Many of the hitch mounted racks have a pin that let you lower the rack so you can open the hatch. Mine does. It's a Yakima King Pin, I think. It goes in a 1-1/4" receiver hitch, but only because the bike store swapped out a part to make it fit the hitch on my Beetle (now deceased--R.I.P.). On my Element, I put on a 2" receiver hitch so I could pull more things (the Beetle couldn't pull anything thus I have nothing to pull, but I like having options), and I just use an adapter to step the hitch down to 1-1/4".
I don't care for strap-on racks. I had a strap come off of an old one on the back of an Explorer once. It was scary (but I just had the kid's bikes on there).
*I looked at a pic of your little car. It won't pull anything either.
I'm reminded of why I wanted the Yakima King Pin. We needed room for 3 bikes for our family and it carries 4 bikes (though I could only hold 3 on the Beetle due to weight restrictions). Because of the capability for 4 bikes, it was set up for a 2" hitch. But, since the Beetle didn't accept a hitch with a 2" receiver (weight restrictions), the bike shop swapped out the arm for me (and I removed the hardware that holds the 4th bike on). Thus, the King Pin (4) could do the job of the King Pin (2). (The KP2 may be called something else.)
So go to etrailer.com and find out if your car will take a hitch, and that will determine what hitch mounted racks you can get. (If you go for hitch mount.)
Karen
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insidious ungovernable cardboard