Not every remarkable car story begins with a barn find or a storage-unit surprise. Sometimes it begins with a single seller quietly listing sixteen tidy, low-key Hondas in one week and letting the odometers do the talking. That is exactly what is happening in Nelson, New Zealand, where Trade Me seller nsnhonda has put an entire private collection up for bids under the banner of a Honda Charity Auction. Readers who enjoyed our recent look at a will appreciate this one too, since it is another reminder of how much passion still surrounds Honda’s back catalog, from race-bred exotics down to the humble commuter models.
The undisputed headline lot is that 2000 Honda Civic Type R, showing 154,000km and offered with no reserve against a $30,000 opening bid. Finished in white over a red and black Recaro interior, the EK9-generation Type R has become one of the most sought-after front-wheel-drive Hondas ever built, prized for its high-revving B16B engine and razor-sharp chassis tuning. The seller notes the car has passed through two owners, had its cambelt replaced during a recent service, and now wears aftermarket suspension, exhaust and intake components rather than a fully stock drivetrain. Every dollar raised on this lot, and across the rest of the auction, goes toward the seller’s chosen charity.
Red and black Recaro seats and Momo shift knob mark the Type R’s driver-focused cabin. Image credit: nsnhonda listing via TradeMe Auction House.
Just as remarkable, in a much quieter way, is a 1995 Honda Accord LXi that has covered only 7,600km since new. Listed with the tongue-in-cheek title “The lowest km 1995 Accord in the world???,” the red, NZ-assembled sedan has already attracted 141 bids and sits at $10,050 with its reserve met. Two owners and three stamped services make up its entire paper trail, and the seller says the original books and keys are still present. It is the kind of survivor that rarely surfaces outside a dedicated private collection, let alone at public auction.
This 1995 Accord LXi has covered just 7,600km and may be the lowest-mileage example of its kind. Image credit: nsnhonda listing via TradeMe Auction House.
Beyond those two standouts, the rest of the Honda Charity Auction reads like a survey of Japan’s export-era Civics and Accords. A 1998 Civic VTi-S shows 65,251km, a rare 1987 Accord Aerodeck liftback carries 111,169km, a 1987 Civic GTI has covered 185,744km, an NZ-assembled 1989 Accord shows 33,147km, and a V6-powered 1998 Accord VTi-L rounds out the lineup at 146,518km. There’s even a well-used 1992 Civic showing 418,563km that the seller says still presents in remarkably clean condition. Bids across the sixteen-car field currently range from roughly $3,000 to $8,000, with the Type R and the ultra-low-kilometre Accord sitting well clear of the rest.
Charity auctions like this one are a reminder that collector interest doesn’t only follow six-figure hammer prices; sometimes a fleet of honest, well-kept commuter Hondas tells the more interesting story. Anyone curious about assembling a similar stable of vintage imports can start with our , and bidders chasing the next opportunity like this should keep an eye on .Every vehicle detail, bidding figure and photograph referenced above comes courtesy of the individual Trade Me listings from seller nsnhonda and TradeMe Auction House, where the full Honda Charity Auction remains live through July 29.