Junkyard Find: 1992 Geo Metro 4-door hatchback

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

What was the cheapest new four-door car available in the United States for the 1992 model year? Not the Subaru Justy, not the Toyota Tercel, not the Hyundai Excel and not the Suzuki Swift. It was today's Junkyard Find!

Yes, the base-model 1992 Geo Metro four-door (or five-door, if that's your preferred nomenclature) hatchback had an MSRP of just $7,399. That's $16,435 in 2024 dollars, which says a lot about how much more you get with the cheapest available new four-door right now.

Oh, sure, buyers willing to live with a two-door could go cheaper than this car in 1992; a new Yugo GV listed at… well, it's hard to say, given that the Yugo's homeland was busy with its civil war and Yugo America Inc folded its tent early in the year; the latest trustworthy Yugo MSRP I could find in my reference library was $4,435 for the base 1990 model ($10,678 in 2024 dollars).

If we're talking about realistic Metro competitors here, the base 1992 Ford Festiva actually managed to undercut the price tag on the cheapest possible Metro two-door hatchback that year: $6,911 versus $6,999.

The wretched 1992 Hyundai Excel base two-door was even cheaper, at $6,595 ($15,879 in today's spondoolies). The cheapest 1992 Subaru Justy was $6,445, and Subaru likely could have squeezed a four-door under the Metro's cost if it hadn't insisted on selling all its U.S.-market four-door Justys with four-wheel-drive by that time.

Those reviewers who whine about the Mitsubishi Mirage's lack of horsepower (I say it's a good-enough car with an excellent warranty for the money, or at least the last one I reviewed was) should consider the engine in this car.

That's one liter (actually 0.993 liters) of displacement from three rampaging cylinders, rated at 55 horsepower and 58 pound-feet. The good news is that it has electronic fuel injection and an overhead camshaft.

Even better news during a time of recession in California (which is where I found this car) is the fuel economy it delivered with a five-speed manual transmission: 40 miles per gallon on the highway, 38 miles per gallon in the city. You could get the Geo Metro with an automatic, and I've found exactly one during my junkyard travels (and that includes EV conversions).

The Metro was based on the second-generation Suzuki Cultus, and it was the successor to the 1985-1988 Chevrolet Sprint (which was based on the first-generation Cultus). You could buy versions of this car all the way through 2017 in Pakistan.

Suzuki began selling the Cultus with Swift badges in the United States as a 1989 model, though Swift prices were always a bit higher than Metro prices.

This car was built at the CAMI plant in Ontario, where Geo Trackers and Suzuki Sidekicks were born in order to circumvent the Chicken Tax.

The Metro entered its second generation as a 1995 model, when the Cultus entered its third generation. It became the Chevrolet Metro starting with the 1998 model year, due to the Geo brand getting axed by The General in 1997.

Production of the Chevrolet Metro continued through 2001, after which it was replaced by the Suzuki Aerio and the Daewoo-built Chevrolet Aveo. Such is the nature of the mighty GM Empire.

This car has a Delco AM/FM/cassette radio, which added $441 to the bottom line ($980 now). Amazingly, the right-side mirror was included at no extra cost on all 1992 Metro models except the gas-mileage-king XFi. I suspect that the radio was a junkyard-obtained unit swapped in long after purchase, since body parts have been swapped as well.

The five-digit odometer means we can't know the true final mileage. My guess is that the reels turned over once, for a total of 162,150.9 miles during this car's life on the road (the kind of owners who can get cars to intergalactic odometer readings generally don't allow their rides to get as hooptiefied as this one, though I have seen exceptions to that rule).

Gas was cheap during the late 1980s and early 1990s, other than a spike after Iraq invaded Kuwait, but some car buyers still wanted good fuel economy.

Gets 100 kilometers per 4.5 liters of gasoline on the Canadian highway. In 1994, the General switched back to the Firefly name that had gone on his Canadian-market Chevy Sprints.

In Japan, the second-gen Cultus made you hip-conscious.

Like a jean, whatever that means.

PLAY CULTUS.

Down Under, this car was known as the Holden Barina, and it was available as a Sportsgirl Edition.

Baby, you can drive my Barina!

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

1992 Geo Metro base model in California wrecking yard.

Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Lou Lou on Feb 14, 2024

    1995 Geo Metro 3 door, 3 cyl, 4 wheels, ugliest blue ever made was the BEST car I've ever owned. Or maybe the best value. I bought mine used in 2005 with 50k miles for $1,00 from a friend of a friend. Had some scrapes on the doors from his wife having trouble parking in their apartment parking garage. But nothing else wrong. I drove it from 2005 until 2013 as my only car and only changed tires once, serviced front and rear brakes 1x, bought a new battery and changed the oil every 10k miles needed or not 😀.

    I sold it with 197k miles, for $950 after 8 years. So I lost $50 depreciation, not including maintainance mentioned. In addition, I sold it because it finally crapped out. I think it was electrical, because I couldn't get it to turn over one day (or even TRY to turn) , and after having 2 buddies tell me, "Might be serious, but IDK" I posted it on CL and sold the next day.

  • Flameded Flameded on Apr 12, 2024

    Still has 1/2 a tank of GAS!!!

  • Master Baiter If you rear-end someone, it's your fault, period. If motorcycles need more time to stop, then riders need to increase their following distance.
  • Master Baiter Until recently, virtually every cell phone and computer was made in China and no one seemed to care. The majority are still built there. I'm not a fan of tariffs as it just gives domestic makers a price umbrella to sell their garbage products to U.S. consumers at higher prices.
  • Teleedle It would seem that if the Chinese made cars and trucks are ready to compete on the world market that they should be able to compete without the need for government help through subsidies. That's never going to happen with the mindset of their leadership. The rate at which they've transferred the ability to copy to the rate of their abilities to innovate isn't really astounding, but it is truly indicative of their inherent abilities to see through problems and overcome without a lot of fuss. They just have a different way that seems to continually baffle the Western mind. It only goes back a few thousand years. The rest of the world just has to catch up... Without tariffs, three Seagulls could be bought for the price of one loaded Toyota Corolla. I would settle for a nice small pickup truck that can get 30-35 mpg, if the Chinese want to build something with real durability and value. I'm sure they can do that for about $10-12k US, too, dumping them all the way to the bank. Neither Trump or Biden or Bugbrain want that, though. Restrictive 'targeted' tariff ideas indicate that they all want protectionism and the Chicken Tax to continue. The price of living in freedum in the non compete world... and the hallmark of one upmanship by the political class towards more and more expensive transportation related needs. All costs are ALWAYS passed onto the end consumer. Tariffs are the burden of the extra cost. Tariffs are punitive, remember... as intended. The political class is still living off the backs of their constituents throughout the world... same as it ever was.
  • Theflyersfan One day, some of these sellers will come to the realization that cars are not houses and putting expensive upgrades into one doesn't equal a higher selling price down the road. $29,000? The only Challenger that has a chance of value down the road, and only with low miles, is the Hellcat.
  • SaulTigh The Cyclone engine was really powerful, but with a fatal flaw. Ask me how I know.
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