I won't say Alfas are as reliable as say, an old Corolla, but neither are they half as bad as common opinion seems to dictate. The problem with Alfa has always been with the dealers and their horrible support, so that any small issue soon turns into a headache that requires 3 visits to correct. I've owned an Alfa 164 V6 Cloverleaf for nearly a decade and a half, and it hasn't been any more unreliable than my current daily driver, a BMW 330i Coupe. It has covere over 150k miles with no work done to the motor or transmission, and has its original dampers and ancilliaries, other than the water pump which is repleaced automatically whenever the timing belt was done, and it has never failed to start. In 14 years it did leave me stranded three times, two directly due to my lack of scheduled maintenance (seized pulleys & belts), and the other from me being cheap and letting the clutch run out completely. The only major problem I've had was with the electrical system, which required a new main fuse box. I've had a couple of dash lamps burnout and occasioanally the power window and seat switches (made by Bosch in Germany) do stick, but otherwise, everything still works. My advice is find a reputable private specialist and you'll have a trouble free and wonderful car for years. My BMW, on the other hand has had numerous electrical niggles, but the dealer is so accommodating that it's easy to forget that it is not, as many would have you believe, a perfect example of perfect German engineering. On a side note, my cousin's '05 M3 needed a new motor after only 13k miles due to faulty main bearings...You be the judge, but perception is not always reality.