The sad true answer is that it depends. Most cars will go 100,000-120,000 with just an oil change and some rough driving. Some unreliable ones won't go but 30,000. With proper maintenance and driving habits almost any well-designed car will last 200,000 miles.
If you really love this car. You CAN make this one last much longer than 200,000. I am approaching 192000 miles in my 2000 Toyota Avalon and with very few problems. This car has a solid reputation from a solid brand. I expect that with watchful and pro-active maintenance (which means fixing things on a schedule... not when they break) this car will remain powerful, reliable, fuel-efficient, and comfortable until 250,000 miles. Just remember to change out parts that should be changed regularly before they break. I am a firm believer that small mechanical failures and little things that go wrong can lead to much larger problems down the road. (literally)
LONG LIVE THE AVALON!
There a Toyota Avalon 2000, reported being sold by an auto mechanic for $1,800, with 300,000 miles on it.
The 1997 Toyota Avalon transmission has a 60,000 mile manufacturer warranty. In most cases the transmission can be expected to last for 200,000 miles.
Properly serviced and maintained, these cars are generally bullet-proof. An easy 15-20 years.
Factory recommendation to change the spark plugs on a 2000 Toyota Avalon is 120.000 miles.
forever
Toyota Avalon was created in 1994.
Automatic: 125,000 milesManual:180,000+
There are three fuse panels in the Toyota Avalon 95
no, the Toyota Avalon is a EFI (electric fuel injection) engine
The 2004 Toyota Avalon has 24 valves.
The 2005 Toyota Avalon has 24 valves.
The 2014 Toyota Avalon has 24 valves.