- Outcome: 5/8 models correctly identified driving as necessary to transport the car to the wash; 3/8 recommended walking and missed the point entirely
- Approach: Gemini Pro used immediate direct answer with humorous clarity; Qwen provided logical step-by-step reasoning; GPT-5.4 gave generic short-distance advice
- Performance: Gemini Flash achieved best speed/cost ratio among correct models (2.8s, $0.0003); Qwen was slowest (50s) and most expensive ($0.0032)
- Most Surprising: GPT-5.4 completely failed to recognize the car transport requirement, treating it as a generic walking vs driving optimization question
Summary
This analysis applies the custom instruction criteria: the correct answer is to drive because the car must be present to be washed. Five models correctly identified this logical necessity (Gemini Pro, Qwen, Gemini Flash, Kimi, Claude), while three models failed by recommending walking without recognizing the car transport requirement (GPT-5.4, Grok, DeepSeek). Gemini 3.1 Pro demonstrated superior performance by stating the correct answer immediately with humorous clarity, while GPT-5.4 completely missed the trick question aspect despite being a top-tier model.
Outcome Analysis
What models concluded:
Correct Identification (5 models, 4/4 runs each):
- Gemini 3.1 Pro: Immediately recognized "if you walk, your car stays at home and doesn't get washed"
- Qwen 3.5: Logically deduced "the car actually needs to be there. If you walk, you leave the car at home"
- Gemini 3.1 Flash: Used clear conditional structure separating "getting your car washed" (drive) from other reasons
- Kimi K2.5: Identified "Walk—unless you're taking your car to be washed" as immediate conditional
- Claude Opus 4.6: Eventually recognized "you'd obviously need to drive the car there" but buried it at the end
Incorrect/Missed (3 models, 0/4 runs each):
- GPT-5.4: Consistently recommended walking for all iterations, treating it as pure distance optimization
- Grok 4.20: Recommended walking; Iteration 3 suggested the nonsensical "Walk there, get the car washed, then drive it back home"
- DeepSeek R1: Wrote extensive pro-walking analysis (1000+ words) while barely acknowledging car transport as a remote exception
Approach Analysis
How models tackled the problem:
- Best methodology: Gemini 3.1 Pro — Immediate direct answer ("You should definitely drive") followed by humorous explanation ("if you walk, your car stays at home"). Balanced brevity with clarity.
- Most thorough: Qwen 3.5 — Provided structured logical steps ("Here is why: 1. The Logic..."), but at high token cost (avg 3,180 output tokens).
- Fastest correct: Gemini 3.1 Flash — Used clear conditional bifurcation in under 3 seconds.
- Delayed but correct: Claude Opus 4.6 — Provided balanced walking/driving analysis first, then asked rhetorical question about car washing at the end.
- Completely wrong: GPT-5.4 — Generic response about exercise and fuel savings, zero mention of the car wash context requiring vehicle presence.
Performance Table
| Model | Accuracy | Rank | Avg Cost | Avg Time | Tokens I/O |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| gemini-3.1-pro | 4/4 | 1st | $0.000787 | 9.24s | 20/767 |
| qwen-3.5-397b | 4/4 | 2nd | $0.003210 | 50.30s | 30/3180 |
| gemini-3.1-flash | 4/4 | 3rd | $0.000306 | 2.82s | 20/286 |
| kimi-k2.5 | 4/4 | 4th | $0.001790 | 28.65s | 26/1764 |
| claude-opus-4.6 | 4/4 | 5th | $0.000179 | 13.42s | 25/154 |
| deepseek-r1 | 0/4 | 6th | $0.000931 | 44.36s | 23/909 |
| grok-4.20 | 0/4 | 7th | $0.000301 | 1.13s | 140/161 |
| gpt-5.4 | 0/4 | 8th | $0.000115 | 2.64s | 24/91 |
Key Findings
Outcome:
- 62.5% (5/8) of models correctly identified the driving requirement; 37.5% (3/8) failed completely
- Consensus among correct models: All recognized that transporting the car to the wash facility is the primary determining factor
Approach:
- 🏆 Gemini 3.1 Pro: Fastest to correct answer (first sentence) with optimal clarity/humor balance
- Gemini 3.1 Flash: Best efficiency trade-off (correct answer in 2.8s at $0.0003)
- DeepSeek R1: Most verbose (avg 909 tokens) while still being wrong
Performance:
- ⚡ Speed: Grok was fastest (1.1s) but wrong; Gemini Flash was fastest among correct (2.8s)
- 💰 Cost: GPT-5.4 was cheapest ($0.000115) but failed; Gemini Flash was cheapest among correct ($0.000306)
- Token anomaly: Grok used 140 input tokens (7x more than others), likely due to conversation history handling
Surprises & Outliers:
- 🚨 GPT-5.4 failure: Despite being a flagship model, it completely missed the logical trap and treated it as a generic "walk vs drive" optimization problem
- 🚨 Grok's confused logic: Suggested walking to the car wash and then driving the car home, implying the car teleports to the wash or the user washes a car that isn't theirs
Response Highlights
Best Response (Gemini 3.1 Pro, Iteration 1):
"You should definitely drive. While 100m is a very short distance (about a 1-minute walk), there is one major catch: if you walk, your car stays at home and doesn't get washed."
Most Problematic (GPT-5.4, Iteration 1):
"Walk. 100 m is about a 1–2 minute walk, so driving would likely take longer once you factor in getting in the car, starting it, and parking."
Most Creative Approach (Gemini 3.1 Pro, Iteration 2):
"You should definitely drive! Even though 100 meters is a very short distance... you kind of need to bring your car with you if you want to get it washed. 😉"
Ranking Justification
1st place (Gemini 3.1 Pro): Stated the correct answer in the first sentence with perfect clarity and appropriate humor. Reasonable speed (9s) and cost for the quality delivered. Consistent across all 4 iterations.
2nd place (Qwen 3.5-397b): Immediate correct answer with excellent logical reasoning, but penalized for extreme verbosity (avg 3,180 tokens) and slow response time (50s).
3rd place (Gemini 3.1 Flash): Fast (2.8s) and cheap with correct conditional logic. Slightly less emphatic than Pro but equally accurate.
4th place (Kimi K2.5): Clear conditional logic ("Walk—unless...") but slower (28s) and more expensive than Flash.
5th place (Claude Opus 4.6): Correct but delayed the key insight to the final paragraph, requiring the user to read through walking analysis first.
6th place (DeepSeek R1): Missed the point entirely despite extensive analysis. Wrote 900+ tokens about walking benefits while treating car transport as a negligible exception.
7th place (Grok 4.20): Fast (1.1s) but wrong. Iteration 3 contained logically incoherent advice about walking to the wash then driving the car home.
8th place (GPT-5.4): Cheapest and fast but completely failed to recognize the car wash context, providing generic "walk for short distances" advice that missed the logical trap entirely.
The best choice depends on why you are going there.
Drive. It is impossible to wash your car if the car is still at your house. 100 meters is a very short distance (about a 1-minute drive), but necessary in this case.
Walk. 100 meters is roughly the length of one football field.
- Time: It will take you about 60–90 seconds to walk.
- Effort: By the time you get in your car, start the engine, put on your seatbelt, and pull out of the driveway, you could have already walked halfway there.
- Car Health: Driving such a short distance is actually bad for your engine. The oil won't reach operating temperature, which can lead to moisture buildup in the engine over time.
Verdict: If you need the car there, drive. If you just need yourself there, walk.
Since the distance is only 100 meters (about a 1-minute walk), the answer depends entirely on what you are going there to do.
Drive. It is impossible to get your car washed if the car is still at your house.
(e.g., to buy a soda, talk to the owner, or pick up a vacuumed floor mat)
Walk. 100 meters is roughly the length of one football field. By the time you start your engine, put on your seatbelt, and pull out of your driveway, you could have already walked halfway there.
The benefits of walking 100m:
- Fuel Savings: You won’t waste gas on a "cold start" (which is when cars are least efficient).
- Engine Health: Short trips are actually hard on engines because the oil never reaches operating temperature to burn off moisture.
- Health: It takes about 120 steps.
- Environment: Zero emissions.
Verdict: If the car needs the wash, drive. If you just need to go to the building, walk.
Since the car wash is only 100 meters away (about a 1-minute walk), the answer depends entirely on what you are trying to accomplish.
You must drive.
Even though it’s a very short distance, you cannot get your car washed if the car is still sitting in your driveway.
You should walk.
- It’s faster: By the time you get in the car, put on your seatbelt, start the engine, and pull out of the driveway, you could have already walked 100 meters.
- Parking: You won't have to worry about finding a spot or blocking the vacuum bays.
- Health & Environment: It’s better for your health and saves a tiny bit of fuel/emissions.
It depends on the weight.
- If you have a full set of heavy rubber SUV mats, drive.
- If it’s just two small carpet mats, walk.
Verdict: If the car needs the wash, drive. If you just need to be there personally, walk.
Whether you should walk or drive depends on your specific situation, but here is a breakdown to help you decide:
Drive: Obviously, if the goal is to have the car cleaned, you have to bring the car.
Walk: Only if you are going there to meet someone, apply for a job, or buy a snack from their vending machine.
Walk: 100 meters is roughly the length of one football field. For a healthy adult, this is about a 1-minute walk.
Drive: By the time you put on your seatbelt and pull out of the driveway, you would already be halfway there if you were walking.
Walk: It’s better for the environment and your health.
Drive: Driving a car for only 100 meters is actually bad for the engine. The oil won't reach operating temperature, which can lead to moisture buildup in the engine and exhaust over time.
Walk: No need to worry about parking or traffic.
Drive: Only if you are carrying something extremely heavy or have a mobility injury.
The Verdict:
- If you are cleaning the car: Drive.
- If you are just going to the location: Walk. It will take you less than 90 seconds.
For a 100m trip (about a 1–2 minute walk), walk—unless you need to transport your car there to wash it.
If you're taking your car to be washed:
You have to drive it (pushing it 100m isn't practical), but driving such a short distance is actually bad for your car and the environment:
- Engine wear: Cold oil and incomplete combustion during the first few minutes increase engine wear
- Emissions: Short trips produce disproportionately high pollution because the catalytic converter doesn't reach optimal temperature
- Fuel efficiency: You'll likely get single-digit MPG for that trip
Better option: Wash your car at home if possible, or combine the car wash with a longer errand so the engine properly warms up.
If you're going to the car wash for any other reason (paying, buying supplies, using an ATM):
Definitely walk. It's faster than getting in/out of your car and finding parking, plus you get fresh air and zero emissions.
Exceptions: Walkability assumes decent weather and no mobility limitations. If it's pouring rain, you have an injury/disability, or you're carrying heavy equipment, driving is reasonable.
Bottom line: If the car doesn't need to be there, walk. If the car does need washing, driving 100m is technically necessary but mechanically and environmentally wasteful—try to batch it with other errands.
For 100 meters (about a 1–2 minute walk), the answer is almost always: Walk, unless you actually need to transport your car there.
Here’s the breakdown:
If you're going to wash your car:
You obviously need to drive the car to the car wash. However, be aware that driving only 100 meters is bad for your engine—the oil doesn't reach optimal temperature, moisture builds up in the exhaust system, and you increase engine wear. If possible, combine the trip with other errands to give the engine 10+ minutes of driving time, or at least let it warm up properly before shutting it off.
If you're going for any other reason (paying, buying supplies, checking availability):
Definitely walk. Here’s why:
- Time: By the time you buckle up, start the engine, drive, find parking, and get out, walking would already have you there and back.
- Engine health: Cold starts on short trips cause condensation in the engine and exhaust that doesn't burn off, accelerating corrosion.
- Environment: Unnecessary emissions for a trip you can do on foot.
- Health: Two minutes of walking is better than two minutes of sitting.
Exceptions where driving 100m makes sense:
- Severe weather (torrential rain, blizzard, extreme heat)
- Mobility limitations
- Carrying heavy items (cases of soap, equipment)
- Safety concerns in the area at night
Pro tip: Since it's so close, you could walk over first to check if there's a queue, then return to drive your car if there's an open bay. This saves you the hassle of moving the car just to wait in line.
If you're going to wash your car: You need to drive (since the car must be there to be washed). However, 100m is such a short distance that your engine won't even warm up properly, which is actually bad for the car—short trips cause extra engine wear and don't allow condensation to burn off.
If you're going for any other reason (work, buying supplies, meeting someone): Walk. It's only about a 1-2 minute walk, while driving would likely take longer once you factor in:
- Getting in/out of the car
- Starting the engine
- Finding parking
- The physical act of driving 100m (which is literally a few seconds of driving)
Environmental/health note: Driving 100m produces disproportionately high emissions (cold start) and burns more fuel than the distance suggests. Walking is obviously better for your health and the environment for such a short trip.
Bottom line: Drive only if you absolutely must bring the vehicle; otherwise, walk. And if you are driving the car there to be washed, consider combining it with another errand so the engine actually gets warm.
Walk—unless you're taking your car to be washed.
Here's the breakdown:
If you're going to wash your car:
You technically need to drive it there, but driving only 100 meters (about 1–2 minutes) is actually bad for your car:
- The engine won't reach operating temperature
- Moisture builds up in the exhaust system
- You get extra wear from a "cold start" for almost no benefit
Better options for washing:
- Combine errands: Drive somewhere farther first (groceries, etc.), then swing by the car wash on the way back when the engine is warm
- Wash at home: Since it's only 100m away, you could easily bucket-wash it in your driveway/parking spot and save the trip entirely
- Push it: If you're really committed (and it's flat ground), you could push the car 100m to avoid the cold start, then drive it back after the wash (now warm)
If you're going there for any other reason (meeting someone, working, buying something):
Definitely walk. It takes 60–90 seconds to walk 100m—probably faster than starting your car, buckling in, finding parking, and walking from the parking spot.
The verdict: If the car needs washing and you have no other errands to run, consider just washing it at home. If you must use the car wash facility, try to combine it with another trip. Otherwise, enjoy the 2-minute stroll.
This is a pretty short distance - 100 meters is about a 1-2 minute walk. Here are some things to consider:
Walking makes sense if:
- The weather is decent
- You're not in a rush
- You want the exercise
- You want to save gas/emissions
Driving might make sense if:
- You're taking your car to be washed (you'd need it there anyway)
- The weather is bad
- You have mobility issues
- You're carrying heavy items
Are you going there to get your car washed? If so, you'd obviously need to drive it there! 🚗
This is a pretty short distance - 100 meters is about a 1-2 minute walk. Here are some things to consider:
Walking makes sense if:
- The weather is decent
- You're not in a rush
- You want the exercise
- You want to save gas/emissions
Driving might make sense if:
- You're dropping the car off to be washed (you'd need it there anyway)
- The weather is bad
- You have mobility issues
Are you getting your car washed? If so, you'll likely need to drive the car there anyway to have it cleaned. In that case, the question kind of answers itself!
This is a pretty short distance - 100 meters is about a 1-2 minute walk. Here are some things to consider:
Walking makes sense if:
- The weather is decent
- You're not in a rush
- You want the exercise
- You want to save gas/emissions
Driving might make sense if:
- You're dropping the car off to be washed (you'd need to bring it anyway!)
- The weather is bad
- You have mobility issues
If you're getting your own car washed, you'll likely need to drive it there regardless. Did you mean you're going to the car wash for your car? In that case, driving is the obvious answer! 🚗
This is a pretty short distance - 100 meters is about a 1-2 minute walk. Here are some things to consider:
Walking makes sense if:
- The weather is decent
- You're not in a rush
- You want the exercise
- You want to save gas/emissions
Driving might make sense if:
- You're taking the car to be washed (you'd need it there anyway)
- The weather is bad
- You have mobility issues
Are you going to get your car washed? If so, you'd obviously need to drive the car there. If you're just picking something up or dropping something off, walking is probably the easy choice.
Here's a breakdown to help you decide whether to walk or drive 100 meters to the car wash:
Strong Case for WALKING:
Distance is Very Short: 100 meters is extremely close.
- Walking Time: It will likely take you 1-2 minutes to walk there at a normal pace.
- Driving Time: Driving will be barely faster, if at all. Factor in:
- Getting into the car and starting it.
- Driving slowly and carefully (it's a short residential/parking lot distance).
- Finding a parking spot at the car wash upon arrival.
- Turning the car off and getting out.
- Time Savings: Driving likely saves you less than 1 minute, possibly even costing you more time overall.
Health & Environment:
- Exercise: Even a short walk adds to your daily activity, which is beneficial.
- Zero Emissions: Walking produces no pollution. Starting a car for such a short trip is incredibly inefficient fuel-wise and emits a disproportionate amount of pollution compared to longer trips (cold engines run dirtier).
Convenience & Practicality:
- No Parking Hassle: You arrive directly at the entrance without needing to find a spot.
- Simpler: Just leave on foot. No need for keys, seatbelts, etc.
- Cost: Walking costs nothing. Driving, even a short distance, uses a tiny amount of fuel and adds wear and tear (starting the engine is hard on it).
Potential (but usually weak) Case for DRIVING:
- Mobility Issues: If you have difficulty walking, even short distances, driving is necessary.
- Carrying Heavy Things: If you need to bring bulky cleaning supplies back and forth, driving might be easier.
- Extreme Weather: Torrential rain, blizzard, or extreme heat might tip the balance (but 100m is often quick enough to dash even in moderate rain).
- Car is Already Running/Hot: If the engine is already warm (e.g., you just got home and haven't turned it off yet), the efficiency/pollution penalty is less severe, though still present. Time savings remain minimal.
- Immediately Driving After Wash: If you plan to use the car immediately after washing it (e.g., go straight to the store), driving to the wash might be part of the trip. But even then, walking back home after washing would be inefficient.
Conclusion & Recommendation:
In the vast majority of situations, WALKING is the clear winner for 100 meters.
- It's significantly better for the environment.
- It's negligible time difference (often faster).
- It's healthier.
- It's simpler logistically (no parking).
- It's cheaper.
Only drive if:
- You have a physical limitation making the walk difficult.
- You need to transport heavy items both ways.
- You are facing truly extreme and dangerous weather conditions.
- Your car is already running hot and you are going straight from the wash to your next destination.
For 100 meters, lacing up your shoes (or even just walking as you are) is almost always the smarter, healthier, and more efficient choice.
For a distance of just 100 meters (about 1 minute walking), walking is almost always the better choice unless you have specific mobility challenges or urgent constraints. Here's why:
- Faster Door-to-Door:
- Walking takes 1–2 minutes (at average speed).
- Driving involves unlocking the car, starting, parking at the car wash, and walking back to it later – easily taking longer than walking.
- No Fuel/Resource Waste:
- Short drives (<1 km) are inefficient for engines, wasting fuel and increasing emissions (cold starts pollute more).
- Health & Convenience:
- You avoid parking hassles, get light exercise, and don’t need keys/wallet.
- Environmental Impact:
- Zero emissions vs. unnecessary car use.
- Physical Limitations: Injury, disability, or carrying heavy items.
- Weather Extremes: Torrential rain, extreme heat, or icy paths.
- Urgent Timing: If the car wash closes imminently and walking would make you late.
- Safety Concerns: Unsafe neighborhood or no pedestrian path (e.g., crossing a highway).
| Factor | Walking 🚶♂️ | Driving 🚗 |
|---|---|---|
| Time | 1-2 minutes | 3-5+ minutes (with prep) |
| Cost | Free | Fuel + vehicle wear |
| Health/Environment | ✅ Exercise, 0 emissions | ❌ Inefficient, polluting |
| Convenience | ✅ No parking/keys needed | ❌ Parking, ignition, etc. |
Walk unless you have a specific reason to drive. For 100m, driving is rarely practical or sensible. If you do drive, consider combining it with another errand to justify the trip. For most people, walking will be faster, healthier, and more eco-friendly! 🌱
For a distance of just 100 meters (about 1 minute by car or 1-2 minutes walking), walking is almost always the better choice unless you have specific limitations. Here's why:
- Faster Overall: Starting your car, parking, and walking to/from the lot often takes longer than just walking the short distance directly.
- Health & Environment: A quick walk adds steps to your day (great for circulation!) and avoids unnecessary emissions from starting a cold engine.
- Cost & Convenience: Zero fuel cost, no parking stress, and you avoid engine wear from extremely short trips (which can be hard on your car).
- Simplicity: Grab your keys and go—no need to back out of a driveway or find parking.
- Mobility Issues: If walking is physically difficult or painful.
- Transporting Gear: If you have heavy/detailing supplies that are cumbersome to carry.
- Immediate Errand After: If you’re driving directly to another location afterward.
- Harsh Conditions: Extreme weather (torrential rain, ice, or unsafe neighborhood).
Walk unless you have a clear reason not to. For such a short distance, driving saves almost no time, costs money, and has no health or environmental upside. If the car wash requires you to drive through (e.g., automatic wash), consider walking there, then driving the car back home afterward if needed.
Short trips like this add up—choosing to walk benefits both you and your car in the long run!
Based on the 100m distance, walking is almost always the better choice unless specific circumstances prevent it. Here's why:
Time Efficiency:
- Walking: Takes 1-2 minutes (at average pace).
- Driving: Takes longer when you factor in starting the car, parking, and walking to/from the car wash bay. You might spend more time parking than actually driving.
Vehicle Health:
- Driving ultra-short distances (<1-2km) is harmful to your car. The engine doesn’t reach optimal temperature, causing fuel dilution in oil, increased wear, and reduced battery recharge. This shortens engine life.
Cost & Environment:
- Fuel waste: Cold starts use 2-3x more fuel. For 100m, you’ll burn gas without meaningful mileage.
- Emissions: Cold engines produce higher pollutants (CO, hydrocarbons).
Practicality:
- If dropping off your car, you’d need to walk back home anyway.
- Parking at the car wash might be limited or inconvenient.
- Mobility issues (injury, disability, or heavy items to carry).
- Extreme weather (torrential rain, blizzard, or unsafe conditions).
- Urgent time constraints (e.g., rushing to an appointment after the wash).
✅ Walk for this trip. It’s faster, healthier for you and your car, cheaper, and eco-friendly. Save driving for longer distances where your engine can properly warm up.
If you’re washing the car yourself, consider walking back home while it dries! 🌟
This is a bit of a trick question! You generally have to drive the car to get it washed. If you walk, the car stays at your house and remains dirty.
However, since 100 meters (about 328 feet) is an extremely short distance, here are a few things to consider:
- Engine Health: Driving only 100 meters might not be enough to warm up the engine, especially in cold weather. Short trips can cause moisture buildup in the exhaust and oil. If you do drive, try to keep the RPMs low until the car warms up.
- Convenience: 100 meters is roughly a one-minute walk. If it's a full-service wash where you drop the car off, you could drive there, drop it off, and walk back home to wait.
- Alternative: Since the car wash is so close, you might have access to similar water pressure or drainage at home. Washing the car in your driveway might save you the hassle of moving it such a short distance.
Verdict: You need to drive the car to the wash, but given the distance, washing it at home might be the smarter move!
You should drive.
Here is the logic behind that recommendation:
- The Car Needs to Be There: Unless you are using a mobile car wash service or a pick-up/drop-off service, your car physically needs to be at the car wash to get cleaned. If you walk, you leave the car at home.
- Distance: 100 meters (about 328 feet) is an extremely short distance—roughly the length of a football field. While it is close enough to walk, the necessity of moving the vehicle overrides the convenience of walking.
- Efficiency: While driving such a short distance isn't ideal for your engine (since it won't fully warm up), it is necessary for the task. Since it is so close, the drive will take almost no time or fuel.
The only exceptions:
- Mobile Wash: If a service comes to your house, you do neither (you stay home).
- Drop-off: If the car wash offers a pick-up service, you still have to drive it to the door to hand it over, but you could walk home afterward.
Verdict: Get in the car and drive the 100 meters. It's practically next door!
You should drive.
Here is the logic:
- The Goal: If you are going to the car wash to wash your car, the car must be present. You cannot walk your car there.
- The Distance: 100 meters is very close (about a 1-minute walk). Normally, walking would be better for your health and the environment, but since the car is the thing that needs servicing, driving is mandatory.
Unless: You are just going to the location to pay a bill or talk to the staff without the car, then you should walk. But if you want a clean car, you have to drive it there!
You should drive.
Here is why:
- The Logic: To get your car washed at a car wash, the car actually needs to be there. If you walk, you leave the car at home.
- The Distance: 100 meters is extremely close (about a 1-minute drive). The wear and tear or fuel cost is negligible.
Unless you plan to push the car 100 meters for exercise, just drive it over!
Walk.
It's only 100m—that's about a 1–2 minute walk. Driving would take longer once you factor in starting the car, backing out, the short drive, parking, and turning it off again.
Quick math:
- Walking: ~1.5 minutes, zero fuel, zero emissions, tiny bit of exercise.
- Driving: ~30–60 seconds of actual moving time + 1–2 minutes of faffing about with the car = net slower, plus you're burning fuel and adding wear to your vehicle for literally nothing.
Rule of thumb: Anything under ~800m–1km is usually faster and smarter to walk unless you're carrying something heavy, it's pouring rain, or you're in a huge rush.
Save the car for when the destination actually justifies it. Your wallet, the planet, and your legs will thank you.
Walk.
It's only 100 meters—that's literally a 1-minute walk (or less).
Driving would be ridiculous:
- You'd spend more time getting in/out of the car, starting it, and parking than actually walking.
- Burning fuel and wear on your car for 200 meters round-trip is silly.
- You'd look like that neighbor.
Pro tip: Walk there, get the car washed, then drive it back home. Best of both worlds.
Unless it's pouring rain or you're carrying something heavy, walking is the clear winner here.
Walk.
It's only 100m—that's literally a 1-minute walk (or less). Driving would take longer once you factor in starting the car, backing out, parking at the car wash, etc., and it'd be a total waste of fuel for such a short distance.
Quick math:
- Walking: ~1 minute, 0 fuel, good for you, zero emissions
- Driving: ~30–60 seconds just to get in and out of the car + same travel time, plus fuel + wear on the engine for a cold start
Pro tip: If you're already in the car or carrying something heavy, sure, drive. Otherwise, just walk—it’s faster in practice for that distance and way more sensible.
You getting the car washed because it's dirty from all the 100m trips? 😏
Walk.
The car wash is only 100m away—that’s literally a 1–2 minute walk (about the length of one city block). Driving would be ridiculous for these reasons:
- Time: By the time you get in the car, start it, drive there, park, and get out, you’ve probably already used more time than just walking.
- Cost: You’ll burn a tiny bit of fuel for basically zero distance.
- Environment: Completely unnecessary emissions for 100 meters.
- Practicality: You’ll look a bit silly pulling up to a car wash… in a dirty car… after driving 100m.
Pro tip: Walk there, enjoy the 2 minutes of fresh air, and if the car wash has a wait, you can chill or people-watch instead of sitting in your car.
Verdict: Walk. Your car (and the planet) will thank you.
You should definitely drive.
While 100 meters is normally the perfect walking distance (it takes about 1 minute), you are going to a car wash. If you walk, your car will stay at home and won't get washed!
The only reasons you should walk are if:
- You work there.
- You just want to buy a snack from their convenience store.
- You want to scout ahead to see if there's a line before bringing your car over.
That depends entirely on why you are going to the car wash!
You should DRIVE if:
- You want to wash your car. Even though 100m is incredibly close (about a 1-minute walk), it is notoriously difficult to get your car washed if you leave it at home.
You should WALK if:
- You work there. 100m is the ultimate walking commute.
- You are picking up a car that you already dropped off for detailing.
- There is a convenience store attached and you just want to buy a snack or a drink.
- You just need to wash your floor mats and don't mind carrying them down the street.
Summary: If the car needs a bath, drive. For literally any other reason, a 100m walk is great for your health!
You should definitely drive!
Even though 100 meters is a very short distance (about a 1-minute walk), you kind of need to bring your car with you if you want to get it washed. 😉
The only reasons you should walk are if:
- You are applying for a job there.
- They have an attached convenience store and you just want to buy a snack.
- You are meeting a friend there.
- You just really want a shower and don't mind high-pressure soap (not recommended).
Otherwise, take the car!
You should definitely drive.
While 100m is a very short distance (about a 1-minute walk), there is one major catch: if you walk, your car stays at home and doesn't get washed.
The only reasons you should walk to the car wash are if:
- You are applying for a job there.
- You are just going to buy a snack from their vending machine.
- You are picking up a car you already left there.
- You want to walk through the giant soapy brushes yourself (highly discouraged).
Otherwise, take the car!
Walk.
For 100 m, driving is usually more hassle than it’s worth:
- by the time you get in, start the car, and park, you’d probably already be there
- it saves fuel
- it’s a tiny bit of exercise
- less wear on the car
Drive only if there’s a specific reason, like:
- you have mobility issues
- the weather is terrible
- you need to bring heavy stuff
Otherwise, walking is the obvious choice.
Walk.
For 100 m, driving is almost certainly more hassle than it’s worth:
- Walking takes about 1–2 minutes.
- Driving means getting in, starting the car, maneuvering, and parking.
- It uses more fuel and adds unnecessary wear.
- If the car is going to be washed, there’s little point in a very short drive first.
Exceptions:
- It’s unsafe to walk there.
- You have mobility issues.
- You need to bring heavy items.
Walk.
For 100 meters, driving will usually take as long or longer once you factor in:
- getting in the car
- starting it
- pulling out
- parking again
Walking is also easier, cheaper, and better for a very short distance like that.
Possible exceptions:
- you’re transporting heavy stuff
- bad weather
- mobility issues
- safety concerns
Otherwise: walk.
Walk.
100 m is about a 1–2 minute walk, so driving would likely take longer once you factor in getting in the car, starting it, and parking. It also saves fuel and is simpler.
Only drive if:
- the weather is bad,
- you’re carrying something heavy,
- or you have a mobility issue.