Numbers crunched: how a Mini is vastly cheaper now than 60 years ago

A Mini is more hugely affordable now than when the original car debuted in 1959. That's despite a typical car being around 32 times more expensive today.

Minis more affordable now than in 1959

A Mini is more hugely affordable now than when the original car debuted in 1959. That’s despite a typical car being around 32 times more expensive today

Research by Mini shows that, if the cost of cars is compared to average UK household disposable income, drivers in 2019 are far better off. 

Minis more affordable now than in 1959

  • Revealed: Top-selling cars with the longest waiting lists

The original Mini’s £780 typical purchase cost was 307 percent of the average disposable income in 1959.The average disposable income of drivers in 1959 when adjusted for inflation is £5,474. Adjust the original Mini’s price for inflation, and you get £16,784.

By comparison, the average price of a modern Mini was around £18,139 in 2018. Yet the average household disposable income per-head is £20,504.

So the cost of the average Mini today is 88 percent of the average disposable income per-head in a household. Indeed, even if £10,000 was taken off that figure, we’d still be in a better position today than 60 years ago.

Minis more affordable now than in 1959

Around eight in 10 of all new private car registrations today are via finance, while a prospective buyer in 1959 would be looking at saving up every one of those 780 pounds.

Today, a four-figure deposit and a three-figure monthly payment will get you the keys to a Mini. Take a £2,000 deposit and £250 per-month as very generic figures: £2,000 is around nine percent of the total average cost of a modern Mini, while £250 is less than one 70th of the total price.

Adjust those amounts for the 1959 price, and you get a deposit of £70, plus monthly payments of £10.80.

Minis more affordable now than in 1959

“Over the past 60 years, how we buy and finance Minis has evolved just as much as the cars themselves,” said Phil Kerry, sales and marketing director at BMW Group Financial Services.

“Motorists now have more choice, and this will only increase over the next few decades.”

Related Articles

Ethan Jupp
Ethan Jupp
I'm Content Editor at MR. Road trips music and movies are my vices. Perennially stuck between French hot hatches and Australian muscle cars.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Find a Car Review

Latest

Mazda reveals new flagship CX-80 seven-seat SUV

The largest Mazda SUV for Europe, the new CX-80 comes with three rows of seats as standard – and a plug-in hybrid option.

Drifting for beginners: we go sideways in a Caterham Seven

Tim Pitt burns rubber at Brands Hatch in a Caterham Seven 360R. Warning: some cones were harmed in the making of this article…

2024 Tesla Model 3 Performance revealed… and it’s even faster

With 460hp, four-wheel drive and adaptive suspension, the new electric Tesla Model 3 Performance is priced from £59,990.

Lamborghini Urus SE plug-in hybrid has 800hp – and a 37-mile electric range

Lamborghini has unveiled its first plug-in hybrid SUV, with the 800hp Urus SE promising wild performance and electrified efficiency.