Used120,093 mi.

2013 SubaruBRZ Limited For Sale

$ 13,295
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Key features of this 2013 Subaru BRZ Limited in St. Louis, MO
GPS Navigation
Bluetooth
Heated Seats
Condition
USED
Mileage
120,093
MPG
22 City / 30 Hwy
Body Style
Coupe
Exterior Color
White
Interior Color
Black
Transmission
Manual
Drive Train
RWD
Fuel Type
Gasoline
Engine
4 Cyl
Stock Number
KP0945-2
VIN
JF1ZCAC16D1608541
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Consumer Ratings and Reviews of the 
Subaru BRZ 
Limited
from KBB.com

4.6

★★★★★

Overall Consumer Rating

Comfort

4.4 out of 5

Performance

4.8 out of 5

Quality

4.5 out of 5

Reliability

4.6 out of 5

Styling

4.6 out of 5

Value

4.6 out of 5

Based on 37 consumer ratings for the 2013 - 2020 models as of 11/21/2024.

5.0 out of 5 stars
★★★★★

I’ll never sell it!

11/27/2021

Fun to drive and proud to own. Four years later and I still get at least a dozen strangers each week asking about my car and saying how much they love it!
5.0 out of 5 stars
★★★★★

Fantastic car.

02/24/2024

Long review because it deserves it. I bought my 2017 BRZ 6spd manual new. I currently have 91k miles on it with literally only 1 problem.....the center console charging port needed to be replaced for $20. I have had to replace nothing but tires, battery, and fluids. That's pretty hard to beat. I'm a mechanic and have worked on a HUGE variety of cars, so you can trust me when I say it's a great car. Toyota and Subaru really let their engineers loose and the results speak for themselves. I'm very pleased with the dependability so far. Performance: By no means the fastest car I've driven, but it's like driving a 205hp go-cart as a daily driver and is fast enough to be quicker than all the "regular cars" out there. I'm currently averaging 36mpg combined, but mostly highway. I can also have fun when I want to drift turns, do donuts, or mess around. Name another car that can match that..... The cargo capacity is really good for a (realistically 2 seater) sports car as well. The rear seats are a joke though and I suspect a ploy to lower insurance costs. Summary: Dependable, great gas mileage, loads of fun to drive, easy to work on, reasonable purchase cost, high safety rating, and comfortable. Highly recommended.
5.0 out of 5 stars
★★★★★

Best sports car under $30K

07/19/2012

I've always been a fan of the Mazda MX-5/Miata, meaning I appreciate refined handling more than raw horsepower in a sports car. The BRZ is like an MX-5 except with a fixed roof. Therefore it's a niche car among niche cars: a sports car, and one that doesn't rely on neck-snapping power for thrills. In other words the BRZ won't appeal to everyone, or even to all sports car buyers. That said, if you enjoy the spirit of the MX-5 but don't want a convertible, read on. Or better yet, call your Subaru dealer now, then read on. Since I could write a book on how much I like my BRZ, I'll confine my review by following KBB's points above and then add a couple more comments. 1 - Value: My 2013 BRZ is a "Limited" trim and its total msrp was $27,495. There are no further options to drive up the price. This is what I paid for it as well, no dealer mark-up. All I can say here is yes, it's a good value. You may not get better handling/braking/steering/shifting car for twice the price. You certainly won't get it for the same price. 2 - Reliability: I only have 800 miles on the car so I can hardly comment on reliability from my own experience, other than noting it's clearly very well-built. So I rated it a 10 based more on Subaru's big success in reliability and resale value with its other models. So far no sign this car will be different. 3 - Quality: Not a 10, but only because some of the interior plastic isn't as nice as it could be. Specifically the inside lower door plastic, forming the the door cupholders, is way too thin. Some of the control knobs aren't the most impressive either. 4 - Overall: Not a 10 here either, but close... 5 - Driving Dynamics: Superb. I won't go on because you can read all about it in the auto reviews. You just have to experience it, the more treacherous the road the better. A 90-year old grandmother would have no trouble zooming around hairpin turns because the car inspires so much confidence. Which wouldn't be a good thing if it didn't deliver, but this car does! On the other hand, the BRZ definitely could use a bit more torque - low-end grunt - but in the horsepower department, 200 is more than enough for a vehicle this light (2776 lbs). 6 - Design: The interior only comes in all-black which I don't like, but that's a subjective thing of course. I'm not a big fan either of the look of Alcantara, but it does hold you in place. The interior looks fresh, a bit spare (which I like), and not at all gimmicky like some other cars in this class. The steering wheel is clean and simple and feels just fantastic. One will end up in MOMA at some point. The aluminum pedals look and feel great too. Three fake-chrome trim pieces (the interior door handles, the pushbutton surround and the handbrake release button) look just bizarre in contrast to the rest of the nice matte silver interior trim. Subaru's attempt to standardize these pieces across their model range backfires in the BRZ. The exterior was designed by Toyota, their only part in the project. It disappointed me when the BRZ/FR-S was only available in pictures, but in person looks a lot better, from some angles even really good. Certainly everyone else has complimented me on it. There's no denying that the car looks tight and compact, it's just not particularly original. 7 - Comfort & Convenience: The front seats are probably the most comfortable you'll ever sit in in a car, although wider bodies have reported feeling a little tight in them. The back seats are useless except for storage purposes, and the car would have been better off designed as a 2-seater from the start. This would have narrowed the doors a bit, although they're much more user-friendly in tight parking spots than doors on most 2+2 coupes, which have to be wide enough to allow access to the back seats. Ingress/egress requires some flexibility (!), but the BRZ is a low-slung sports car, after all. Visibility - always a big deal for me - is the best you'll find in a sports car. Forward visibility is panoramic, you see exactly where the front wheels are. Rearward is good too but the trunkline is high. Unfortunately the center stoplamp is just obnoxious, I don't think I'll ever stop glancing in the mirror thinking another car is on my tail... Rear 3/4 visibility is, well, better than in a top-up convertible, but the back windows are really just small triangles of light. If your seats are not positioned too far back, and your neck isn't arthritic, you may just see out of them. The Limited comes with all sorts of convenience features (which the Premium trim lacks, as does the Scion FRS), you can read about them on the Subaru website. The keyless entry (doors and trunk) and pushbutton start are great conveniences. The radio/navigation screen isn't, I'll never prefer pressing a screen over the fine control you have turning a knob. Noise - You'll be pleasantly surprised, the BRZ is actually pretty quiet! That is, until you get near 4000 rpm during hard acceleration. That's when the interior resonator pipe - intentionally designed to bring in 2 cylinders-worth of noise to the cabin - kicks in. I don't like it and may have my dealer muffle mine, but otherwise the BRZ is less noisy than other small cars I've driven, certainly less than other sports cars.
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