is its forte. Rabbit really irons out the kinks in the road and eats up surface irregularities … it leans into curves with the sure-footed feel of a top thoroughbred rounding the turn for home.” Rabbit received four stars from the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for frontal crashes and five stars in side impact tests, while the International Institute for Highway Safety gave the car its top rating all around. Six airbags and ABS brakes are standard.

Heads up!
Although VW’s overall reliability record has suffered over the last decade, most consumer Websites report 2007-09 Rabbits as average to better-than-average. Then again, even the oldest model is still relatively new. Factory VW replacement parts are expensive. The extra power provided by the five-cylinder engine means fuel economy is not as good as that delivered by rivals such as Honda Civic or Mazda3, but in real world driving, Autonet.ca road testers averaged 9.0 L/100km (which we consider average). Rabbits of all years were among the Volkswagens recalled in 2010 because of possible fuel leaks.

Overall
Although the cabin is well finished, it is a bit austere. But there’s room for five adults and good cargo space is provided behind the 60/40 split rear seats, which fold forward to accommodate larger items. VW’s basic warranty is 4 years/ 80,000 km (5 years/100,000 km for powertrain) so low-mileage Rabbits still will have coverage. Thus far, these cars have had excellent resale value with five-door models (which were $1,000 extra when new) selling for slight premiums. A GTI version also was offered, but that’s a completely different kind of cat - er, bunny - and warrants its own review.

Prices at a glance

Note: these are asking prices, not selling prices, from a cross-Canada survey using Autonet.ca and other sources.

Year range Approx. price range
2007 $4,500 - $7,900
2008 $10,999 - $23,900
2009 $16,495 - $25,590

Vitals
Engine:2.5L DOHC I5 (150 hp, 2007; 170 hp, 2008-09)
Transmissions:5-speed manual; 6-speed automatic with Tiptronic
Layout:front engine/ front wheel drive
Body:2-door hatchback; 4-door hatchback

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