15000 miles a year is roughly the equivalent of commuting from Worthing to Crawley 5 days a week for 48 weeks a year, not exactly big distance. Also worth noting that a car that does 15000 motorway miles is going to suffer less wear than a car doing 6000 stop-start in a town or city.
There's always private sales and I'm sure you can find some friend of a friend who knows something about cars. I'm no expert but have a good look at the service history and any repairs (good private owners do have a habit of keeping invoices). check the car is cold when you get there, check it starts ok and listen to the exhaust, open the bonnet, get someone to rev it and listen for rattles, take it for a test drive, brake hard and do a speedy turn on full lock. Over the years I have bought loads of second hand cars, all private, and some for significant sums and I am no mechanic.
Only time I've ever taken a mechanic along was when I invested in my mid-life crisis classic sports car (and still running fine 6 years later). There are some good deals out there. If in doubt, see if [MENTION=263]zefarelly[/MENTION]has an hourly rate
Sorry, but back to watching SEGW fall over
I wouldn't choose a new car. Decent second hand every time.
Polo's are mint.
Well, Audis, BMWs and, to a slightly lesser extent, Mercs all seem to be driven by grade A bellends so you’ve got to ask yourself, do I really want to associate myself with that kind of person?
I learnt to drive in a Polo and it was a great car FWIW
I learned to drive in a Morris Traveller - and it was crap! Your point is.....?
That I thought it was a decent car and, as it is one of the cars on the OPs list, I think my point is relatively clear...
Honda Civic - the last few generations have been excellent cars and are getting better all the time.