History/Overview
The Si designation is traditionally worn by one of the sportiest versions of Honda’s venerable Civic compact sedan. Since 2018, it has played second fiddle to the balls-to-the-wall Type R, but the Si gets to stand alone for the 2022 model year as the Civic enters its 11th generation and the Type R takes a hiatus.
What’s New/Key Changes From Last Year
Redesigned model.
Available Trims
The Civic Si comes in a single trim that sits atop the mainstream Civic range. Its 1.5L turbocharged four-cylinder engine comes exclusively with a six-speed manual transmission backed up by a limited-slip differential.
Standard Features
Outside, the Civic Si wears 18-inch wheels, all-LED lighting, heated side mirrors, rain-sensing wipers, and passive keyless entry. Inside, you’ll enjoy a sunroof, a digital gauge display, an auto-dimming mirror, dual-zone A/C, wireless phone charging, heated front and rear seats and steering wheel, sport seats, a 12-speaker stereo, and a 9.0-inch touchscreen with navigation.
Safety-wise, the Civic Si has a less-sophisticated driver assist suite than other trims, lacking traffic jam assist, low-speed braking control, and a low-speed follow function for the adaptive cruise system. However, it does come with basic adaptive cruise control, blind spot monitoring, lane-keeping assist, rear cross-traffic monitoring, forward collision mitigation, lane departure warning, and automatic high beams.
Fuel Economy
Honda’s fuel consumption estimates for the Civic Si are 8.7/6.4 L/100 km (city/highway).
Competition
The Honda Civic Si competes with sport compact sedans like the VW Jetta GLI, Subaru WRX, Hyundai Elantra Sport, and Kia Forte GT.
This vehicle has not yet been reviewed