British experts from the WhatCar portal and the insurance company MotorEasy surveyed thousands of car owners and compiled a rating of the most unreliable premium cars.
The anti-leader was the latest generation Audi Q7 crossover with a reliability indicator of only 78.6%: 47% of owners complained about breakdowns over the past two years. Most often, problems arose with electronics, engine, exhaust system and multimedia. At the same time, 29% of repairs cost the owners more than 1,500 pounds sterling (about 146 thousand rubles).
Second place was taken by the BMW iX electric crossover with a reliability of 81%: 33% of owners encountered serious problems with the battery, electric motor, multimedia and steering. In 43% of cases, cars remained in service for more than a week.
The current generation Mercedes-Benz GLE closed the top three with a rating of 82%: 43% of drivers reported problems with electronics, air conditioning, engine, suspension and interior trim, with 45% of cars being repaired for more than a week.
The top 6 most problematic premium models also included Porsche Cayenne (84.2%), Audi E-tron (84.4%) and Land Rover Discovery (84.7%).
WhatCar and MotorEasy have already named the Audi Q7 among the most unreliable crossovers, but in previous generations.
Earlier it became known about Volkswagen’s plans to build an army assault vehicle.







