I live in the suburbs of Louisville, KY. Louisville has a pretty good system of buses, or so I've been told, but there is simply no way to get from my home to where I work by bus. I like my job and I'm not moving, so driving is my only option. I drive a nice 10 year old car that is long paid for but only gets about 22 mpg. I have been thinking about getting a new car that gets much better mileage, but in doing the math I found out that, at $3/gallon and with a Pruis, it would take about 8 years to recoup the cost just in gas. I have two close friends that have them and they both absolutely love them.
Yeah, you know, that's something that always bugs me when people do reviews of hybrid cars. "It costs three thousand more than that other car you might buy, and it'll take you X years to make up the difference in gas. So you'd have to be a math-challenged idiot to buy a hybrid." (They usually forget about the tax deduction, but that's a side point.)
People never do this analysis with the features of other cars. "The Porsche 911 costs $40,000 more than the Honda Accord; it'll take 22 years to make up that difference cruising for chicks." "The Hummer H2 costs $15,000 more than the Chevy Tahoe; it'll take 3 months to have enough middle fingers extended in your direction to make up the difference."
People buy hybrid cars first and foremost
because they're good cars. I consider my Prius the perfect midsize car: it's very roomy on the inside, it has a hatchback so it'll hold a surprising amount of stuff, but it fits into any parking space I need it to. It has very cool tech features that appeal to my geek side: the keyless entry and ignition (the RFID chip on the key means I just need to have it in my pocket, and the doors unlock when I touch them and the car starts up when I hit the power button), the GPS system, the Bluetooth speakerphone, the set-the-temperature-and-forget-it climate control, the autodimming rear-view mirror. These are all available in more expensive cars, but the Prius was the first car to have them for $25K. Maneuverability is excellent, acceleration is good with great pickup from a stop, and the drive is quiet and comfortable.
And just focusing on the gas mileage is ignoring the environmental effect. The Prius is a SULEV (super ultra-low emission) certified vehicle. It's not the only one on the market right now, but it was one of the first and it's still one of the cleanest. I also love the fact that at a stop, and at low speeds, the engine is
completely off, so gas consumption and pollution are zero. I'm not reaping immediate financial benefits for having a clean car, but it makes me feel better about driving.
And yes, all that and I save gas too. I'm fairly certain that within the lifetime of my car, we'll be saying "Remember when gas was
only $3 a gallon?" So your calculations are...somewhat optimistic, perhaps. (And to a certain extent I'm okay with that. I'm actually of the opinion that gas in the United States has been
too cheap for our own good. This is not an opinion that makes me many friends.)
Anyway. That's my own response to the number-crunching. Anna and I bought a Prius because we needed a new car right then -- to replace a hybrid Honda Insight, when Anna got pregnant -- and our research took us to the conclusion that the Prius was
the best car for our needs, wants, and budget. The gas savings were only a part of the equation. The whole picture was what drove us to the Prius.
BTW, I'm not an absolute hybrid zealot. A few months after that, when my old Saturn died, we didn't have the budget for a hybrid, so we bought a Mazda 3. Still a great little car, with good mileage, and much cheaper than the Prius. We also don't drive it nearly as much.
You have to do your own math. And I would also say that if you have a good car that's already paid for, even if it's low mileage, it's a very valid decision to keep it. Gas isn't the only cost with a new car, and there's also an environmental cost in manufacturing a car (hybrid or not) that you can never really recover, only mitigate by driving it as long as possible.