Toyota Prius Prime Toyota Prius Prime 2022 Honda Fit Honda Fit 2012

We are 103,000+ car owners sharing real-world car information.

Join Us

Toyota Prius Prime (2022) vs. Honda Fit (2012) Specs

How powerful is the engine? How much room is in the back seat? Get the 2022 Toyota Prius Prime and 2012 Honda Fit specs.

2022 Toyota Prius Prime and 2012 Honda Fit Specifications

Model Year 2022 2012  
Model Toyota Prius Prime Honda Fit  
Engine  
Transmission  
Drivetrain  
Body 4dr Hatch 4dr Hatch  
      Difference
Wheelbase 106.3 in 98.4 in 7.9 in
Length 182.9 in 161.6 in 21.3 in
Width 69.3 in 66.7 in 2.6 in
Height 57.9 in 60.0 in -2.1 in
Curb Weight 3365 lb. 2496 lb. 869 lb.
Fuel Capacity 11.3 gal. 10.6 gal. 0.7 gal.
Headroom, Row 1 39.4 in 40.4 in -1 in
Shoulder Room, Row 1 54.2 in 52.7 in 1.5 in
Hip Room, Row 1 53.7 in 51.5 in 2.2 in
Legroom, Row 1 43.2 in 41.3 in 1.9 in
Headroom, Row 2 37.2 in 39.0 in -1.8 in
Shoulder Room, Row 2 53.0 in 51.3 in 1.7 in
Hip Room, Row 2 51.6 in 51.3 in 0.3 in
Legroom, Row 2 33.4 in 34.5 in -1.1 in
Total Legroom 76.6 in (over 2 rows) 75.8 in (over 2 rows) 0.8 in
Cargo Volume, Minimum 19.8 ft3 20.6 ft3 -0.8 ft3
Cargo Volume, Maximum 0.0 57.3 ft3 -57.3

Return to top

What Our Members Are Saying about the Seat Room and Comfort of the 2022 Toyota Prius Prime

None of our members have yet commented on the seat room and comfort of the 2022 Toyota Prius Prime.

Be the first!

What Our Members Are Saying about the Seat Room and Comfort of the 2012 Honda Fit

2012 Honda Fit Seat Room and Comfort: Pros
YearBody/PowertrainComment
2013 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
The best in this category (when you take into consideration the size of the trunk). see full Honda Fit review
2012 Honda Fit Seat Room and Comfort: Cons
YearBody/PowertrainComment
2013 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed shiftable automatic FWD
Seat bottoms are typical Japanese style short bottomed and not conducive to long duration drives. see full Honda Fit review
2013 4dr Hatch 117-horsepower 1.5L I4
5-speed manual FWD
One more thing. Rear seat comfort was obviously not a big selling point, nor a necessary feature. But one piece of it was worse than it had to be: the rear seat headrests. The artful circular shape and limited adjustment made the rear seats even harder to use; the headrest would tend to jab passengers in their spine. A better solution which was more even with the seat back would really have helped here. see full Honda Fit review
 
See TrueDelta's information for all Hatchbacks
See TrueDelta's information for all Toyota models.