The 2025 Honda Civic Sport Touring Hybrid Out-Germans the Germans
Buy it for the great fuel economy, fall in love with it because of the enlightened driving dynamics.Pros
- Smooth, assertive, EV-like acceleration
- Engaging steering, handling, and braking
- Easy mid-40s fuel economy
Cons
- Infotainment graphics look dated
- No true one-pedal driving
- No rear climate vents
The badging on the trunk of this 2025 Honda Civic says you can have it all. Sport. Touring. Hybrid. If only it mulched and bagged, this car would be the ultimate all-in-one Honda.
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Stringing those three words together might seem far-fetched—almost contradictory—but here it’s a rare instance of truth in automotive advertising. Drive it quickly or far or parsimoniously, it doesn’t matter; the 2025 Honda Civic Sport Touring Hybrid is in its element. The label on Honda’s three-box compact car actually describes what’s inside. Philosophically, at least.
The Hybrid That Thinks It’s an EV
Explaining what’s inside the engine bay takes a lot more than three words. Like the Accord and CR-V hybrids, the Civic leads with the electric half of its powertrain. Around town, it drives the front wheels through a 181-hp permanent-magnet motor that draws power from either a 1.1-kWh lithium-ion battery pack or a generator spun by the four-cylinder engine. At higher speeds or with your foot to the floor, the gas engine helps turn the wheels through a single-speed transmission, boosting peak output to 200 horses.
That’s the long way of saying the Civic Hybrid drives more like an EV than a gas car. It shoots off gracefully and effortlessly then matches the movement of your right foot with immediate action. Around 30 mph, where a gas car shifts into second gear and loses steam, the Civic rides an uninterrupted wave of torque. If you’re paying attention, you might notice the engine humming quietly in the distance with luxury-car refinement. With the radio on, you probably won’t.
Sport mode causes the engine revs to rise and fall to simulate the shifts of a multispeed transmission that’s not actually there. It’s a nice idea but hardly convincing because there’s no accompanying torque interruption. We’d love to see Honda take a cue from the Hyundai Ioniq 5 N and code a blip into the power delivery so that your body feels what your ears hear.
More than that, we wish Honda would lean harder into the EV angle by embracing one-pedal driving. The steering wheel paddles toggle through four levels of lift-throttle regenerative braking, yet even the most aggressive setting doesn’t slow the car quick enough to match the ebb and flow of traffic. Frustratingly, the car also reverts to the lowest level after just a few seconds of acceleration.
But those are mere quibbles about a powertrain that allows you to have your gas and burn it, too. The Sport Touring Hybrid is rated for 50 mpg on the EPA’s city cycle and will embarrass the Civic Si in a drag race. While we couldn’t match the 49-mpg combined rating or even the 47-mpg highway rating, we can’t be mad about an easy 45 mpg in the real world. Especially because this car has a sense of purpose beyond sipping the least amount of fuel possible.




