3/4 Front Glamour 1997 Honda Odyssey
  • 3/4 Front Glamour 1997 Honda Odyssey
  • GL 1997 Honda Odyssey
  • GL 1997 Honda Odyssey
  • CarsDirect Price Tag
    VehicleMinMax
    1997 Honda Odyssey N/A N/A
    2012 Nissan Quest N/A N/A
    2012 Toyota Sienna N/A N/A
    2012 Chrysler Town & Country N/A N/A
    Average Not Available
    Used Car Price Range

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  • Monthly Payment Calendar
    VehicleMinMax
    1997 Honda Odyssey N/A N/A
    2012 Nissan Quest N/A N/A
    2012 Toyota Sienna N/A N/A
    2012 Chrysler Town & Country N/A N/A
    Average Not Available

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

    Estimated Monthly Payment

    Currently Unavailable
  • MPG
    MPGcityhwy
    1997 Honda Odyssey 20 25
    2012 Nissan Quest 19 24
    2012 Toyota Sienna 18 24
    2012 Chrysler Town & Country 17 25
    Average 19 25
    MPG

    20 City | 25 Highway
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OVERVIEW
Honda is reknowned for design and technical innovation, and that's why it calls its Odyssey "the Honda of minivans."

The Odyssey is a different kind of player in the minivan game. Different can be risky in a mainstream market like minivans. In fact, it can be disastrous. You could ask General Motors.

Chrysler, of course, defines the segment. Other manufacturers are faced with either following Chrysler's lead or getting out of the way.

Typically, Honda chose to do neither, and built the Odyssey.

Chrysler, and more recently, GM made headlines when they came out with four-door minivans. But the Odyssey was actually the first minivan to feature four doors, rolling into showrooms just before the latest generation of Chrysler vans.

And, of course, Honda took a different approach: the Odyssey's rear doors open like those on a sedan. This requires a wider parking space, but dispenses with the sometimes troublesome door track of sliding doors. On balance, we think the arguments for conventional doors such as this are good ones.

Unlike Toyota's zoomy-looking Previa, Honda elected to be conservative in its design. Like Chrysler, Honda decreed user-friendliness to the dimensions, inside and out. Unlike Chrysler, Honda had a hot-selling sedan--the Accord--whose sales it didn't wish to disrupt, which led Honda of America to keep its Odyssey sales projections low compared to mainstream U.S. minivans.

A more significant factor in the Odyssey's U.S. sales picture is its huge popularity in the Japanese domestic market, where it's a best-seller. Honda can barely keep pace with demand at home, let alone fight for a bigger share of the U.S. minivan market.

So modest sales volumes are deceptive here, and unless you need max capacity we think the Odyssey warrants a closer examination. It's full of clever design touches that lend versatility out of proportion to its size, and in last year's J.D. Power customer satisfaction study it posted the highest score the company has ever recorded for a minivan.

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