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Chevrolet Volt vs. Honda Fit MPG

Chart is based on 9 fuel economy reports for the Chevrolet Volt and 1536 fuel economy reports for the Honda Fit.

Chevrolet Volt MPG

Chevrolet Volt Chevrolet Volt 2017 90.5 MPG Highway Percentage 80 percent Chevrolet Volt Chevrolet Volt 2014 46.7 MPG Highway Percentage 83 percent Chevrolet Volt Chevrolet Volt 2012 57.0 MPG Highway Percentage 59 percent
Year Body/Powertrain flat, hilly, or mountainousLand driving style: very light to "lead foot"Foot A/C use: none to heavyA/C constant stop and goTraf % many stops per mileCity % stop every mile or twoSub % fairly steady speedHwy % Hwy Spd MPG
2017 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Plug-in Hybrid
CVT FWD
hills med light 10 10 0 80 75 90.5  
2014 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
mtns light hvy 1 2 16 83 98 46.7  
2012 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
flat light none 0 3 39 59 60 57.0  

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This page shows only averages. See all the Chevrolet Volt fuel economy data.

Honda Fit MPG

Honda Fit Honda Fit 2016 48.5 MPG Highway Percentage 10 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2015 38.2 MPG Highway Percentage 62 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2013 31.3 MPG Highway Percentage 14 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2013 33.7 MPG Highway Percentage 63 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2013 25.6 MPG Highway Percentage 15 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2012 35.2 MPG Highway Percentage 68 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2012 38.3 MPG Highway Percentage 57 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2012 38.4 MPG Highway Percentage 90 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2011 34.4 MPG Highway Percentage 44 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2011 34.4 MPG Highway Percentage 45 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2011 33.2 MPG Highway Percentage 29 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2010 38.0 MPG Highway Percentage 51 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2010 38.6 MPG Highway Percentage 56 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2010 35.2 MPG Highway Percentage 22 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2009 34.7 MPG Highway Percentage 51 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2009 34.9 MPG Highway Percentage 31 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2009 34.4 MPG Highway Percentage 45 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2008 31.5 MPG Highway Percentage 54 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2008 35.2 MPG Highway Percentage 42 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2008 34.2 MPG Highway Percentage 62 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2007 30.0 MPG Highway Percentage 40 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2007 33.5 MPG Highway Percentage 48 percent Honda Fit Honda Fit 2007 32.5 MPG Highway Percentage 52 percent
Year Body/Powertrain flat, hilly, or mountainousLand driving style: very light to "lead foot"Foot A/C use: none to heavyA/C constant stop and goTraf % many stops per mileCity % stop every mile or twoSub % fairly steady speedHwy % Hwy Spd MPG
2016 4dr Hatch 130-horsepower 1.5L I4
CVT FWD
flat light none 0 10 80 10 60 48.5  
2015 4dr Hatch 130-horsepower 1.5L I4
CVT FWD
flat light none 7 10 21 62 65 38.2  
2013 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
flat light light 0 9 77 14 60 31.3  
2013 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
flat med light 3 34 0 63 71 33.7  
2013 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
flat light light 15 43 28 15 80 25.6  
2012 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
flat light light 3 13 16 68 68 35.2  
2012 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
flat v.lt none 5 10 29 57 62 38.3  
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2012 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
flat light light 0 3 8 90 65 38.4  
2011 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
flat light light 3 26 26 44 66 34.4  
2011 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
hills med light 8 22 26 45 68 34.4  
2011 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
flat light light 8 10 54 29 59 33.2  
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
hills light light 4 13 32 51 62 38.0  
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
flat light none 4 6 34 56 62 38.6  
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
flat light none 24 26 28 22 91 35.2  
2009 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
flat light none 24 14 11 51 64 34.7  
2009 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
flat light light 4 27 37 31 65 34.9  
2009 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
flat light light 4 41 11 45 75 34.4  
2008 4dr Hatch 109-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
flat med light 5 19 22 54 68 31.5  
2008 4dr Hatch 109-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
flat med light 10 18 30 42 67 35.2  
2008 4dr Hatch 109-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
flat light light 6 19 13 62 68 34.2  
2007 4dr Hatch 109-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
flat med light 5 15 40 40 68 30.0  
2007 4dr Hatch 109-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
flat light none 5 27 21 48 81 33.5  
2007 4dr Hatch 109-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
flat med none 8 25 16 52 80 32.5  

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This page shows only averages. See all the Honda Fit fuel economy data.

Chevrolet Volt vs. Honda Fit MPG

Unlike other fuel economy surveys, TrueDelta's Real-World Gas Mileage Survey includes questions about how and where a car was driven. So you can get an idea of the Chevrolet Volt and Honda Fit's where a car was driven. So you can get an idea of their real-world MPG based on how and where you drive a car.

See TrueDelta's information for all Hatchbacks
See TrueDelta's information for all Chevrolet models and Honda models.

TrueDelta Reviews the Real Gas Mileage of the Chevrolet Volt

Chevrolet Volt Real Gas Mileage: Pros
YearComment
2016 From the start, the primary reason to buy either the Chevrolet Volt or the Toyota Prius has been energy efficiency. Which is more efficient depends on how many miles you tend to drive each day. The Volt is a car like no other. It can travel much farther and accelerate much more quickly on electricity alone than other plug-in hybrids. Consequently, it usually operates like a fully electric vehicle (EV). Other plug-in hybrids must rely much more often on their gasoline engines. While the Volt can't travel nearly as far on electricity alone as pure EVs, they don't have a gas engine as a backup. As long as there's a fossil fuel dispensary around you never have to worry about running out of juice in the Volt. How much farther can the new Volt travel on a full charge? GM's engineers enlarged and improved the battery pack, increased the efficiency of the electric motor and transmission, and reduced the car's weight by a massive 240 pounds. These changes increased the car's battery-powered range in the EPA's test from 38 to 53 miles. The 2012-2015 Prius Plug-in Hybrid had a range of only 11 miles even with the gas engine assisting with acceleration. (The upcoming Prius Prime should do better, but will likely still have much less battery-powered range and performance than the Volt.) As in all EVs and plug-ins, though, cold weather or heavy A/C use will significantly reduce the Volt's range. If your drives are rarely long enough to run the Volt's battery down, and you live in an area where the price of electricity is at or below the national average (or discounted at night), the Volt will cost less to operate than the Prius. Be aware that the price of electricity varies far more than the price of gasoline depending on where you live. Also, with gas prices down and the Prius's fuel efficiency up, the advantage of running on electricity isn't as large as it used to be. If your electricity is expensive, the Prius will actually cost less to drive. But will gas prices remain low? If you do need to run the new Volt on gasoline, then it manages very good but not amazing fuel economy, 42 mpg combined in the EPA's tests (up from the 2011-2015's 37 mpg). The Prius Eco scored 56 mpg, and in my driving easily exceeded this number. If your focus is on the environment rather than the cost of fuel, the Volt at least potentially uses cleaner energy (depending on the source of your electricity). Fully charging the Volt via a standard household outlet can take up to 13 hours. If you regularly drive more than 25 miles per day you'll probably want to get a 240-volt charger, which reduces the charge time to about four hours. see full Chevrolet Volt review
 

What Our Members Are Saying about the Real Gas Mileage of the Chevrolet Volt

Chevrolet Volt Real Gas Mileage: Pros
YearBody/PowertrainComment
2017 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Plug-in Hybrid
CVT FWD
I bought the Volt because it meets my stringent requirements: It must run on electric only until the battery depletes, but it must also allow me to drive the 300 miles round trip to pick up my wine in Central Washington without requiring a wait to recharge. If I drive less than 55 miles per day, I can use zero gas, which happens 80% of my drives. Just shy of 5000 miles now, and I've used 20 gallons of gas and just over $100 of electricity. It's not so much the lower fuel expense for me (but it's nice to have), it's more the reduction of emissions especially in the water-power Pacific Northwest region. see full Chevrolet Volt review
2014 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
Many of us Volt owners think Chevy is under-advertising the features of the car. Our usage in three months is 3100 miles. Our tabulated mileage for gasoline is 88 MPG, or somewhere around 7 gallons a month. The largest percentage use is on the home charged 220 volt system which loads 11 kWh into the battery. Depending on outside temperature, this gives between 34 to 38 miles of electric driving, and as spring comes, it will be into the low 40's. An electric charge at the8c rate costs about a dollar. We bought a Clipper Creek 220 Volt charger... it does the task in 4 hours, and it is portable. You can charge on 110volts too, andthat takes 10 hours. You have the choice of how to use the drive system: All electric first, then gas. Or gas first, then electric. And two combined modes. In cold weather we start out with a plugged-in preheat, then go Gas Only to warm it fully, especially if the planned trip will be requiring some gas use because of the distance. For short trips, we use battery power to warm the cabin and seats. Our shopping is a 38 mile trip with a 500 foot elevation change. We do that trip so the total gas usage is 2/10ths of a gallon, sometimes 3/10ths. Our Church trips make up a large portion of the driving miles, and they are always all electric for the 22 mile trip. One thing this does is give a "good feeling" about running an errand.... it is esentally costless. GM Onstar keeps track of all energy use. But I also keep a book log. Some folks don't realize that you coulddrive this car all across the country on gas, and get 37 MPG. see full Chevrolet Volt review
2014 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
So far have driven in the winter when you get the poorest mileage on the electric motor. I have 3100 km. on the car and lifetime gas consumption is 2.6 Liters per 100km. I dont think there is another car out there that can do this well and it will get even better in the Volt as the weather warms up from the minus 12 degree weather we have had all of Jan and Feb. I LOVE NOT HAVING TO FILL UP AT THE PUMPS AND STILL HAVE NO RANGE ANXIETY. I previously have owned two Prius and the Volt is way ahead in so many ways. see full Chevrolet Volt review
2013 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
The reason you should buy a Volt is all about the fuel cost. In my case I'm averaged close to ~100 mpg (It would have been higher but for a recent 200 mile round trip to Ikea). Granted that mpg is excluding the electricity costs which in my case this car is costing ~ +$30/month increase in my electric bill so after 3 months of ownership (leased October 2012) I've used ~30 gallons of fuel (average cost $3.40 /gal) and driven 3200 miles which is ~ 6.2 cents/mile. Comparing this it a compact (Ford Focus) averaging 30 mpg with regular gas ~ $3.1 would have averaged 10 cents/mile. see full Chevrolet Volt review
2012 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
Obvious. see full Chevrolet Volt review
2012 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
I've had the Volt for 9 months and 13,000 miles. I drive it exactly like I would any of my other cars. It putts around town on errands, it goes hundreds of miles for various trips and everything in-between. Life-to-date gas mileage is 75.3--higher than I expected. see full Chevrolet Volt review
2012 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
Our lifetime average is 167 mpg after 15,000 miles! see full Chevrolet Volt review
Chevrolet Volt Real Gas Mileage: Cons
YearBody/PowertrainComment
2013 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
Although the electric range on this car fits most of my needs the fuel economy when the battery is empty is poor. Typically this car will get ~35 mpg (on highway) in premium gulping engine only mode - much lower than other hybrids and worse than many compact cars costing half as much. Therefore if you regularly traveling much beyond the battery only range (say >45 miles) you'd be better served with traditional hybrid. see full Chevrolet Volt review
2012 4dr Hatch 149-horsepower Electric + Gas
CVT FWD
It's an electric car with a gas generator.. The electric range in the summer is amazing getting close to 30mi on full quiet comfort electric.. The winter MPG is horrible.. The design required the gas engine in cold weather to run the heat, it also required it to keep the batteries warm.. as a result combining the cost of electric and gas made my average around 6.8mpg in the harsh snow belt winters. see full Chevrolet Volt review
 

TrueDelta Reviews the Real Gas Mileage of the Honda Fit

Honda Fit Real Gas Mileage: Pros
YearComment
2015 Hondas have been lagging the leaders in fuel economy. But with new "Earth Dreams" engines and CVT transmissions (pardon the redundancy), they've closed the gap. When fitted with the CVT (continuously variable transmission), the Fit LX rates 33 mpg city, 41 mpg highway in the EPA's tests. The city rating is especially impressive, and both figures are much better than the 2013 Fit's 28/35 (with a five-speed conventional automatic) and a little better than the Nissan Versa Note's 31/40 (with a CVT). You won't find a higher EPA city figure in any other non-diesel, non-hybrid car you'd want to drive. The highway figure, on the other hand, is matched or slightly exceeded by a few somewhat larger cars. Small yet tall hatchbacks are aerodynamically challenged. With a bit more poundage and stickier tires, the Fit EX and EX-L don't test quite as well, with scores of 32/38. But I doubt their real-world fuel economy would differ significantly from the LX's. The days when manual transmissions ruled the EPA charts are history. With a six-speed manual, the Honda Fit rates 29/37. While this is better than the 2013 5-speed manual's 27/33, the much zippier Ford Fiesta ST isn't far behind with 26/35. For those who like to row their own, another Fiesta variant, the SE EcoBoost with a three-cylinder turbocharged engine, is the way to go: 31/43. In my real-world suburban driving the trip computers of the Fit, Versa Note, and Fiesta SE EB all regularly reported averages over 40 and as high as the low 50s (with infrequent stops and a feather-light foot). see full Honda Fit review
 

What Our Members Are Saying about the Real Gas Mileage of the Honda Fit

Honda Fit Real Gas Mileage: Pros
YearBody/PowertrainComment
2013 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
driven normally, fuel economy better than EPA results. (But drops fairly quickly when trying to merge or accelerate along with normal flow of traffic) see full Honda Fit review
2012 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
Owned less than a week but drive home after purchase was 60 miles and indications are the true mileage will exceed the EPA numbers as it shows 36mpg for half city and half congested freeway travel see full Honda Fit review
2012 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
Capable of 40 mpg on the highway with A/C running, 2 passengers and a load of cargo. see full Honda Fit review
2011 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
30 miles per gallon on average in mostly city driving averaging 30 miles per hour or less/stop&go. see full Honda Fit review
2011 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
30+ MPG even with a lot on stop and go. I got the 5 speed which actually may lower my MPG but I love the ability to punch it when I need to! Wish it had a 6th gear for 70 mph+ I want to see if I can hit 40-45 MPG going on I-10 doing 60-65 the whole way see full Honda Fit review
2011 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
Regularly get 32-36 in town, have gotten 40 on the highway. see full Honda Fit review
2011 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
30 MPG in brutal, city driving; 40+ MPG on the highway. The fuel economy is better than I expected. see full Honda Fit review
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
That it gets double my previous car. see full Honda Fit review
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
Fuel economy meter gives real-time feedback. see full Honda Fit review
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
38MPG average in my driving community see full Honda Fit review
Honda Fit Real Gas Mileage: Cons
YearBody/PowertrainComment
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
Loses out slightly to the Fiesta in fuel economy. see full Honda Fit review
2010 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
Although we got 38 mpg over the course of our 32,000 miles, we actually got better mileage with our previous 07 Civic over its lifetime and powertrain performance was much better for the Civic. Overall dissapointed with mileage. see full Honda Fit review
2009 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed automatic FWD
I rented the car for a weekend & my gas mileage from Phoenix, to Flagstaff & back to Phoenix was only 28.8 mpg This car had an automatic tranny. Engine rmp always sounded BUSY & noisey see full Honda Fit review