RE: One-owner Skoda Favorit for sale

RE: One-owner Skoda Favorit for sale

Tuesday 21st December 2021

One-owner Skoda Favorit for sale

A scrappage scheme survivor is looking for a new home



It's no exaggeration to say that the Favorit represents the birth of modern Skoda. And modern Skoda ain't doing half bad. Which makes this little supermini - Skoda's first front-engined, front-wheel drive car - pretty significant. The Favorit will celebrate 35 years in 2022 also, first shown to the world at the 1987 Brno Engineering Fair. Given all that, and given that Favorits are rapidly heading towards extinction, this specific one deserves our attention. Because there are four-wheeled survivors, and then there are survivors.

While some of us might see some utilitarian chic in the Favorit, and recall its rallying exploits and know its historical value, it's easy to see how it would pass many by. You still occasionally hear jokes, sadly and stupidly, about new Skodas, leave alone those from the 1990s with roots in the 80s. When this Skoda was new, middle-aged and even relatively old, it's hard to imagine much affection for it. Because the Favorit was merely a Skoda supermini, and people were mean about them and didn't care. Because that was what you did back then.

Consequently, the scrappage schemes would probably have seemed like a lifesaver to those who owned a Favorit - it gave them more money than their car was worth to trade into something new. Not many would pass that up; it's not like the Favorit was an under the radar hot hatch hero. It was the kind of small car the schemes lapped up, because the allowance was so generous.


For this specific model alone - the 1.3-litre, 50hp LXiE Flairline, a peak of 2,000 cars has become just eight. Even starting at 2009, we're at comfortably less than 10 per cent, as more than 200 were on the roads then. Perhaps a decimation of Skoda Favorits isn't the most egregious scrappage crime committed, but it still seems a little sad.

Which brings us to this one, which looks too good to get rid of now, leave alone back then. A one-owner car from 1994 - so one of the very last before the Felicia - this Favorit has recorded just 29,916 miles in almost 28 years. It looks almost factory fresh, too, with an immaculate engine bay, unmarked seats, and original dealer sticker taking pride of place in the rear window. It seems a remarkable little car.

At £4,500 it's difficult to know exactly what a prospective buyer might do. Those needing an actual car for commuting would be better served by something far newer, and anyone wanting a usable classic might not have their heart set on a Skoda. But when even a contemporary and comparable Escort diesel can be £5k, perhaps classic buyers will cast their net further afield and find cars like the Skoda. If nothing else, it would be the perfect transport for next year's Festival of the Unexceptional...








Author
Discussion

AMGSee55

638 posts

103 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Strong money for a Favorit, albeit one with great F of the U credentials. Note to vendor. Earn your mark up and realign the centre console before you take the pictures!!

gazza285

9,835 posts

209 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
AMGSee55 said:
Strong money for a Favorit, albeit one with great F of the U credentials. Note to vendor. Earn your mark up and realign the centre console before you take the pictures!!
Note to OP, don't forget the link.

samoht

5,766 posts

147 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
gazza285 said:
Note to OP, don't forget the link.
I suspect OP clicked through from the story to 'Make a comment', but the antiquated PH forum software failed to connect his new thread with the article.

Later on we'll probably have two duplicate Skoda Favorit threads...

TyrannosauRoss Lex

Original Poster:

35,125 posts

213 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
I can't see it ever selling for that!

ettore

4,146 posts

253 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Not my thing but I think a car that has survived and been cherished so well absolutely deserves to live. I'm sure there's a skoda pervert out there who would look after it well. If I had a spare barn I could imagine filling it with unloved oddities!

SidewaysSi

10,742 posts

235 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Entry for festival of the unexceptional..great looking thing!

Water Fairy

5,518 posts

156 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
I can respect that but could never want it. A 130 series coupe is much cooler.

cerb4.5lee

30,876 posts

181 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
This makes me miss the 1982 Estelle that I had. I had a good laugh(and got laughed at more) in the 2 years that I had my Scud for. This is very clean, but I'm finding it difficult to think who'd actually be interested in buying it at that price though.

Manic Street Sleeper

1,053 posts

42 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Decimation is the "killing" of one in ten ... not nine in ten. smile

Pastor Of Muppets

3,283 posts

63 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Put a K20 in it and have some last laughs at the lights?

spreadsheet monkey

4,545 posts

228 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
SidewaysSi said:
Entry for festival of the unexceptional..great looking thing!
If nearly five grand is now the cost of entry for FotU, then I think the event has lost its point!

Surely that event is all about cheap cars that people have rescued from an early grave, or hand-me-down Micras and Corollas from favourite relatives.

someoneelse

76 posts

183 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Utterly delightful, especially in that colour and condition. Price seems roughly fair (maybe £3500 or 4000 is more like it?) but only if (as mentioned) they can sort the centre console. After all, where would you find another half-decent 90s supermini in that condition?*

The weird thing is thinking this is a nearly 30 year old car... to me, a 30 year old car is something like an MGB...

  • fishing for more lovely old unexceptional cars wink

jerrytlr

418 posts

214 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
If the condition is as good as it looks, I'd say worth every penny! Cracking colour too.

How much input did VW have on these, or are they pre-VW?

TdM-GTV

291 posts

218 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Look how tiny that engine is! Not a bad little curio to own if you have space in the garage

waynecyclist

8,908 posts

115 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
jerrytlr said:
If the condition is as good as it looks, I'd say worth every penny! Cracking colour too.

How much input did VW have on these, or are they pre-VW?
These were pre VW, the Felicia is VW based etc

Bonkers money, sorry but it will never sell for that

QuickQuack

2,255 posts

102 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
jerrytlr said:
If the condition is as good as it looks, I'd say worth every penny! Cracking colour too.

How much input did VW have on these, or are they pre-VW?
The Favorit was completely before any VW involvement. It was before the Berlin Wall came down!

Jon_S_Rally

3,425 posts

89 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
Nice to see, but probably not something I would buy. If you're into that kind of thing, it's not silly money.

LucyP

1,714 posts

60 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
It's over-priced. It's the last of the joke Skodas before VW sorted them out. Not quite as many laughs as the previous models, as at least it was front engine, front wheel drive.

A 2004 Ford KA sold at auction this year for £4,700 but that had 179 miles on the clock, so was essentially new. This Skoda isn't.

They are not even rare. Here is a test on another one with only 25,000 miles.

https://www.retromotor.co.uk/retro-road-test/1992-...

What do you do with it? It's too good and too expensive to use. Will it ever really appreciate sufficiently above the storage and maintenance costs to become an investment?

It's a museum piece, if there is such a museum. It's one for a Skoda collector if there are any. One for a Skoda dealer, to generate interest, and show how far Skoda have come.

There is no VW input. It was designed before VW, but VW then helped Skoda re-work it into its successor, the Felicia.

Nu57jez9639

805 posts

39 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
From the days when Skoda was a joke and owners had series piss taken, definitely 100percent Skoda no vw in put this is a late 1 so quality might be slightly better as Skoda joined vw group around early 90. I actually no someone that bought 1 for a laugh and paid £75 for.it as it had plenty of mot the same person also had a brand new Subaru Impreza WRX at the time.

itcaptainslow

3,706 posts

137 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
quotequote all
What a little charmer! Price is just that little bit above justifying buying it for the novelty element (which is probably not a bad thing, to be honest) but it’ll make a fine buy for a Skoda perv.