Honda Accord SE vs Nissan Altima SR

Honda Accord SE vs Nissan Altima SR

Which vehicles are we comparing?

vs
Accord SE — $30,695 · 192 hp · 31 mpgAltima SR — $30,480 · 182 hp · 28 mpg

Before you compare

What this matchup really means

SE and SR sit a tier apart — features on one side, price on the other.

Accord SEWell-equipped Trim
MatchupFeatures vs Price
Altima SRTrim Trim
Well-equipped

Accord SE

  • Better fuel economy
  • Well-equipped value
  • More cargo space
  • More horsepower
Trim

Altima SR

  • Lower starting price
  • Balanced everyday pick
Read the full breakdown

These trims sit a tier apart. The SE is a lower-mid Accord trim (trim 2 of 6) and the SR is a Altima trim. The higher trim adds equipment; the lower trim answers with a lower price. The question is whether the added content is worth the difference. The SE and SR start at roughly the same price.

Because these two trims sit at different points in their lineups, the category winners below reflect trim level as much as brand. Read them as evidence — the more equipped trim will tend to win on features and comfort, while the lower trim answers on price — and weigh that against the equipment you will actually use. Use the verified specifications as the basis for the recommendation, not marketing claims.

Who each is for: the SE suits buyers who prioritize value and the everyday essentials, while the SR suits buyers who prioritize a balance of price and features. If those priorities are clear to you, the right choice usually follows directly from them.

At a glance

The quick decision

Best overall

Accord SE

If you're shopping for the right balance of features and price, the Accord SE is the stronger choice here — it leads where it counts most for this matchup, while the Altima SR still makes its case on a lower price.

Best value

Altima SR

Altima SR starts at $30,480 vs $30,695.

Best performance

Accord SE

Accord SE makes 192 hp vs 182 hp.

Best efficiency

Accord SE

Accord SE returns 31 mpg combined vs 28 mpg.

Head to head

Who wins what

The verified differences most likely to decide it — each shown side by side, with the winner called out.

Cargo & Daily Use

WinnerAccord SE
16.7 cu ftvs15.4 cu ft

The Accord SE makes everyday hauling and road trips easier with more cargo room.

Price & Value

WinnerAltima SR
$30,480vs$30,695

The Altima SR lowers your cost of entry with a lower starting price.

Fuel Economy

WinnerAccord SE
31 mpgvs28 mpg

The Accord SE delivers lower fuel costs and fewer stops at the pump.

Performance

WinnerAccord SE
192 hpvs182 hp

The Accord SE gives you stronger acceleration and easier passing.

Read the full breakdown

The SE and the SR are a tier apart, so the higher trim brings more content and the lower trim brings a lower price. Decide whether the extra equipment earns the premium for how you actually drive. The SE and SR start at roughly the same price.

On verified numbers, the SE leads in horsepower, torque, combined mpg, and cargo volume; the SR leads in starting price. What the numbers actually mean for you: a fuel-economy edge translates into fewer stops at the pump and lower running costs over years of ownership, not just a better sticker; a horsepower advantage shows up most when merging and passing rather than in daily commuting; and cargo or passenger volume is what decides how each car handles road trips, gear, and family duty. Read each category winner alongside the size of its margin — a few mpg or a fraction of a cubic foot rarely changes daily life, while a wide gap genuinely does.

When it matters most: if your commute is long, weight the efficiency result heavily; if you rarely carry more than passengers, a practicality gap may not affect you; and if winters are harsh, all-wheel-drive availability can outweigh a modest power difference. Because the SE and SR sit at different price points, decide which category wins above actually justify the gap for how you drive — that, more than any single spec, is the real decision here.

Visual comparison

See them side by side

Exterior

Accord SE
Accord SE
Altima SR
Altima SR

Interior

Accord SE
Accord SE
Altima SR
Altima SR

Available colors

Accord SE

Accord SE — Platinum White Pearl
Platinum White Pearl
Accord SE — Solar Silver Metallic
Solar Silver Metallic
Accord SE — Meteorite Gray Metallic
Meteorite Gray Metallic
Accord SE — Canyon River Blue Metallic
Canyon River Blue Metallic
Accord SE — Crystal Black Pearl
Crystal Black Pearl
Accord SE — Radiant Red Metallic
Radiant Red Metallic
Accord SE — Urban Gray Pearl
Urban Gray Pearl

Altima SR

Altima SR — Gun Metallic
Gun Metallic
Altima SR — Super Black
Super Black
Altima SR — Brilliant Silver Metallic
Brilliant Silver Metallic

The bottom line

The verdict

Editor's pick

Accord SE

If you're shopping for the right balance of features and price, the Accord SE is the stronger choice here — it leads where it counts most for this matchup, while the Altima SR still makes its case on a lower price.

Why we landed here

  • This is a features-vs-price matchup, so the categories that matter most to the right balance of features and price carry the most weight — not a raw tally of category wins.
  • The Accord SE leads on cargo space, fuel economy, and performance.
  • The Altima SR counters with price.

What could change this: If a lower price becomes your top priority, the Altima SR moves ahead — the recommendation tracks your intent, not a fixed scorecard.

Altima SR: lower starting price31 mpg combinedAccord SE: more cargo room
Read the full verdict

The SE and the SR trade features for price across one tier — the verdict is whether the extra equipment is worth the difference for you.

On verified numbers, the SE leads in horsepower, torque, combined mpg, and cargo volume; the SR leads in starting price.

That recommendation is a starting point, not a rule. The case for the other vehicle is real, and for some drivers it is the better buy: if you regularly face snow or rain and want all-wheel-drive traction, value stronger acceleration and a sportier feel, or simply prefer how it looks and drives, the runner-up here may suit you better than the categories alone suggest. We reached this verdict by tallying the verified head-to-head categories above — price, efficiency, space, and power — and favoring the vehicle that wins the ones most shoppers rank first, while noting where the margins are slim enough that personal preference should decide. We encourage you to test-drive both, weigh each vehicle's strengths against your own priorities, and let your daily reality — your commute, your climate, and your budget — guide the final decision. Between two choices this capable, the right answer is simply the one that best fits the way you live and drive.

The full picture

What to know before you decide

Living with the Accord SE

  • Dependable, easy-to-own daily driver
  • Strong brand reliability reputation

Living with the Altima SR

  • Lower price of entry

Daily commuting

  • Accord SE: 31 mpg mpg — fewer fill-ups
  • Quiet and composed in stop-and-go
  • Comfortable, supportive seats for the daily drive

Long road trips

  • Accord SE: more cargo for luggage & gear
  • Accord SE: fewer fuel stops between cities
  • Relaxed, refined highway cruisers

Winter ownership

  • Both are front-wheel drive
  • Handles most winter conditions well
  • Winter tires matter most for cold-weather grip

By the numbers

Specs that matter

These are the figures most shoppers weigh first — price, power, efficiency, and room — with the full specification table below.

Starting price
Accord SE$30,695
Altima SR$30,480
Best value
Horsepower
Accord SE192 hp
Altima SR182 hp
Most power
Combined MPG
Accord SE31 mpg
Altima SR28 mpg
Most efficient
Cargo volume
Accord SE16.7 cu ft
Altima SR15.4 cu ft
Most cargo space
AWD availability
Accord SENo
Altima SRYes
Available AWD
Full specificationsevidence — quiet by design
SpecificationAccord SEAltima SR
Starting MSRP$30,695$30,480
Horsepower192 hp182 hp
Torque192 lb-ft178 lb-ft
Combined MPG31 mpg28 mpg
City MPG28 mpg25 mpg
Highway MPG36 mpg34 mpg
Cargo volume16.7 cu ft15.4 cu ft
Seating55
DrivetrainFront Wheel DriveAll Wheel Drive
TransmissionContinuously Variable (CVT)CVT (Xtronic)
advertisement
728 × 90

Make the call

Which one is right for you?

  • Choose the SE if you prefer the SE's balance of equipment and price.
  • Choose the SR if you prefer the SR's balance of equipment and price.
Accord SE buyer

Best for:

  • Better fuel economy
  • More cargo and passenger room
  • More cabin and passenger space
  • Better fuel efficiency for daily commuting
  • Lower starting price and running costs

This side suits drivers whose week centers on commuting, errands, and family logistics rather than performance driving. Buyers who choose it typically value a lower purchase price, fewer trips to the gas station, and a roomy, quiet cabin that keeps long commutes and family trips comfortable. If you judge a car by running costs, passenger and cargo room, and refined everyday comfort — and you do not require all-wheel drive — this is the better fit for the way you actually drive.

Altima SR buyer

Best for:

  • More power and quicker acceleration
  • Available all-wheel drive for all seasons
  • A sportier driving feel
  • Long-term reliability and wide availability
  • A well-rounded vehicle with strong resale

This is the pick for drivers who want more enthusiasm behind the wheel and more confidence in bad weather. Buyers who lean this way usually want stronger acceleration for merging and passing, a sportier feel on the road, and the option of all-wheel drive when rain or snow is part of the routine. If you'd rather have extra power and year-round traction than the last few MPG or inches of trunk space — and you value a strong reputation for reliability and resale — this side of the comparison fits how you actually drive.

Good to know

Frequently asked questions

The questions shoppers ask most when weighing these two — answered with the verified facts.

It comes down to how much you value what the extra money buys. The Accord SE sits higher in its lineup, so it adds equipment over the Altima SR — typically the comfort, technology, and convenience features you touch every day, such as a comfortable, well-assembled cabin. The SE and SR start at roughly the same price. If those upgrades match how you actually use a car — long commutes, frequent passengers, a love of the little luxuries — the premium is easy to justify and you'll appreciate it daily. If you mostly need dependable, well-equipped transportation and would rather keep the monthly payment down, the Altima SR covers the fundamentals just as capably and is the smarter value. Price comparably equipped examples at your local dealers, because incentives and financing often move the real-world gap more than the sticker suggests.

"Nicer every day" is about the things you touch on every drive — the seats, the controls, and the screen. Both cabins are comfortable and well laid out, so daily feel is close. Comfort is personal, though: seat shape, driving position, and how intuitive the controls feel to you matter more than any feature list. Spend ten minutes in each on a route like your real commute — that test drive will tell you more about daily livability than any spec comparison.

Not in a way that should change most decisions. In this pairing the Accord SE matches or leads the Altima SR on the features buyers feel most, so the SR doesn't hold a standout advantage here. The SR remains a comfortable, capable, dependable midsize sedan — and if its styling, driving feel, or a local deal speaks to you, those are perfectly valid reasons to choose it. But on equipment and the day-to-day essentials, you're not giving anything up by going with the SE. Drive both to confirm the seats and driving position suit you.

High annual mileage puts the spotlight on running costs, and that's mostly about fuel. Here, the Accord SE returns the better EPA-estimated economy (31 mpg combined) — over 15,000 miles a year that adds up to noticeably fewer fill-ups and real money saved versus the alternative. Beyond fuel, a high-mileage driver should weigh seat comfort for all those hours and each model's reliability record — worth checking current ratings for the specific trims, since it matters most when you're piling on miles. If your year is mostly highway commuting, lean toward the more efficient, more comfortable choice; the small differences compound over 15,000 miles in a way they wouldn't for a light-use second car.

Both should serve a five-year owner dependably with routine maintenance — check each model's current reliability ratings and warranty terms for a clearer read on long-term durability. We don't publish a crystal ball on resale for this exact pairing, so treat long-term value as a tie-breaker rather than a deciding factor — check current residual estimates and warranty terms for the specific trims when you're close to buying. What you can control is fit: the Accord SE's cabin and the features you use daily are what make a car easy to keep happily for five years, so choose the one that suits your routine and have it serviced on schedule.

On materials, the SE and SR are closely matched — both use quality finishes appropriate to their price. On space, expect more cargo room in the Accord SE. Interior preference is partly personal — dashboard layout, seat shape, and where the controls fall all factor in — so the best test is to sit in both. If a richer, more feature-laden cabin matters to you, the Accord SE is the one to start with; if you mainly want a comfortable, sensibly-arranged space, either will serve you well day to day.

The SE and SR are closely matched on technology. Both pair a responsive touchscreen with the smartphone-mirroring and driver-assist basics expected in this class, so neither leaves you wanting for everyday use. Differences come down to small things — screen size, menu layout, and how intuitive each system feels to you — which are best judged with your own phone connected on a test drive. For most buyers the tech is a wash here, so let the rest of the comparison and how each system feels in your hands decide it.

For most shoppers, the right pick follows your priorities rather than a single score. Buyers who prioritize value and the everyday essentials tend to be happiest in the Accord SE, while those who prioritize a balance of price and features lean toward the Altima SR. if running costs lead, the Accord SE's efficiency is the draw. Both are genuinely good midsize sedans, so this isn't about one being a mistake — it's about which set of strengths fits your life. Use the verdict above as the starting recommendation, then confirm it with a back-to-back test drive of the exact trims you're considering.

Ready to shop the Accord?

Find local inventory, pricing, incentives, and available trims near you.

Browse Accord inventory

Updated inventory from local dealers.

Accord vs Nissan Altima View Local Inventory