3/4 Front Glamour 1996 Mercury Villager
  • 3/4 Front Glamour 1996 Mercury Villager
  • GL 1996 Mercury Villager
  • GL 1996 Mercury Villager
  • GL 1996 Mercury Villager
  • CarsDirect Price Tag
    VehicleMinMax
    1996 Mercury Villager N/A N/A
    2012 Kia Sedona $28,644 $28,644
    2012 Ford Transit Connect N/A N/A
    2012 RAM Cargo N/A N/A
    Average $28,644 $28,644
    Used Car Price Range

    Currently Unavailable
  • Monthly Payment Calendar
    VehicleMinMax
    1996 Mercury Villager N/A N/A
    2012 Kia Sedona $486 $486
    2012 Ford Transit Connect N/A N/A
    2012 RAM Cargo N/A N/A
    Average $486 $486

    Based On: 10% down, 5% APR, 60 months

    Estimated Monthly Payment

    Currently Unavailable
  • MPG
    MPGcityhwy
    1996 Mercury Villager 17 23
    2012 Kia Sedona 18 25
    2012 Ford Transit Connect 21 27
    2012 RAM Cargo 17 25
    Average 18 25
    MPG

    17 City | 23 Highway
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OVERVIEW
Once upon a time in the car business, it seemed Japan could do no wrong and America could do almost nothing right. America's Big Three carmakers figured if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. So they partnered up with their Japanese competitors and built vehicles here using much of the same engineering that had given Japan an edge.

The Mercury Villager is a product of just such a partnership. Introduced in 1992, the front-wheel drive Villager gets its drivetrain and most of its design from Nissan, and shares both with the nearly identical Nissan Quest. Powertrains come from Nissan, and assembly is handled at a Ford factory located in Avon Lake, Ohio.

The Villager arrived as a more carlike, more compact yet surprisingly spacious alternative to Chrysler's then-aging minivan trio.

In fact, it represented the first true challenge to the original Chrysler minivan concept--car-like driveability and van-like cargo capacity, plus garageability. Early responses from Ford and GM were based on rear-drive truck platforms, and GM's front-drive Chevrolet Lumina APV, Pontiac Trans Sport and Oldsmobile Silhouette never quite caught on.

In addition to nailing the concept, the Villager and Quest were affordable, with pricing that started at about $17,000.

The Villager is still pleasantly carlike and spacious for its size, and gets a host of upgrades for 1996. And at $19,940 to start, it's still affordable. But with larger, newer minivans at a comparable price from Chrysler and even Ford, the Villager also shows how much the world around it has changed.

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