Used Car of the Day: 2005 Volkswagen Passat TDI

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

The year 2005 seems like yesterday but it's darn near two decades ago. Yikes. Let's put aside our existential angst to check out a car from that model year that's still rolling -- a 2005 Volkswagen Passat TDI.


This third-owner car has 215,000 miles on it -- and the current owner has done some things like put in a new turbo, new mass airflow unit, new intake flap valve, new headlamps, new coolant reservoir, and new hood release latch.

The engine runs and the transmission shifts smoothly, says the seller, and the brakes work well.

Apparently the air conditioning, heater, windows, and sunroof work well, too.

It does need new front bumper clips and a new front lower valance. The rear speakers are not connected and there are some other minor electronic gremlins.

The ask is $5,500 and the car is for sale in Palm Springs, California.

[Images: Seller]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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4 of 32 comments
  • Pianoboy57 Pianoboy57 on Feb 01, 2024

    I had to be crazy to become the fourth owner of an

    '02 B5.5 1.8t. But I really liked that car. It was comfortable and drove well. It took a big repair about once a year the six years I owned it. Youtube helped me out a lot and I had to rig a ring pull out of bailing wire since so many trips under the hood were needed.


    My wife had to start making weekly trips to a doctor so I replaced it with a Corolla. No plans for another VW unless its a classic Beetle.

  • Zerofoo Zerofoo on Feb 01, 2024

    Did this vintage Passat suffer the MKIV problems that the Golf and Jetta experienced? Stuff like failed window regulators, broken glove box doors, bad brake light switches, and rubber peeling off the interior components? This era was not a good time for VW.

    • SCE to AUX SCE to AUX on Feb 01, 2024

      My 02 had the electrics in the LR door fail a few times (window, lock, lights), A/C compressor switch failed, crankshaft position sensor left me stranded at 4 months, incorrect fuel gauge, dangerously unresponsive throttle, rusted brake rotors when new, and stuff I'm forgetting. It was in the shop every 3 months for something else.

      The last straw was when the oil light came on 3000 miles after changing the oil, and 3 quarts were gone - at 33k miles. The dealer made up a story about a leak (engine was dry), and so I traded it for a Scion xB.

      I didn't keep the Passat long enough to get into anything age-related.

  • Teddyc73 Oh look dull grey with black wheels. How original.
  • Teddyc73 "Matte paint looks good on this car." No it doesn't. It doesn't look good on any car. From the Nissan Versa I rented all the up to this monstrosity. This paint trend needs to die before out roads are awash with grey vehicles with black wheels. Why are people such lemmings lacking in individuality? Come on people, embrace color.
  • Flashindapan Will I miss the Malibu, no. Will I miss one less midsize sedan that’s comfortable, reliable and reasonably priced, yes.
  • Theflyersfan I used to love the 7-series. One of those aspirational luxury cars. And then I parked right next to one of the new ones just over the weekend. And that love went away. Honestly, if this is what the Chinese market thinks is luxury, let them have it. Because, and I'll be reserved here, this is one butt-ugly, mutha f'n, unholy trainwreck of a design. There has to be an excellent car under all of the grotesque and overdone bodywork. What were they thinking? Luxury is a feeling. It's the soft leather seats. It's the solid door thunk. It's groundbreaking engineering (that hopefully holds up.) It's a presence that oozes "I have arrived," not screaming "LOOK AT ME EVERYONE!!!" The latter is the yahoo who just won $1,000,000 off of a scratch-off and blows it on extra chrome and a dozen light bars on a new F150. It isn't six feet of screens, a dozen suspension settings that don't feel right, and no steering feel. It also isn't a design that is going to be so dated looking in five years that no one is going to want to touch it. Didn't BMW learn anything from the Bangle-butt backlash of 2002?
  • Theflyersfan Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Hyundai, and Kia still don't seem to have a problem moving sedans off of the lot. I also see more than a few new 3-series, C-classes and A4s as well showing the Germans can sell the expensive ones. Sales might be down compared to 10-15 years ago, but hundreds of thousands of sales in the US alone isn't anything to sneeze at. What we've had is the thinning of the herd. The crap sedans have exited stage left. And GM has let the Malibu sit and rot on the vine for so long that this was bound to happen. And it bears repeating - auto trends go in cycles. Many times the cars purchased by the next generation aren't the ones their parents and grandparents bought. Who's to say that in 10 years, CUVs are going to be seen at that generation's minivans and no one wants to touch them? The Japanese and Koreans will welcome those buyers back to their full lineups while GM, Ford, and whatever remains of what was Chrysler/Dodge will be back in front of Congress pleading poverty.
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