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Weak-franchise mainstreamlight hatchNo longer sold new

Fiat Punto value and depreciation

Known for italian polo rival of the 2000s.

Year-1 depreciation
24%
3-year retention
58%
5-year retention
44%
Tier
Weak-franchise mainstream

Depreciation curve

R0R25R50R75R100Now1y2y3y4y5y6y7y8y9y10yYears from now

We class the Fiat Punto as a weak-franchise mainstream in our 12-tier model, which puts its retention at roughly 58% after three years and 44% after five. Perfectly good cars weighed down by dealer-network and parts-cost perception on the used market.

Retention table

AfterRetained
1 year76%
3 years58%
5 years44%
7 years32%
10 years20%

Estimates for a new purchase at list price; retail basis, trade-in ≈ 12% under retail.

The Punto badge covered the second generation car of the early 2000s and returned on the facelifted final version sold until around 2015, with the Grande Punto era listed separately. It was a credible Polo alternative when new, usually priced below the Volkswagen. Weak resale and a shrinking dealer network hurt it later in life.

Punto against its rivals

Fiat Punto: common questions

Does the Fiat Punto hold its value?

We class the Fiat Punto as a weak-franchise mainstream in our 12-tier model, which puts its retention at roughly 58% after three years and 44% after five. Perfectly good cars weighed down by dealer-network and parts-cost perception on the used market.

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All figures are modelled estimates for planning, not offers or valuations. Data reviewed 2026.