Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lexus, Kia top 2021 JD Power auto study

- BY HENRY PAYNE

Automobile­s are more complex than ever, and more dependable than ever.

That’s the encouragin­g news from data analytics firm JD Power which released its 2021 U.S. Vehicle Dependabil­ity Study Thursday. The widely-watched study found vehicle durability at an all-time high, improving 10% over 2020 — and 25% over 2016 when the industry was backslidin­g in durability due to the swarm of new electronic­s debuting on vehicles.

This year’s survey also marked a victory for Kia as the Korean brand beat perennial #1 Toyota as the most dependable mainstream brand. Toyota’s luxury brand, Lexus, continued its dominance as the most reliable automaker overall for the ninth time in 10 years. The Porsche 911 sports car was the most dependable model surveyed.

Just five years ago dependabil­ity was declining — by 3% year-over-year — provoking flashing lights from JD Power, especially in so-called ACEN features (infotainme­nt, navigation, in-vehicle communicat­ion systems) as automakers rushed to integrate connectivi­ty and autonomy in their vehicles.

But the latest study indicates that these systems are maturing, with reported defects dropping from 152 problems per 100 vehicles five years ago to just 121 PP/100 today.

“Today’s three-year-old vehicles are of higher quality and more dependable than in previous years,” said JD Power vice president of global automotive Dave Sargent. “Most owners aren’t experienci­ng their vehicles breaking down or falling apart. In the future, dependabil­ity will partially be determined by the ability to solve problems through vehicle updates and the avoidance of technology obsolescen­ce.”

The ability to update vehicles over the air is accelerati­ng with, for example, the Ford F-series pickup — the top-selling vehicle in autodom — introducin­g OTA updates with its 2021 models.

Ironically, Tesla — the pioneer of OTA updates — had one of the poorest scores on JD Power’s test (172 PP/100) as the Silicon Valley brand struggled with manufactur­ing quality issues.

The closely-watched Vehicle Dependabil­ity Study, now in its 32nd year, tracks 33,251 original owners of three-year-old cars (2018 models for this year’s study) over 12 months. JD Power covers 177 specific problems grouped into eight major vehicle categories: audio/communicat­ion/entertainm­ent/navigation (ACEN); engine/transmissi­on; exterior; interior; features/controls/displays (FCD); driving experience; heating, ventilatio­n and air conditioni­ng; and seats.

All categories improved this year, led by exterior and driving experience. The ACEN grouping, where consumers have seen the biggest advances in recent years (from voice recognitio­n software to navigation to satellite radio features) showed marginal improvemen­t and remains the category with the most problems reported.

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