Model record
Honda Civic 7th generation
Background
The seventh-generation Honda Civic is an automobile produced by Honda from 2000 until 2005. It debuted in September 2000 as a 2001 model. Its exterior dimensions stayed similar to the outgoing predecessor, with interior space significantly increased, bumping it up to the compact car size designation. A notable feature was the flat rear floor that gave better comfort to the rear seat passengers. This generation abandoned the front double wishbone suspension, used previously from fourth to sixth generations, replacing it with MacPherson struts. This generation was the last to offer 4WD variants.
Text adapted from “Honda Civic (seventh generation)” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
Sources
Same marque
Other Honda models
- 0 SUV —
- 0 Saloon —
- 1300 —
- 145 —
- Accord (1976) —
- Accord (1997) —
- Accord (North America seventh generation) —
- Accord (fifth generation) —
- Accord (first generation) —
- Accord (fourth generation) —
- Accord (ninth generation) —
- Accord (second generation) —
- Accord (tenth generation) —
- Accord (third generation) —
- Accord Aero Deck —
- Accord Euro R —
- Accord hybrid —
- Airwave —
- Amaze —
- Ascot —
- Avancier —
- BR-V —
- Beat —
- Brio —
- CR-V (fifth generation) —
- CR-V (fourth generation) —
- CR-V (third generation) —
- CR-X del Sol —
- Capa —
- City —
- Civic (eighth generation) —
- Civic (fifth generation) —
- Civic (first generation) —
- Civic (fourth generation) —
- Civic (ninth generation) —
- Civic (second generation) —
- Civic (sixth generation) —
- Civic 10th generation —
- Civic 11th generation —
- Civic GX —
- Civic Hybrid —
- Civic Si —
- Civic Type R FL5 —
- Clarity —
- Concept C —
- Crossroad —
- Crosstour —
- Domani —