Skip to main content

I upgraded my Honda Civic head unit to a 9-inch wireless CarPlay display for under $500

The stock head unit with wired CarPlay in my 2017 Honda Civic EX recently gave up the ghost. The most affordable solution was a greatly upgraded aftermarket head unit from a brand called JOYING. It’s a 9-inch display with wireless CarPlay, a volume knob, and a design made for 10th-gen Honda Civics. It retails well below $500 and is worth every penny.

What you get with JOYING

Seriously, this thing has my full endorsement. For a 2017 Honda Civic EX, the upgrade delivers four key improvements:

  • Wireless CarPlay, not just wired
  • A physical volume knob instead of touch controls
  • A sharper 9-inch display in place of the 7-inch screen
  • EQ customization and prefixes that enhance existing speakers

Wireless CarPlay

Once set up, the system boots up and connects to wireless CarPlay incredibly fast. I checked the battery life on my iPhone 15 Pro Max on iOS 17.2 beta 3 while driving without charging. Podcast playback, navigation, and Hotspot to my kid’s iPad while using wireless CarPlay used 11% battery (57% to 46%) over 60 minutes.

The physical volume knob is such sweet relief compared to the original head unit’s touch buttons for volume up and down. Newer Civics than mine use a volume knob because volume knobs rule.

Mightier display

The larger display is just awesome. A 9-inch screen can’t compare to the all-display dashboards of more modern cars, but the size jump is noticeable over the OEM display. The overall head unit is only slightly larger thanks to a reduction in the amount of bezel around the screen.

The display size difference isn’t great enough for CarPlay to adapt its layout, so you end up with a larger and more legible interface. The UI remains crisp as the screen resolution is higher. When not using CarPlay, the JOYING head unit is a full-fledged Android 10 tablet that does use the higher resolution to show more versus bigger. (The OEM head unit was also an Android tablet, just not a very good one.)

“Free” stereo upgrade

An unexpected benefit of the upgrade is gaining EQ control over the car stereo system. It’s like getting a brand-new stereo system without actually buying new speakers. There’s a lot to love about this head unit.

My only disappointment? The display doesn’t play nice with my prescription sunglasses. I think they’re polarized. It’s not unusable, but it’s dimmer at extreme angles Otherwise, I’m frankly surprised by how good the upgrade experience went. Steering wheel controls, climate controls, right lane camera, rear camera – it all works great.

Even the installation process was smoother than I expected. The OEM head unit has a very specific case shape for the 10th-gen Honda Civic that kind of rules out off-the-shelf aftermarket head units. It works with my car’s two existing USB ports, and it adds a third USB port that you can run through the glove box.

These two videos do a good job of showing the installation process and head unit in action. Both helped me complete the job on my own.

I bought style B (without factory amplifier) with 4GB RAM and 64GB storage. If you care more about the non-CarPlay experience, there’s a pricier 8GB RAM and 128GB storage option. You can also add a SIM card with 4G internet access, install most Android apps, and use wireless or wired Android Auto. I mostly just care about the wired/wireless CarPlay experience as an iPhone user.

The JOYING head unit is designed specifically for the 10th-generation Honda Civic. It retails for $459.

More

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel

Comments

Author

Avatar for Zac Hall Zac Hall

Zac covers Apple news, hosts the 9to5Mac Happy Hour podcast, and created SpaceExplored.com.