Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Reviews

First drive: 2015 Honda Fit

Add as a preferred source on Google
2015 honda fit review p c54895b7cdc94966bd2b82d349006e84 615x340
Image used with permission by copyright holder
“Versatility is the 2015 Honda Fit’s strong suit, and it always has been. You’d think someone else would’ve caught on by now.”
Pros
  • Segment-leading practicality
  • Fun, spunky driving dynamics
  • High-tech safety and entertainment features
Cons
  • Manual requires lots of shifting on hilly drives
  • Abundance of dark, hard plastics
  • Capacitive volume control on radio could be a dial

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

Versatility is the 2015 Honda Fit’s strong suit, and it always has been. You’d think someone else would’ve caught on by now.

Recommended Videos

The Honda Fit has been the best at what it does since its U.S. debuted in 2007. That is to say, it offers safe, reliable, practical, efficient transportation that just about anyone can afford. And it doesn’t depreciate quickly either.

By our count, that makes the Fit a standout. The fact that it’s fun to drive makes it deserving of some sort of trophy amongst the subcompact hatchbacks in its segment.

For 2015, Honda has debuted an all-new Fit, which the brand claims to amplify each of its qualities and add a splash of technology to the mix, too. So, we took a quick break from reviewing our normal slew of high-tech luxury cars to board a jet to San Diego and see exactly how much stuff you can cram into this tiny Honda.

The answer? More than you’d expect.

Form follows function

Call it an egg. Call it a teardrop. Just don’t call it ugly. It’s not.

There are plenty of reasons why the 2015 Fit is a hatchback. Its tiny wagon shape not only aids in aerodynamics, but also creates more space for your friends and their stuff.

At its core, it has the makings of the perfect car for college.

At its core, the Fit has the makings of the perfect car for college. The base LX model comes with power doors, windows, and locks with keyless entry. Hands free Bluetooth connectivity and reverse camera are standard on every model – as they should be, in my opinion.

The Fit has a trump card up its sleeve, though; it’s practical … wheelbarrow in the back practical. 55-inch flat screen in the rear seat practical.

It’s the interior configuration that really puts this car ahead of the competition, and also makes it very obvious why the car must be a hatchback. It uses the extra headroom in back.

With the back row in place, there’s room for five medium-sized adults and a couple of suitcases behind them. We’ll call that seating mode. The rest, Honda came up with on its own.

Toss the seats down, and you have “Utility Mode”, which creates about as much space as the truck bed in the Ridgeline. “Tall Mode” allows you to lift the rear seat cushions up and lock them in place, leaving floor-to-ceiling space where your butt and legs would normally go, a la flat screen.

“Long Mode” allows you to flatten the rear seats and front passenger seat so you can carry a longboard. And, finally, there’s “Refresh Mode”, my personal favorite, which lets you lay the front seats into a bed-like configuration, so you can sleep in the car – silly but functional.

Hill and dale

The Honda engineers gave the 2015 Fit a new drivetrain, complete with a revvy 1.5-liter four-cylinder that produces 130 horsepower and 114 pound-feet of torque, as well as the option of a new six-speed manual or continuously variable transmission (CVT).

The manual transmission is – as we’d expect from Honda – easy to shift and very forgiving, and it’ll make for a great learning tool for those who choose to start here. It’s even fun to drive around town. Though, I found it to be a little too much work through parts of our hilly drives on the outskirts of San Diego.

This isn’t a racecar, and it isn’t trying to be.

With the manual, the Fit is rated at 29 mpg city, 37 mpg highway, which is only average for the segment. The CVT may well be the very first I’ve ever preferred to its manual alternative, as it simply makes better use of the torque band away from flat roads, and it’s rated at 33 and 41 mpg, respectively.

I found the steering in the 2015 Honda Fit to be particularly responsive, and the suspension remained flat and nimble, even during more assertive maneuvers.

Let’s be clear: this isn’t a racecar, and it isn’t trying to be. However, as subcompact economy cars go, the Fit is an enjoyable driver’s car and it definitely skews closer to engaging than it does numb.

There’s something new inside for the Gen-Y crowd, too. The HondaLink infotainment system available in EX models and up allows users to play Internet radio, SIRI Eyes Free commands, and even your phone’s data plan to power the navigation.

2015 Honda Fit left side
Image used with permission by copyright holder

That means that you can buy an EX model, pay $59 for the HondaLink application, and access turn-by-turn directions in your car without having to opt all the way up to the EX-L Navi trim for the Fit.

Conclusion

Since the Fit debuted in 2007, several competitors have come to market with better fuel economy and more performance, but none has mastered the package quite as well as Honda.

The 2015 Fit may not be the fastest or most luxurious, but it does make for an affordable, well-rounded option that has practicality and Honda’s reputation for reliability in its corner.

For my money, I’d choose the Fit for its versatility in a segment compromised by small size. Plus, you never know when you might need to sleep in your car.

Highs

  • Segment-leading practicality
  • Fun, spunky driving dynamics
  • High-tech safety and entertainment features

Lows

  • Manual requires lots of shifting on hilly drives
  • Abundance of dark, hard plastics
  • Capacitive volume control on radio could be a dial
Davis Adams
Former Contributor
Whether you're talking about gadgets or cars, Davis always seems to prefer "next year's models." He's a neophile to the core…
This sleek Chinese EV pairs supercar styling with three AI brains
The Xpeng L03 is an AI supercomputer disguised as a stylish family SUV
Xpeng L03

Xpeng’s latest electric vehicle carries enough processing power to make the term "smart car" actually sound more realistic than it actually is. The new Xpeng L03 debuted simultaneously in Europe and China on July 16, with the company presenting it across 65 markets. Available as a fully electric vehicle and an L03 Power X range-extender, the coupe-SUV is Xpeng’s most internationally focused model so far. Market-specific prices and sales dates remain unannounced.

Three AI chips and Google Maps built right in

Read more
A new sodium battery posts wild four-minute charging numbers, but don’t expect it in an EV yet
The breakthrough could improve fast charging and battery life, but the study hasn’t demonstrated those results in a production-sized pack
EV Charger

A new sodium-metal battery has posted a charging number that makes today’s EVs look painfully slow. In laboratory testing, the cell operated at a 15C rate, equivalent to completing a charge or discharge in roughly four minutes.

That doesn’t mean researchers plugged in an electric car and watched it fill up before the driver finished buying coffee. The result came from a small experimental cell using a new quasi-solid electrolyte, while the larger pouch-cell prototype delivered far less dramatic performance.

Read more
The Apple Car may be dead, but it became the foundation of Apple Intelligence
A decade of work on a canceled car project reportedly laid the groundwork for Apple Intelligence.
Apple Intelligence in Apple Car

The Apple Car may have never left the garage, but it apparently gave birth to Apple's AI ambitions. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple's canceled autonomous vehicle project, one that consumed more than a decade of work and over $10 billion before being scrapped in 2024, ended up laying the technological foundation for Apple Intelligence. In a rather ironic twist, one of Apple's most expensive failures may also become one of its most important long-term investments.

The Apple Car forced Apple to think like an AI company

Read more