I took a relative out car shopping last week, and we looked at all of the usual suspects. Her budget was $25k or less, so we looked at new Honda Civics, Mazda3's, Ford Fusion, Hyundai Sonata, Toyota Camry, and Nissan Altimas. Of all of these, we could have gotten out cheapest on the Altima as they were offering huge discounts on the 2018's. With a list of $24k we could have picked one up for around $18k. But...it drove the worst by a looonnnggg way. Probably wasn't the worst looking or the most stripped, but it just didn't drive well.
In the end it wasn't much of a contest, the easy winner was the Civic. While maybe a step down from the Camry or the Fusion in terms of size and niceness, it was the best driving, most comfortable, most features, and best fuel economy. Price out the door for a mid level version (EX?) was $21k. Her ranking in order; Civic, Camry, Sonata, Fusion, Mazda3, Altima.
Poor Nissan, it was an also run here and I remember sitting the showroom and looking over at their big van thing people mover, and my niece's comment was basically that anyone that can design something so ugly is a clear sign the whole company is in trouble.
The Mazda was the surprise. I liked it, but she did not. A bit smaller than the Civic, but it was somewhat course and cramped by comparison. To get one equipped in a similar fashion it would have been $5k more than the Honda. The dealer wasn't helpful either. The Ford has also come a long way, but it was still no match in terms of refinement, fit or finish of the Honda and Toyota.
This brings me to the Camry. I wanted to like this car being a long time Toyota racer, but I just couldn't. You could feel a little soul trying to creep out of the Honda and Mazda, the Toyota was completely void of any type of interaction. Nice enough car, but possibly the world's best appliance. Strangely my wife's RAV4 is more engaging.