Test Drive: 2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced in Cardiff Green (A $500 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

ClassPremium Compact SUV

Miles driven: 447

Fuel used: 21.5 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish A
Fuel Economy C+
Value A
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 300-hp 2.5L
Engine Type Turbo 4-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 20.8 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 22/28/24 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel typePremium gas recommended

Base price: $41,000 (not including $1045 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Cardiff Green paint ($500), Select Package ($4000), Advanced Package ($4150)

Price as tested: $50,695

Quick Hits

The great: Posh, comfortable cabin; quietness; long list of available comfort and convenience features

The good: Respectable acceleration from 4-cylinder engine; confident, distinctive styling; competitive pricing

The not so good: Our mediocre observed fuel economy trailed EPA estimates; some control-interface quirks

More Genesis GV70 price and availability information

John Biel

Perhaps Genesis mislabeled its brand-new premium-compact SUV by calling it the GV70. It is derived from the platform of the G70 sedan and styled in the same vein. But the available engines, rotary-dial gear selector, and console dial for the infotainment system are straight out of the midsize G80 sedan and GV80 sport-utility. Maybe the newcomer ought to really be called the GV75.

Of course, there are numbers that truly are more important to shoppers and we’ll get to them by and by. What really counts is that with the GV70 Genesis has created an excellent, value-packed entry in this busy market segment.

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

The Genesis GV70 launches for 2022 as the second crossover SUV in the growing Genesis-brand product lineup; in size and price, it slots in below the midsize Genesis GV80, which debuted for 2021.

Riding a wheelbase of 113.2 inches and ranging 185.6 inches from bumper to bumper, the 5-passenger GV70 is, respectively, 3.1 and 9.1 inches shorter in those categories than the GV80 that’s set up to carry seven in some models. Where the G70 premium-compact sedan offers the choice of a 2.0-liter turbocharged four or a 3.3-liter twin-turbo V6, the GV70 engines are a similarly aspirated 2.5-liter four and 3.5-liter V6.

All-wheel drive is standard in every GV70. Prices (with delivery) begin at $42,045 for the base 4-cylinder version and rise to $63,545 for the V6 Sport Prestige. Consumer Guide sampled a 2.5-equipped Advanced—it sits second from the top of four 4-cylinder models—with a starting price of $50,195. Only a spray of Cardiff Green paint nudged the final tab to $50,695.

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Consumer Guide Test Drive

The GV70’s interior is dazzling in terms of both design and materials. The infotainment system can be controlled via a center-console dial (which is unfortunately easy to grab when you intend to use the rotary-dial gear selector mounted just aft of it) or the extra-wide, 14.5-inch high-definition touchscreen.

Typically for a Genesis, trim levels are treated as packages added to the core model. To get two steps up from the base vehicle, CG’s tester first had to absorb Select equipment (19-inch alloy wheels, panoramic sunroof, 16-speaker Lexicon premium audio, ventilated front seats, and brushed-aluminum interior accents). Then came the Advanced package with leather upholstery, heated steering wheel, interior trim with a “Waveline” pattern, surround-view monitor, blind-spot view monitor, front parking-distance warning, rear parking-collision avoidance, Remote Smart Parking Assist (to jockey the vehicle in and out of tight spaces while the driver stands outside), and advanced rear-occupant alert.

Test Drive: 2022 Genesis G70 3.3T Sport Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

There’s ample space in the GV70’s front seats, but the rear-seat legroom and headroom can be tight for adults.

All that is the frosting on the cake. It builds on GV70 basics like LED headlights and taillights, heated exterior mirrors, heated front seats with power adjustment, dual-zone automatic climate control, front and rear 12-volt power outlets, and hands-free liftgate. Tech items include an infotainment system with 14.5-inch screen, navigation, satellite and HD radio, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto compatibility; dual front and rear USB ports; wireless device charging; and fingerprint recognition for one-touch starting. Safety and driving assists consist of adaptive cruise control, forward collision avoidance with pedestrian and cyclist detection, lane-keeping and following assist, rear parking-distance warning, and blind-spot and rear cross-traffic monitoring.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

The GV70’s cargo volume is a bit better than most premium compact SUV rivals–there’s 28.9 cubic feet behind the second-row seats, which grows to 56.8 cubic feet when the second-row seat backs are folded.

The Advanced’s luxury additions fill out a cabin that’s pretty lush for the price, with lots of soft-touch material—even far down on the doors past the point at which lots of other manufacturers default to plastic. Knurled surfaces adorn the ends of the wiper and light-control stalks, steering-wheel thumb buttons, and the transmission selector dial. Metal accents brighten the doors, dash, console, and steering wheel. The big infotainment display atop the instrument panel is vibrant, easily legible, and can show two things at once (for instance radio settings and navigation map). Fortunately, it is a touchscreen, which means you don’t have to use the remote console controller—and this one reminds us a little of the Lexus Remote Touch get-up that we’ve never particularly liked. By the way, it’s uncanny how easy it is to reach this round controller when you really want the trans selector. Easy-working temperature dials mix with numerous buttons for climate control.

Quick Spin: 2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

A 300-hp turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder is GV70’s base engine; a 375-hp turbo 3.5-liter V6 is also available. Choosing the Select package upgrades the standard 18-inch wheels to 19-inch alloys.

Comfortable seats welcome four adults. The front row is roomy; the second row slightly less so—but it would be wrong to call it cramped. Headroom is quite good, too, and driver sightlines are fairly unobstructed. Personal-item storage is accomplished in a large glove box, decent covered console bin, door pockets with bottle holders, and net pouches behind the front seats. Exposed cup holders are found in the console and the pull-down center armrest in the rear seat.

Overall cargo space is good, even if the rakish rear shape might stand in the way of certain loading options. The cargo bay holds at least 28.9 cubic feet of stuff. Drop the 60/40-split rear seats, which fold absolutely flush with the load floor, and a further 28 cubic feet open up.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

The GV70’s attractively athletic body shape is highlighted by nicely executed styling details, such as the Genesis brand’s signature shield-shaped grille and slim “Quad Lamp” LED headlights and taillights.

The 2.5 engine, rated at 300 horsepower and 311 lb-ft of torque, is attached to an 8-speed automatic transmission. This powerteam is an eminently competent pairing for moderately lively performance that gets a little zestier (and a touch louder) in “Sport” mode, with its quicker throttle response and more patient upshifts. Still, you can happily cruise all day in subtler “Comfort” mode. “Eco” and “Custom” settings are available as well. We wish the GV70 was a little stingier with gas—premium, wouldn’t you know. EPA ratings are 22 mpg in city driving, 28 on the highway, and 24 combined. When this driver put 81.5 miles on the test vehicle—with 69 percent city-style operation—it returned just 20.3 mpg.

With a suspension that’s a retuned version of the G70’s front struts and multilink rear, ride quality is luxury-brand good, with fine bump absorption and isolation from road noise. Steering is nicely weighted and responsive in the Comfort setting. Maybe the more resistant Sport-mode steering is a help on twisty roads where you wouldn’t want to overdo inputs, but in lazier urban-expressway driving it just feels heavy. Brakes are easy to modulate and predictably reliable.

The inaugural GV70 finds its strength in numbers—the number of things it does right. That would be true no matter what number Genesis assigned to it.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

The new-for-2022 Genesis GV70 might be the Genesis brand’s most impressive vehicle so far; it delivers an athletic driving character, attractive styling inside and out, and a high level of luxury and available technology features, all at prices that handily undercut its primary European luxury-brand rivals.

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced Gallery

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

Meet the 2022 Consumer Guide Best Buys

Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

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Test Drive: 2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line in Aruba Green

2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

2015 Audi Q5

Class: Midsize Crossover SUV

Miles driven: 200

Fuel used: 8.8 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 22.7 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance B-
Fit and Finish A-
Fuel Economy B-
Value B+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 281-hp 2.5-liter
Engine Type Turbo 4-cyl
Transmission 8-speed dual-clutch automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Driving mix: 75% city, 25% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 21/28/24 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $42,590 (not including $1170 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: X-Line Rust Interior Package ($200), carpeted floor mats ($210), carpeted cargo mat with seat-back protection ($115)

Price as tested: $44,285

Quick Hits

The great: Comfortable, spacious cabin for passengers and cargo within smaller exterior dimensions than other three-row midsize SUVs; generous list of comfort and safety features; redesign brings broader model range and available hybrid powertrain

The good: Nicely finished interior; distinctive touches of X-Line trim level

The not so good: Shifts from dual-clutch automatic transmission can feel abrupt; third-row seat is best suited for kids; limited cargo room behind third row

More Sorento price and availability information

John Biel

With the new-generation Kia Sorento that has come out for 2021, the South Korean automaker seems to be admitting that while the idea of 3-row seating in a midsize sport-utility vehicle is a benefit, the reality of it isn’t always so rewarding.

As Consumer Guide’s First Spin report on the fourth-generation Sorento pointed out, the fully updated SUV grows no bigger in total but its wheelbase is stretched by 1.4 inches. The result is to expand second-row legroom by 2.3 inches at the expense of approximately two inches of legroom in the third row. If middle-row passengers in adjustable seats are willing to share this “windfall,” they can liberate enough legroom for average-sized adults to sit knees up in the third row. It’s not an appealing prospect for a trip of any great length, and even getting to or from the hindmost seats can be a chore. The middle-row captain’s chairs that were in the SX Prestige X-Line that CG tested track forward to create access to the third row, but the path is pretty narrow and hard for a grown-up to navigate.

2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

The SX Prestige X-Line is the top model in the redesigned-for-2021 Kia Sorento lineup. The off-road-focused X-Line additions include a slightly raised ride height, a bridge-type roof-rack system, and unique front and rear fascias with better approach and departure angles for climbing over obstacles and rough terrain.

This is why a number of manufacturers now have two midsize SUVs, a “small” and a “large” (in Kia’s case the latter is the Telluride, a CG “Best Buy”), and some don’t even try to put a third row in the junior job.

Our first full test of the new Sorento was at the top of the 5.5 gas-engine trim levels. (There also are two gas-electric hybrids, Sorento’s first such.) We say “5.5” trim levels because the SX Prestige is restricted to front-wheel drive while the tested SX Prestige X-Line is confined to all-wheel drive and sells for $2000 more. Base price with AWD is $43,760 (including delivery), but the test vehicle had an additional $525 in options.

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2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

The new Sorento’s dashboard layout is attractive and easy to use, and the SX Prestige naturally comes loaded with features–such as heated and cooled seats, a 10.25-inch touchscreen, and a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster.

The redesigned Sorento is a by-the-book crossover: Its new platform—which Kia says is lighter and stronger than the previous model’s—is shared with the brand’s K5 midsize sedan. Gas-engine models get new powerplants, a 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine with 191 horsepower in lower-line models or—with turbocharging—281 horsepower in higher-grade versions like the one CG tested. The naturally aspirated engine is now hooked to an 8-speed automatic transmission while the turbo is paired with an 8-speed dual-clutch automatic.

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2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

The first and second-row seats offer excellent space for adults. Upscale leather upholstery comes standard in the SX Prestige–choosing the X-Line model makes the $200 Rust Interior Package mandatory. (The upholstery color looks more like “Caramel” or “Butterscotch” than “Rust” to our eyes, but it’s attractive nonetheless.)

The 2.5 turbo delivers 281 horsepower and 311 lb-ft. of torque. When allowed to, this engine provides good power and cruises easily and moderately quietly. In default “Comfort” drive mode, upshifts from dual-clutch automatic feel abrupt and a little jerky in standing-start getaways as it hastens through the gears to get into higher, more economical ranges, so power delivery feels choppy as a result. It’s almost more pleasant to click into “Sport” mode, where gear changes are put off until the engine revs a little higher. (“Smart,” “Eco,” and—with AWD—“Snow” modes are also accessible from the same console dial.) EPA fuel-economy estimates for this powerteam are 21 mpg in the city, 28 mpg on the highway, and 24 combined. This driver’s 69.4-mile stint, with 67 percent city-type operation, showed 20.5 mpg.

The off-road-flavored X-Line has 8.2 inches of ground clearance, 1.3 more than the rest of the Sorento lineup, and SX Prestiges roll on 20-inch alloy wheels (with a matte-gray finish on the X-Line). The test truck’s ride was not terribly upset by uneven pavement. Steering was responsive and not too light. Torque vectoring in the AWD system not only distributes power between the axles but also applies braking to inside wheels during cornering in pursuit of better stability. There is a good sense of body control in the new model. A center-locking differential is also part of the AWD driveline.

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2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

The second-row seats tilt and slide forward to create a small passageway to the third row–which is best suited for kids.

The SX Prestige comes off as fairly plush. Comfortable leather-upholstered seats are heated and ventilated in front. The steering wheel is heated, too. Soft and padded surfaces are broadly distributed—even on the tops of the rear doors. Overhead there’s a panoramic sunroof; in back the power liftgate is hands-free. In addition to all-wheel drive, the X-Line has its own front- and rear-bumper fascias, and a raised bridge-type roof-rack design.

There’s a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster and a 10.25-inch infotainment touchscreen. Navigation, UVO link remote services, and Android Auto/Apple CarPlay connectivity are among the tech features. So are a wireless charger, USB charge ports in all three rows, and keyless entry and starting. A Bose premium audio system with satellite radio is included as well. The system is easy to use, with external tuning and volume knobs and easy-to-reach function buttons. The dual-zone climate system has a few plainly marked function buttons, with repeated-push levers for temperature settings as the only small quibble we could have with the arrangement. Entering Sport mode changes the instrument-panel graphics.

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Test Drive: 2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

There’s 12.6 cubic feet of cargo space behind the Sorento’s third-row seats–enough for a small grocery run, but that’s about it. Fold the third row, and the cargo volume grows to between 38.5 to 45.0 cubic feet, depending on the position of the second-row seats. With both the second- and third-row seatbacks folded, cargo space grows to 75.5 cubic feet.

A package of Kia Drive Wise driver-assist features consists of automatic emergency braking with junction-turn and cyclist detection, blind-spot detection, Safe Exit Assist, rear cross-traffic alert and avoidance, lane keeping and following, Highway Drive Assist light-autonomy function, adaptive cruise control, and rear-occupant alert. A surround-view monitor and blind-spot view monitor (that shows in the instrument cluster on the side where a turn signal is activated) round out the safety enhancements.

Interior storage is excellent with a large glove box, sizable covered console box with an organizer tray, an exposed tray/wireless charging pad under the device inputs at the front of the console, net pouches on the backs of the front seats, door pockets with bottle holders in the front doors, and bottle holders in the rear doors. Cup holders are provided in the console, high on the rear doors, and in the sidewalls next to the third-row seats.

First Spin: 2021 Kia Sorento

Test Drive: 2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

SX Prestige models are powered by a turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder that makes 281 horsepower and is paired with an 8-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission. X-Lines get 20-inch matte-finished alloy wheels.

With all seats up, rear cargo space is very limited. There is hidden storage in a bin under the floor panel. Handy pulls on the back of the 50/50-split third-row seats retract them into the floor, and with the seats down there’s almost four times as much flat-floor load space. Drop the second-row seats and up to 75.5 cubic feet of load space is available, though not flush with the rest of the cargo floor and, of course, there are gaps in between the individual seats.

Kia certainly has made a better midsize SUV out of the Sorento. It just can’t make it any more than a kiddie-hauler 3-row ute.

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2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

The Kia Sorento’s impressive redesign for 2021 brings lots of great new features, and the fashionable new SX Prestige X-Line trim level adds an extra degree of off-road/rough terrain capability without compromising the on-road ride.

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2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line Gallery

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2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 57; 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

2021 Kia Sorento SX Prestige X-Line

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6 Cool Things about the 2021 BMW M5 Competition

2021 BMW M5 Competition, Motegi Red

2021 BMW M5 Competition in Motegi Red Metallic

We’re old friends now, the BMW M5 and Consumer Guide editors. A week in the 2021 model with the Competition Package was our third turn in one of the current-generation cars, following tests of a 2018 M5 and a 2019 Competition.

In prior years, only incremental changes were made to this highest-performance iteration of BMW’s premium-midsize sedan. (We’ll direct you to the aforementioned test reports to see what we thought of driving demeanor and passenger accommodations.) However, that process accelerates for ’21 with styling tweaks and the arrival of some additional features.

2021 BMW M5 Competition

2021 BMW M5 Competition

It will take a minimum of $105,495 to put an M5 in your garage, including the requisite $995 for delivery and another $1000 in Gas Guzzler tax. But it’s easy to run that number up—our test car was worth $136,045. Factor in $7600 for the uprated Competition Package, formerly a model variation but now an option group. Fuel-economy estimates from the EPA are 14 mpg in the city, 21 on the highway, and 17 combined, but this reviewer managed 21.7 miles per gallon of premium fuel from a 122.3-mile stint that included 41 percent city-type operation.

2021 BMW M5 Competition

2021 BMW M5 Competition

Here are some other things you might want to know about this singular sedan:

More sporty/performance fun

6 Cool Things about the 2021 BMW M5 Competition

No power shortage

2021 BMW M5 Competition

2021 BMW M5 Competition

One feature of the Competition Package is added power. It makes 617 horsepower at 6000 rpm, a gain of 17 from the M5’s base spec for the 4.4-liter V8 with twin turbochargers. (Torque is the same 553 lb-ft at 1800 rpm in both states of tune). That translates to mid- to low-3-second 0-60-mph clockings—and a top speed of 189 mph should you spring for the M Driver’s Package option ($2500; it also includes a day of high-performance driving instruction for the owner who can make it to a BMW Performance Center).

For GREAT deals on a new or used Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep or RAM check out Monrovia CDJR TODAY!

Test Drive: 2021 Ford Bronco Sport Outer Banks

2021 Ford Bronco Sport Outer Banks

2021 Ford Bronco Sport Outer Banks in Rapid Red Metallic (a $395 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2021 Ford Bronco Sport Outer Banks

ClassCompact Crossover SUV

Miles driven: 223

Fuel used: 7.4 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 30.1 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance C+
Fit and Finish A-
Fuel Economy B+
Value B+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 181-hp 1.5-liter
Engine Type Turbo 3-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels 4WD

Driving mix: 35% city, 65% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 25/28/26 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $32,160 (not including $1495 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Rapid Red Metallic paint ($395), Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist+ ($795), Outer Banks Package ($1595)

Price as tested: $36,440

Quick Hits

The great: Broad model range and accessory options allow a high degree of personalization; lots of thoughtful, practical convenience features; everyday usability 

The good: Fun, rugged styling inside and out; excellent off-road capabilities for a crossover SUV; respectable fuel economy for a 4-wheel-drive off-roader

The not so good: Rear-sear space shrinks quickly behind tall front-seat occupants; 3-cylinder engine can sound and feel a bit unrefined; pricing gets a bit steep on higher-line models

More Ford Bronco Sport price and availability information

John Biel

Perhaps Ford worries that in case the very name of its newest compact-crossover SUV—Bronco Sport—isn’t enough to draw positive connections to its 1966-77 mini sport-utility then “heritage-inspired” styling will have to finish the job. Even if they do the trick, though, there’s still a world of difference between them—and that’s not even considering the general automotive technological changes of the intervening 45 to 55 years.

2021 Ford Bronco Sport Outer Banks

The Bronco Sport is the smaller sibling of the long-awaited 2021 Ford Bronco, which is set to start hitting dealerships in earnest this summer. In terms of vehicle architecture and intent, the relationship between the Bronco Sport and the Bronco is similar to that of the Jeep Compass and Jeep Wrangler. The senior Bronco and the Wrangler are body-on-frame vehicles intended for serious off-roading; the Bronco Sport and Compass boast impressive off-road chops when properly equipped, but they use crossover-SUV underpinnings that are better suited to everyday on-road driving.

At 172.7 inches long overall, the debut 4-door Sport is 20.6 inches longer than the 2-door (or even no-door roadster) of 1966, and its 105.1-inch wheelbase is 13.1 inches greater. The beam-front and solid-rear axles with rear parallel leaf springs from the “good old days” have given way to a fully independent suspension, and body-on-frame construction is replaced by a unit-body platform. While it originally took six cylinders and 170 cid (2.8 liters) to generate 105 gross horsepower, a 1.5-liter 3-cylinder powerplant produces 181 net ponies in the twenty-first-century vehicle.

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Ford Bronco Sport Cabin

The Bronco Sport’s cabin ambiance is functional yet pleasant in Outer Banks trim. The gauge cluster uses a digital display screen (that boasts lots of “eye candy” animated graphics) nestled between an analog tachometer and speedometer. The rotary-dial gear selector knob is easy to use, as is the “G.O.A.T. Mode” drive-mode selector knob.

The first Bronco Sport that Consumer Guide had the chance to test was plucked from the absolute center of the 5-tier range, an Outer Banks model with a starting price (with delivery) of $33,655 but a full price of $36,440 including options. Base and Big Bend versions lie below it; Badlands and limited-production First Edition jobs are higher up on the pecking order. Starting prices span $28,155 to $39,655.

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Ford Bronco Sport Cabin

The front seatbacks have zippered storage pouches and integrated MOLLE straps for securing loose items. Rear legroom grows scarce as the front seats are adjusted rearward–the driver’s seat is all the way back in this photo.

All come with 4-wheel drive and an 8-speed automatic transmission. General standard safety features in the Ford Co-Pilot360 bundle include pre-collision warning with automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts, lane-keep assist, and automatic high-beam headlights. A Bronco Sport that reaches the Outer Banks level also has 18-inch machined-face Ebony Black-painted alloy wheels; Shadow Black paint for the safari-style roof; black grille; body-color door handles; full LED exterior lighting; heated power mirrors; rain-sensing windshield wipers; leather-trimmed seats with mini perforation; heated front seats with 8-way power adjustment for the driver and 6-way power for the passenger; heated, leather-wrapped steering wheel; dual USB ports inside the center console; ambient lighting; dual-zone climate control; SYNC3 infotainment system; satellite radio; Wi-Fi hotspot; remote starting; and reverse sensing.

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Ford Bronco Sport Cabin

The Bronco Sport’s “safari-style” roofline kicks up to provide a shade more rear cargo space (and headroom for rear-seat passengers). The rear glass can be opened separately from the liftgate–a very handy feature.

The test truck was rounded out with a pair of option packages. Co-Pilot360 Assist+ contributed adaptive cruise control with stop-and-go and lane centering, evasive steering assist, touchscreen navigation, and Sirius XM Traffic and Travel Link services. The Outer Banks Package inserted a Bang & Olufsen sound system with 10 speakers and subwoofer, HD radio, power moonroof, and wireless charging. Rapid Red Metallic paint was its only other extra-cost feature.

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Ford Bronco Sport Cargo Area

The Bronco Sport’s cargo volume is quite good considering its tidy exterior dimensions–in the Base, Big Bend, and Outer Banks models, there’s 32.5 cubic feet of space behind the second-row seats and 65.2 cu. ft. with the seat backs folded. A rubberized, washable cargo floor is standard, as are integrated carabiner-style retainer hooks in the cargo area’s side walls, and a bottle opener (!) built into the liftgate jamb above the passenger-side taillight.

No hot performer with the turbocharged 3-cylinder engine (consider the 245-horsepower turbo 2.0-liter four in the Badlands and First Edition if you need more of that), the Bronco Sport has a better chance of impressing with its utility, room, and driving dynamics. The 1.5-liter EcoBoost powerplant generates 190 lb-ft of torque at 3000 rpm, just enough to get the new little Ford around quite adequately, but it is noisy with a jittery idle. EPA fuel-economy projections are 25 mpg for city driving, 28 mpg on the highway, and 26 combined. This tester’s experience pretty much fell in line with that—he recorded 26.2 mpg after going 60.7 miles with 45 percent of it under city conditions. Other CG testers did even better–our aggregate mileage just topped 30 mpg in a majority of highway driving.

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Ford Bronco Sport Wheels

Base, Big Bend, and Outer Banks models are powered by an EcoBoost turbocharged 1.5-liter 3-cylinder engine paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission. Outer Banks models come standard with 18-inch machined-face alloy wheels.

Ford likes its amusing acronyms for the terrain-management system (G.O.A.T.=Goes Over Any Terrain) and suspension (H.O.S.S.=High-performance Off-road Stability Suspension). The bottom three models have a 5-setting G.O.A.T. system with “Sand,” “Slippery,” “Sport,” “Eco,” and “Normal” modes. Confined to dry streets and expressways, this driver divided his time between Normal and Sport, and found the former preferable for most driving. Sport’s concession to performance was to delay transmission upshifts, which sometimes left the engine loudly revving in limbo at the high end of a gear range during surface-street driving. H.O.S.S. tuning targets off-road comfort and capability with soft springing and antiroll bars to improve articulation over obstacles. Perhaps surprisingly, it makes for a decent on-road ride and easy, well-controlled handling as well.

First Look: 2021 Ford Bronco Sport

Ford Bronco Sport hatch light

All Bronco Sports have a pair of bright, adjustable LED lights built into the rear liftgate–very handy for camping or tailgating, or just loading/unloading groceries or what-have-you in or out of the cargo area after dark.

At a glance, the suspicion is passenger room could be tight, but this 5-foot-10.5-inch-tall reviewer was able to sit comfortably behind a driver’s seat set up for his dimensions. Headroom for four adults is excellent in both rows, even beneath the moonroof. However, narrow rear door openings complicated extracting feet for vehicle exits. Materials are nice at the Outer Banks level, with a good amount of soft-touch stuff where passengers are likely to notice. Driver vision is fairly unobstructed.

Bronco Sports like the one CG tested raise their adventure-vehicle profile through a number of handy touches. Pouches on the backs of the front seats are more or less stationary backpacks. They close with a zipper and are covered outside in MOLLE straps good for securing loose items. The cargo floor base is a sturdy, textured rubberized surface that continues up the back of the 60/40 split-folding rear seats. Cargo tie-downs are built into the sidewalls and dual LED floodlights handy for illuminating after-dark loading operations in the middle of nowhere are installed on the inside of the liftgate.

The rear 60/40-split seats fold at a slight upward angle but it matches the slope of the load floor to form an unbroken surface capable of holding up to 65.2 cubic feet of cargo—as much as 5.1 more than in 4-cylinder models, by the way. The rear window can be opened independently of the liftgate, and there is a little organized small-item space under the cargo floor. A big glove box, modest console cubby, and door pockets hold incidentals. Cup holders reside in the console, door pockets, and pull-down rear armrest.

Those who want optimal driveline and off-roading features can get the Badlands for just $500 more than the Outer Banks. At any price, though, the Sport has the spirit of the Bronco of so long ago even if so many other things have changed.

Real-World Walk-around: 2021 Ford Bronco

2021 Ford Bronco Sport Outer Banks

The new-for-2021 Ford Bronco Sport is positively brimming with personality, and its off-road/adventure-focused features help make it a more-practical vehicle for everyday use as well. Acceleration with the base engine is middling, and rear-seat space can be stingy despite the upright body dimensions, but the Bronco Sport nonetheless succeeds in delivering the style and rugged attitude of its Bronco sibling in a tidier, more affordable package.

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2021 Ford Bronco Sport Outer Banks Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

Bronco Sport Outer Banks

Baby Bronco: What’s in a name?

Bronco Sport Outer Banks

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Test Drive: 2021 Nissan Leaf SL Plus

2021 Nissan Leaf SL Plus

2021 Nissan Leaf SL Plus in Sunset Drift Chromaflair paint (a $395 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2021 Nissan Leaf SL Plus

Class: Electric Vehicle

Miles driven: 179

Battery capacity: 62 kWh

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance A-
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy A
Value B
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 214 horsepower
Engine Type Electric motor
Transmission Automatic
Drive Front-wheel drive

EPA-estimate MPGe: 114 city/94 hwy/104 combined

EPA-estimated driving range: 215 miles

Consumer Guide range estimate (ideal conditions): 215+ miles

Base price: $43,920 (not including $925 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Splash guards ($200), premium paint ($395), carpeted floor mats and cargo-area mat ($190)

Price as tested: $45,630

Quick Hits

The great: Responsive acceleration; engaging handling; affordable pricing for a pure-electric vehicle

The good: Good selection of comfort, safety, and technology features; nicely finished interior in SL Plus trim

The not so good: Maximum driving range doesn’t match most rival EVs; rear seat backs don’t fold flat with the cargo floor

More Leaf price and availability information

John Biel

If you’re a dedicated user of a fully electric motor vehicle, the PLUS versions of the Nissan LEAF—with full-charge operating ranges that exceed 200 miles—probably seem like a good idea. If you’re a no-nonsense range-über-alles EV owner, the LEAF SL PLUS probably represents the height of senseless extravagance.

The PLUS package, with a 160-kW motor served by a 62-kWh battery, is available on all three LEAF trim levels. However, the EPA’s maximum-range estimate for the basic S PLUS is 226 miles, while SV and SL PLUS range is projected at 215 miles—and the line-topping SL starts at $5700 more than the S.

2021 Nissan Leaf SL Plus

The Nissan Leaf was redesigned for the 2018 model year, and after receiving updates for 2019 and 2020, it rolls into 2021 with no changes.

Consumer Guide tested one of these silent sybarites that, for 2021, start at $44,845 with delivery, though a trio of stand-alone options pushed the final price to $45,630. It continues to be a comfortable-riding and fairly roomy compact hatchback sedan with commendable zip.

A quick review of the second-generation LEAF that bowed for 2018 recalls that the PLUS power-and-range boost came in for 2019. After adding standard safety features for the ’20 model year, it comes into 2021 unchanged. The ask for the SL PLUS is $3450 higher than the midrange SV with the same powerplant. The upcharge fetches an electronic parking brake, ProPILOT Assist light-autonomy adaptive cruise control and steering, Intelligent Around View Monitor, Intelligent Driver Alertness Monitor, LED headlights and daytime running lights, LED turn-signal indicators in the heated power mirrors, auto-dimming rearview mirror, Homelink universal transceiver, rear cargo cover, leather seats with 8-way power adjustment for the driver’s seat, and a 7-speaker Bose Energy Efficient Series audio system. (The SL’s 3930-pound curb weight is 16 pounds more than the SV PLUS weighs.)

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2021 Nissan Leaf

In SL Plus trim, the Leaf’s cabin boasts a nice roster of upscale features. The unusual “hockey puck” shifter takes a little getting used to. A switch ahead of the shifter controls the “e-Pedal” drive mode–activating the e-Pedal makes the electric motor’s regenerative braking more aggressive, which enables the vehicle to come to a complete stop in certain driving situations just by lifting off the throttle pedal; applying the brakes isn’t necessary.

Other notable standard features are a heated leather-wrapped steering wheel; heated front seats; Apple CarPlay/Android Auto compatibility; NissanConnect infotainment with 8-inch touchscreen, navigation, satellite radio, and remote vehicle-monitoring system; 17-inch alloy wheels; and a charge-port light. Safety and driver assistance are boosted by the Safety Shield 360 group: blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts, automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection, lane-departure warning, and automatic headlight high-beam control. Other standard tech items are a forward-collision warning, Nissan’s Intelligent Lane Intervention (to help keep the car in its lane when lane markings are clear), and Rear Door Alert.

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2021 Nissan Leaf

Considering the compact-hatchback dimensions, the Leaf offers respectable space in the front and rear seats.

The PLUS motor/battery outstrips the base unit by quite a lot. Available only in S and SV trim, the latter consists of a 110-kW motor and 40-kWh lithium-ion battery good for 147 hp and 236 lb-ft of torque. Projected range is 149 miles. In addition to its greater range, the PLUS powerplant is more powerful at 214 hp and 250 lb-ft of torque. It delivers lively, linear acceleration and makes the LEAF PLUS capable of easily maintaining safe expressway cruising speeds.

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2021 Nissan Leaf, Orange

The Leaf offers a respectable 23.6 cubic feet of cargo volume, which grows to 30 cu. ft. with the rear seat backs folded. The seat backs don’t fold flush with the cargo floor, however, and the audio system’s subwoofer (which is mounted just behind the seats) takes up space as well. The supplied charging cable comes with a soft-sided carrying case.

This reviewer took over the test car with an indicated charge level of 99 percent. With commuting-time temperatures in the 30s and low 40s Fahrenheit and the heat on, his test stint of 72.5 miles (with 49 percent city-type operation) left charge level at 64 percent and indicated range at 138 miles, meaning a trip of 200-plus miles in these driving conditions was possible—and clicking off the heater showed remaining range would have inched up to 144 miles. Tapped into the 240-volt charger at the CG offices, the car reported is would need four hours and 40 minutes to return to full charge, but a “Level 3” quick-charge port is built in to permit faster charging. The EPA rates the SV/ SL PLUS at 114 MPGe in city driving, 94 on the highway, and 104 combined; respective figures for the S PLUS are 118/97/108.

Guide to Electric Vehicle Charging

2021 Nissan Leaf, Orange

The Leaf includes both a 6.6 kW charge port (the smaller port with the orange cover) and a 100 kW CHAdeMO charge port (blue cover). The charge-port light makes plugging in at night or in a dark garage much easier.

The front-wheel-drive second-generation LEAF displays nimble handling—it’s a good city car for more than just its gasless operation—and a smooth ride. In speedier expressway driving expect to hear a little bit of wind and road noise. At the flick of a console lever, drivers can summon e-Pedal for “one-pedal” operation. When the accelerator pedal is released all the way, regenerative and friction brakes are applied automatically, bringing the car to a complete stop on level ground or slopes without need of the brake pedal. The LEAF will hold its position until the accelerator is pressed again.

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Test Drive: 2020 Land Rover Defender 110 SE

Land Rover Defender 110 SE

2020 Land Rover Defender 110 SE in Pangea Green (a $710 option) with white contrast roof (a $870 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2020 Land Rover Defender 110 SE

ClassPremium Compact SUV

Miles driven: 182

Fuel used: 12.6 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 14.4 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy D+
Value C
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 395-hp 3.0 liter
Engine Type turbo 6-cyl
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Driving mix: 55% city, 45% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 17/22/19 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel typePremium gas required

Base price: $62,250 (not including $1350 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Driver Assist Pack ($1020), Cold Climate Pack ($700), Advanced Off-Road Capability Pack ($735), Off-Road Pack ($1345), sliding panoramic sunroof ($1750), white contrast roof ($870), Pangea Green ($710), tow-hitch receiver ($650), 14-way heated memory front seats ($500), Sirius XM satellite radio ($300)

Price as tested: $72,180

Quick Hits

The great: Airy, spacious cabin; high-tech features; satisfying power

The good: Adventurous, concept-vehicle-style styling inside and out

The not so good: Mediocre observed fuel economy well below EPA estimates; steep pricing; side-hinged rear swing gate with spare tire can be cumbersome

More Land Rover Defender price and availability information

John Biel

It’s not unusual for an automotive legend to spawn a modern sequel these days. Anybody who has seen, say, a Volkswagen New Beetle, a Toyota FJ Cruiser, or a Jeep Gladiator knows that to be true. However, when the replacement for an icon gets reinterpreted, that’s a pretty rare thing.

Land Rover Defender 110 SE, Pangea Green

The new Land Rover Defender tips its hat to the burly, boxy profile of the original, but its look is much more sophisticated and modern, with avant-garde styling details that look like they belong on an auto-show concept vehicle.

The Land Rover Defender compact sport-utility that arrived on the market during 2020 is just such a curiosity. It trades on the image and reputation of the Defender that was last sold in the U.S. in 1997 (though it continued in other global markets until 2016), but that vehicle line dated to the early Eighties as the successor to the legendary original Land Rover found wherever the road ends the world over since 1948.

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Land Rover Defender 110 SE

The new Defender’s dash is stylish and functional, with a digital gauge cluster and high-mounted HVAC vents. A storage shelf stretches across most of the dashboard (there’s even an open area behind the infotainment touchscreen).

It was early 2021 before Consumer Guide Automotive editors could get a crack at one, a 2020 4-door 110 model. Fortunately, with minimal differences for 2021, it remains relevant. The 5-passenger SE-trim test truck had a starting price of $63,600 with delivery (a figure that rises by $450 for ’21) but came to $72,180 with a considerable load of options.

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Land Rover Deender Cabin

We found the unconventional dashboard-mounted shifter a bit awkward to use. There’s a generously sized console-armrest storage bin, and an open area on the console itself below the USB charging ports and power outlet.

When the Defender last reached the USA, it had body-on-frame construction and solid axles. The new model replaces them with an aluminum unibody design—Land Rover says it is the stiffest body it has ever produced—and 4-wheel independent suspension. The 110 has a 118.9-inch wheelbase and can seat up to seven passengers with an optional third-row seat. Its “little brother” is the 2-door Defender 90 on a 101.9-inch wheelbase and room for as many as six, thanks to a center jump seat that allows 3-abreast seating in front.

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Land Rover Defender Cabin

The high-mounted seats are comfortable and attractively upholstered. The tall, upright roofline makes for excellent headroom in both the first and second rows, and legroom is decent as well.

Slab sides, flat side glass, a tailgate-mounted spare tire, and “skylight” windows along the sides of the roof forge stylistic links to the former Defender and its forebear. The cabin is off-road chic. CG’s tester had an earthy color combination, with mossy-green Khaki materials on the seats, console, armrests, and portions of the dashboard against Ebony panels. There’s just a bit of soft—but sturdy-looking and feeling—material here and there, yet areas of exposed painted-metal show through the doors. SE seats are trimmed in leather but with hardy woven-textile facings. The washable hard-rubber surface of the cargo floor continues up the backs of the 40/20/40-split seats.

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Dedender 110 Cargo Area

The Defender’s side-hinged swing gate can be cumbersome in tight spots, but it’s cargo volume is quite good for the class: 34 cubic feet behind the rear seats, and 78.8 cubic feet with the rear seats folded to create a flat load floor.

SE standard equipment starts with a mild-hybrid inline 6-cylinder engine and 8-speed automatic transmission. Exterior features are 20-inch alloy wheels, LED headlights with automatic high-beam assist, LED taillights, fog lights, heated power-folding exterior mirrors (auto dimming on the driver’s side), rain-sensing windshield wipers, and black roof rails. Interior comforts and conveniences include power-adjustable memory seats, leather-wrapped steering wheel, interactive vehicle-information display, dual-zone climate control, “ClearSight” rearview mirror (that shows a camera view of what’s behind the vehicle), keyless entry and starting, navigation, 10-inch infotainment display screen, Meridian sound system with HD radio, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone connectivity. Built-in safety and driving aids are automatic emergency braking, surround-view camera, 360-degree parking assist, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic monitors, lane-keeping assist, driver-condition monitor, traffic-sign recognition, and safe-exit monitor.

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Dedender 110 Wheels

A 296-hp turbo 2.0-liter 4-cylinder is standard, but our tester was equipped with the Defender’s step-up engine choice: a gutsy 395-hp turbo 3.0 6-cylinder with mild-hybrid capability. Twenty-inch alloy wheels are standard equipment.

Some of the options added to the test truck delivered enhanced versions of certain standard items. Among them were adaptive cruise control and—in the Advanced Off-Road Capability Pack—All-Terrain Progress Control, Terrain Response 2, and configurable Terrain Response that allow drivers to tailor powertrain and chassis performance to the vehicle’s surfaces and surroundings.

The P400 3.0-liter straight six is turbocharged to deliver 395 horsepower at 5500 rpm and 406 lb-ft of torque at 2000 rpm. It’s a generally quiet engine that exhibits good jump away from stops with enough strength to tow up to 8201 pounds. With the help of the smoothly operating transmission, it performs well on the highway, maintaining good cruising speed with the readiness to pass smartly when asked. Even augmented with a 48-volt mild-hybrid system, fuel economy is not one of the 6-cylinder Defender’s strengths. EPA ratings are 17 mpg in the city, 22 mpg in highway operation, and 19 combined. However, this driver notched just 13.6 mpg from a 67.3-mile test stint of which 40 percent was city-type driving.

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Land Rover Defender 110 SE

Defender-logo puddle lamps and unique LED taillights add to the Defender’s distinctive upscale look and feel.

Defender rides well for being Land Rover’s most off-road-oriented SUV. The 110 handles easily, with the Adaptive Dynamics system continually reading wheel and body movements to control body roll, and it is pleasantly maneuverable. The standard electronic air suspension can shift ground clearance from 8.6 inches to a more off-road-helpful 11.5 inches.

There is fine head- and legroom in both seating rows of the 5-passenger 4-door model, and a flat floor makes 3-across seating possible, at least for kids. Fairly tall windows and an upright roof design contribute to good driver vision around the vehicle. It’s quite well isolated from exterior noise, too. One bothersome aspect to the test truck was a maladjusted left-rear door that wasn’t keen on opening without a really good yank.

The PIVI Pro Infotainment has touchscreen tuning. Inputting audio presets makes sense with some study. Favorites are saved at the tap of a star icon, but station choices are arrayed all over the screen. It’s not the easiest-to-use system we’ve seen, but it’s not nearly the hardest. The climate system has handy dials for temperature settings and a small cluster of plainly marked buttons for functions like fan, mode, and defrosters. The vehicle-info screen between the speedometer and tachometer dials is large and easily manipulated through thumb buttons on the steering wheel.

As for storage, glove and console boxes are skimpy, but a tray runs the width of the instrument panel (save for the area taken by the steering column). There’s floor-level open space, and pockets in all four doors. The side-hinged tailgate opens from the left—opposite of “curb loading” in left-hand-drive markets. There’s useful cargo space in back, with more available with the rear seats retracted—though they don’t drop full flat. There is a little underfloor bin for small-item storage, and a long tray on the inside of the tailgate.

There are more luxuries to be had—for a price—and starting tabs for some Defenders top $80,000. But this Land Rover certainly concentrates on delivering off-road bona fides designed to do its ancestors proud.

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Land Rover Defender 110 SE

The new Land Rover Defender 110’s profile view shows off its boxy profile, roof-mounted “safari windows,” rear-mounted spare tire, and extra-short front and rear overhangs–all features of the iconic original, but brought into the 21st century with a high level of sophistication–and a rather steep as-tested price tag to match.

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2020 Land Rover Defender 110 SE Gallery

(Click below for enlarged images)

First Spin: 2020 Jeep Gladiator

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Test Drive: 2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige in Lima Red (a $400 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T AWD Prestige

ClassPremium Midsize SUV

Miles driven: 389

Fuel used: 20.3 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A-
Power and Performance B-
Fit and Finish A-
Fuel Economy C+
Value B
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 300-hp 2.5L
Engine Type Turbo 4-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 19.2 mpg

Driving mix: 60% city, 40% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 21/25/22 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel typePremium gas recommended

Base price: $63,400 (not including $1025 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Metallic paint ($400)

Price as tested: $64,825

Quick Hits

The great: Posh, comfortable cabin; quietness; long list of available comfort and convenience features

The good: Respectable acceleration from 4-cylinder engine; confident, distinctive styling

The not so good: Mediocre observed fuel economy; steering and ride composure aren’t quite at the level of class leaders

More Genesis GV80 price and availability information

John Biel

We’re guessing this is where things really get interesting for Genesis.

Having first put itself on the outer ring of the premium-class radar screen with a trio of sedans, Hyundai’s young spin-off luxury brand is now entering the equally (if not more) important crossover/SUV segment. The 2021 model year sees the debut of the Genesis GV80, a midsize crossover allied to the new-generation G80 sedan. No pressure—it’s only going up against a crowded field partially populated by the likes of the BMW X5, Cadillac XT6, Lexus RX, Lincoln Aviator, Mercedes-Benz GLE-Class, and Consumer Guide’s “Best Buy” Volvo XC90.

2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

The GV80 debuts for 2021 as the first SUV in the Genesis model lineup. The Genesis brand launched for the 2017 model year as the luxury division of Hyundai Motor Company and has offered only premium sedans up until this point.

If anything should help the GV80 stand out right away in this milieu, it is its great value proposition. Prices for a 4-cylinder rear-wheel-drive GV80 start at $49,925 with delivery, down in entry XT6 and RX territory, but nearly $6000 less than a GLE 350 and almost $10,000 south of an X5 sDrive40i. At the top end, an all-wheel-drive V6 GV80 Prestige could leave the dealership for $71,975. However, there’s nothing cut-rate about the execution of this newest Genesis.

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2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

The GV80 boasts a clean, sophisticated dashboard layout with an extra-wide infotainment screen that can be configured to display two or three different info readouts (a navigation map and exterior climate readout are shown here).

CG’s first test of a GV80 comes as a top-trim Prestige with AWD and the 2.5-liter turbocharged four. Four-cylinder models are available in either rear- or all-wheel drive and seat five. (Those with the twin-turbo 3.5-liter V6 have AWD only, and one version with third-row seats holds seven.) The only option on the $64,825 vehicle was a $400 application of Lima Red paint—a charge pretty hard to avoid considering that any color other than Alta White costs extra.

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Consumer Guide Test Drive

The GV80 uses a rotary-dial gear selector and a circular infotainment control interface (in addition to touchscreen functionality on the infotainment screen itself). One clever touch–the gear selector’s lighting glows red when the vehicle is in reverse, and matches the color of the selectable-color ambient cabin lighting when the vehicle is in drive.

Genesis treats GV80 trim levels like option packages added to the Standard model. In the 4-cylinder family, the upgrades are Advanced and Prestige. Furthermore, the cost of adding AWD escalates with each trim level because in addition to the different driveline, all-wheelers also come with more equipment than their 2-wheel-drive namesakes. For instance, the AWD Standard has some features that don’t kick in until the Advance level with RWD, a tactic that is repeated up the line. As a result, the example that we drove cost $6350 more than it would have with the rear wheels doing all the work.

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GV80 2.5T

There’s decent space for adults in the GV80’s second-row seats (a third-row is available, but only on the 3.5T six-cylinder models). The second-row seat backs fold easily with the press of a button on the seat bottoms.

The Prestige that we drove started out with plenty of goodies brought up from the lower lines. That included a panoramic sunroof, matte-finish wood trim, heated and ventilated front seats, heated leather-wrapped steering wheel, rear-door sun shades, 110-volt power plug in the cargo area, hands-free liftgate, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic collision-avoidance assists, forward-collision avoidance with pedestrian and cyclist detection, rear-occupant alert, 21-speaker premium audio with satellite and HD radio, navigation, Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone compatibility, wireless charging, digital key, surround-view monitor, and Remote Smart Parking Assist that can parallel park the GV80 with the operator outside the vehicle.

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GV80 2.5T Prestige

Though the cargo area’s load floor is a bit high, it’s also nice and wide, and the second-row seat backs fold to create a flat surface. The cargo area’s lighting is better than the class norm–a welcome feature when loading or unloading at night.

Prestige-specific items are 3-zone climate control; heated second-row seats; and 16-way power driver’s seat with power seat bolster and cushion extension, and Ergo Motion function with internal air cells that adjust to driving mode and vehicle speed. Included upgrades not even found on the rear-drive Prestige are 22-inch alloy wheels, electronically controlled suspension with “Road Preview” that adjusts damping to upcoming road-surface irregularities, head-up display, and active noise cancellation.

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2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

GV80 2.5T models are powered by a 300-hp turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder.

The GV80 rides a 116.3-inch wheelbase and is 194.7 inches long. It has a stylistic kinship to the redesigned G80 sedan through things like a huge pentagonal grille filled with a bright diamond-pattern surface and stacked slitlike headlights that establish a pattern continued as simulated vents on the front fenders. Inside, much of the switchgear and controls are the same, but the dashboard and console designs are different in the two vehicles, and there’s a different steering wheel in the GV80.

In the Prestige, surroundings are plush, with lots of padded surfaces, even on the sides of the console. The test truck displayed an elegant look and feel to the beige leather on the nicely detailed and highly comfortable seats. Certain controls on the console like the silver rotary transmission selector and circular infotainment controller (upon which fingertip “handwriting” commands can be made) have knurled surfaces for enhanced look and feel. Better yet, the cabin is delightfully quiet.

An up-to-the-minute infotainment system features a 14.5-inch touchscreen atop of the dashboard. The plethora of information available from it can be managed by touch on the screen, through the central controller, from steering-wheel buttons, and/or voice command. The climate system’s big external dials permit quick, direct temperature settings, but the remainder of the controls are on a touchpad of their own. Glove box, console bin, door pockets, seat-back pouches, and cup holders in the console and pull-down rear armrest take care of passengers’ needs for personal-item storage.

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2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

All-wheel-drive 2.5T Prestige models step up to 22-inch alloy wheels in place of the 19s or 20s on lesser 2.5T models.

The GV80 is commendably roomy in both rows, and sports pretty good cargo space with the rear seats up, plus some organized underfloor space. For more room, rear 40/20/40-split seats fold nearly flat and in an uninterrupted surface from the load floor. Though there are remote seat releases in the cargo hold, a handy button on each side of the second-row seats also lets you drop seat backs at a touch without groping for levers or going to the back of the vehicle.

The 2.5 turbo engine is new to Genesis. It develops 300 horsepower and 311 lb-ft of torque. Working through an 8-speed automatic transmission, it behaves about the same way it does in the G80, with good-not-great standing-start acceleration but responsive trans kickdown for effective highway passing. Selectable drive modes include Comfort, Snow, Eco, Sport, and Custom, and adjust transmission mapping, throttle responsiveness, and suspension. (Sport also induces the seat side bolsters to grip the driver a little tighter.) When this driver put 75.5 miles on the test car—all of it in city-type driving—it returned 19.0 mpg, which falls short of the EPA city-mileage projection of 21 mpg. About the only way the GV80 needs to really improve to draw near to the brands it hopes to run with is in chassis dynamics. It lags somewhat behind their levels of ride composure and steering feel.

Genesis has gotten off to an impressive start as a luxury-grade automaker. The GV80 will show if that was more than just beginner’s luck.

Quick Spin: Volvo XC60 Plug-in Hybrid

2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige

The GV80 is a fine first-SUV effort from the upstart Genesis brand. It boasts distinctive styling, a posh cabin, and an impressive array of available comfort and convenience features. However, ride quality trails the premium midsize SUV class leaders, and our observed fuel economy was disappointing.

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2021 Genesis GV80 2.5T Prestige Gallery

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Meet the 2021 Consumer Guide Best Buys

For GREAT deals on a new or used Land Rover check out Land Rover Princeton TODAY!

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast, Episode 62; GM’s Cars of 1961, Top Auto Stories of 2020

Top Auto Stories of 2020

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

Whether you drive a car, need a car, or just occasionally bum a ride with friends, you’ve come to the right place. Join the editors of Consumer Guide Automotive as they break down everything that’s going on in the auto world. New-car reviews, shopping tips, driving green, electric cars, classic cars, and plenty of great guests. This is the Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast.

Episode: 62

Broadcast date: January 3, 2021

Guest: John Biel

GM’s Cars of 1961, Top Auto Stories of 2020

Host Tom Appel and co-hosts Jill Ciminillo and Damon Bell start off the show by discussing  their test-drive experiences in the Mercedes-Benz AMG E53 midsize sedan. Collectible Automobile magazine Editor-in-Chief John Biel joins us to chat about the great features in the February 2021 issue, including a profile on Bill Mitchell’s Corvette Stingray racer and an overview of GM’s cars of 1961. John sticks around for the third segment to help us review the top automotive stories of 2020, such as the effect of COVID-19 on the industry and automakers’ increasing focus on pure-electric vehicles.

The Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast is broadcast every Sunday on Chicago’s WCPT AM 820 at 1:00 PM CST.

Discussed this week:

Collectible Automobile Magazine

Corvettes

COVID-19

Electric Vehicles

Follow the crew:

The CG Daily Drive Blog

Car Stuff Facebook Page

Consumer Guide on Twitter

John Biel on Twitter

Tom on Twitter

Damon on Twitter

Jill on Twitter

Drive, She Said (Jill’s blog)

Tom on the radio:

Tom on WGN Radio

Tom on Green Sense Radio

Tom on the Stan Milam Show

The Crew

Top Auto Stories of 2020

For GREAT deals on a new or used Cadillac check out Michael Stead Cadillac TODAY!

Test Drive: 2021 GMC Yukon Denali

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

2021 GMC Yukon Denali in Midnight Blue Metallic (a $495 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2021 GMC Yukon Denali 4WD

Class: Large SUV

Miles driven: 199

Fuel used: 14.1 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A-
Power and Performance A
Fit and Finish A-
Fuel Economy C+
Value B-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy A
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 420-hp 6.2L
Engine Type V8
Transmission 10-speed automatic
Drive Wheels 4-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 14.1 mpg

Driving mix: 60% city, 40% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 14/19/16 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel typePremium gas recommended

Base price: $71,400 (not including $1295 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Denali Ultimate Package ($11,255), Midnight Blue Metallic paint ($495), power-sliding center console ($350) Denali Ultimate Package Savings (-$1000)

Price as tested: $83,795

More Yukon price and availability information

Quick Hits

The great: Cavernous room for both people and cargo; pleasant road manners for such a large vehicle

The good: Classy interior trim; long list of standard and available features; satisfying acceleration

The not so good: Brawny V8 is thirsty for premium fuel; extra-large dimensions can make close-quarters maneuvering a challenge

John Biel

The GMC Yukon large SUVs are bigger and better for 2021, what with dimensional changes that yield more passenger and cargo space and a switch to an independent rear suspension that improves ride quality. The best of them all, if luxury and features matter, is the Denali.

A 4-wheel-drive Yukon Denali like the one Consumer Guide tested has a starting price of $72,695 that includes delivery. However, an extensive—and costly—Ultimate Package option, Midnight Blue Metallic paint, and a power-sliding storage unit in the console inflated the sticker on the test truck to luxury-vehicle territory: $83,795. (Opt for rear-wheel drive and those prices come down by $3000.)

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

All of General Motors’ full-size SUVs–the Cadillac Escalade, Chevrolet Tahoe and Surburban, and GMC Yukon–are redesigned for 2021. The Denali trim level continues as the flagship luxury model of the Yukon lineup.

Denalis are found throughout the GMC pickup and sport-utility roster, forming something of a deluxe brand-within-a-brand. Some recent Denali-grade GMCs tested by CG haven’t been as up to snuff, interior-wise, as expected of that nameplate. However, this new Yukon doesn’t fall prey to that. While hard-plastic surfaces have not been completely banished, padded, soft-touch materials reside most everywhere a passenger might touch. That includes the sides of the center console and even a patch on the sidewalls that third-row-seat occupants can use as armrests.

In addition, the Denali has an instrument panel and console that’s distinct from what’s found in other ’21 Yukons. The visor over the big and complete gauge cluster continues out over the middle of the dashboard to throw a friendly arm over two high-level air vents. In place of the others’ stand-up-style display for the GMC Infotainment system, the Denali moves its 10.2-inch screen lower and in to the dash. Plus, there’s a more-sculpted fascia in front of the right-seat passenger.

First Spin: 2021 Cadillac Escalade

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

Denalis get a exclusive dashboard design that isn’t shared with the rest of the Yukon lineup. Our testers acclimated quickly to the unconventional push-button gear selector (located on the dash to the left of the infotainment screen). The center console houses dual cup holders, a wireless charging pad, and USB and USB-C ports.

The Brownstone/Jet Black interior in the tester was one of four exclusive choices. All come with premium leather seating surfaces and authentic wood accents on the dash, door panels, and retractable covers for cup holders and standard wireless charger located in the console.

Beyond materials selection, the cabin also coddles passengers with roominess, quiet, and abundant and varied personal-item storage options. The new design has expanded second-row space and rear overhang. The first two rows feature soft and comfortable bucket seats. All four of these seats are heated, and the front ones are ventilated to boot. There’s standard heating for the leather-wrapped steering wheel. Middle-row passengers enjoy lots of legroom (thank the 5-inch wheelbase expansion for that), and the seat backs recline quite far. Seat backs aren’t as cushy in the third row, but there’s acceptable room for two adults or three kids on the 60/40-split seats, especially if middle-row occupants use some of the five inches of track travel built into their seats for the benefit of their fellow man. Note that roof C-pillars widen toward the bottom and diminish the view from the back row.

Quick Spin: 2020 Lexus GX 460 Premium

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

As expected, there’s ample space in the Yukon’s first and second rows. Perforated leather upholstery is standard, as are heated/ventilated front seats and heated second-row seats. Included in the Denali Ultimate Package is a rear-seat media system that includes dual seat-mounted LCD HD screens and wireless headphones.

There are storage bins and pockets on two levels in each door, a big glove box, and a large covered console box. With the $350 power sliding option, the console box tracks back to expose a tray large enough to hold a purse—and give access to a “hidden” drawer that is essentially locked when the console is in the full-forward position. You have to press an overhead switch to make all this happen, but to us it seems that a simple manual lever release would work even faster. The remainder of cabin storage is pouches on the backs of the front seats, four cup holders in the console to serve front- and middle-row passengers, and cup holders molded into the sidewalls for those in row three.

With 6.1 more inches of body tacked on the ’21 Yukons, there’s now 25.5 cubic feet of cargo space behind third row—a 66-percent gain, according to the manufacturer. Retract the middle and rear rows and available space expands to 122.9 cubic feet, enough to surpass some class competitors’ extra-length models. The cargo floor is large and flat, though a gap is exposed between the folded middle-row buckets. Handy power switches on the right side of the cargo hold facilitate raising and lowering the rearmost seats. A hands-free power liftgate is standard.

First Spin: 2021 GMC Yukon

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

Regular-length Yukons grow significantly bigger with the 2021 redesign. There’s 25.5 cubic feet of cargo space behind the third-row seats, and 72.6 cubic feet with the power-folding third-row seat backs retracted.

The new multilink rear suspension, which takes over for a good old live axle, and Magnetic Ride Control that reads the road up to 1000 times a second, a Denali standard feature, are key elements that deliver the kind of ride one hardly expects of a truck-type body-on-frame sport-ute. The big-ticket Ultimate Package on the test vehicle included both 22-inch alloy wheels (with 275/50R22 tires) and an adaptive air suspension. The latter helps deliver an absorbent but not squishy ride, even with the outsized wheels. Suspension noise over broken pavement is minor. The truck we sampled also steered and handled better than a good many other largish SUVs. Brakes have a firm and progressive pedal feel that terminates in quick and secure stops.

First Look: Jeep Grand Wagoneer Concept

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

Denalis come standard with a 420-hp 6.2-liter V8 that supplies robust acceleration. Twenty-two-inch bright machined aluminum wheels are part of the extensive (and pricey) Denali Ultimate Package.

GMC didn’t completely reinvent the wheel for the 2021 Yukon Denali. The standard powerteam—a 6.2-liter V8 and 10-speed automatic transmission—is carried over from the previous generation. The V8 makes the same 420 horsepower and 460 lb-ft of torque, and it is easily sufficient to move the big fellow with authority and smoothness. Indeed, the Denali is relatively quick off the line, and properly equipped 4x4s can tow up to 8000 pounds (or 8200 pounds with rear drive). However, it’s also thirsty. EPA estimates of 14 mpg in the city, 19 on the highway, and 16 combined more or less matched this reviewer’s 14.7 mpg from a 101-mile stint with 58 percent city-style driving.

The transmission is operated by a row of vertical buttons next to the infotainment screen, with push for Park and Neutral and pull for Drive and Reverse. It’s odd to see, but easy to catch on to. Some other standard Denali tech features not already mentioned include a multicolor head-up display; 14-speaker Bose audio; navigation system; Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone compatibility; lane-keep assist; and blind-spot, front-collision, and rear cross-traffic alerts. That’s how it remains the best example of a Yukon that gets better overall.

Quick Spin: 2020 Ford Expedition MAX Platinum

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

Like all of GM’s redesigned-for-2021 large SUVs, the Yukon Denali boasts much-improved road manners and better all-around refinement than its predecessors. It’s not cheap, but the Denali nonetheless occupies a important price range (low $70K to mid $80K) for buyers who don’t elect to step all the way up to the full-luxury Cadillac Escalade.

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2021 GMC Yukon Denali Gallery

2021 GMC Yukon Denali

For GREAT deals on a new or used Nissan check out Gardena Nissan TODAY!

Test Drive: 2020 Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

2020 Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

2020 Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road in Lunar Rock/Ice Edge two-tone (a 500 option)

Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road2020 Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

Class: Compact Crossover

Miles driven: 809

Fuel used: 24.9 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 32.4 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B+
Power and Performance B-
Fit and Finish B-
Fuel Economy A-
Value B
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B-
Tall Guy B-
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 203-hp 2.5L
Engine Type 4-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels AWD

Driving mix: 10% city, 90% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 25/32/27 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $35,280 (not including $1120 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: TRD Off-Road Weather Package ($1185), Premium Audio/Dynamic Navigation ($1620), TRD Off-Road Technology Package ($1950), two-tone paint ($500), door-sill protector ($199), running boards ($549), door-edge guard ($140), mudguard ($129), blackout emblem overlays ($65)

Price as tested: $42,567

More RAV4 price and availability information

Quick Hits

The great: Cargo capacity, available high-tech features, towing capacity (for a compact crossover)

The good: Fuel economy, pleasant road manners despite off-road-focused gear

The not so good: Front-seat space isn’t great for big and tall folks, engine gets a bit noisy during fast acceleration, non-linear transmission feel

John Biel:

Automakers spent a good 25 years softening the sport-utility vehicle into something more “carlike.” The result was the crossover, a vehicle type that has succeeded perhaps beyond anyone’s wildest dreams, even seriously threatening the survival of the sedans and station wagons from which they richly borrowed.

Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

The TRD Off Road is a new addition to the RAV4 lineup for 2020. It’s an all-wheel-drive-only trim level that slots in at $600 less than the top-line AWD Limited in the RAV4 model roster.

All pendulums swing, however. Lately, there have been moves by some manufacturers to toughen up the crossover. One of the newest comes from one of the oldest—the Toyota RAV4 that essentially pioneered the crossover field in the mid 1990s. For 2020, it adds a TRD Off-Road model designed to make the compact crossover more capable in the terra incognita that lies beyond the shopping-mall parking lot.

Toyota actually began moving in this direction in 2018, when the RAV4 added an Adventure model with a few terrain-taming technologies and a huge boost in towing capacity, wrapped up in a look that was more rugged than other RAV4s. It was continued when a redesigned fifth generation of Toyota’s top-selling vehicle came out for ’19. The TRD Off-Road, which starts at $36,400 with delivery—$2225 more than the Adventure—takes that concept to another level.

Test Drive: 2019 Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV

Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

The TRD Off Road Pro’s red accents and contrast stitching add sporty panache to the basic RAV4 cabin. A wireless smartphone charging pad (locating just in front of the shift lever) is included in the $1950 Technology Package, as are a 360-degree around-view monitor, front and rear park assist with automated braking, and digital-camera rearview mirror.

Toyota Racing Development supposedly tapped some things learned from its RAV4 rally program to give the Off-Road a suspension with specially tuned red coil springs, twin-tube shock absorbers configured for better rebound control, and new bump stops for improving body control over large bumps and dips. The TRD Off-Road rides on black flow-formed 18×7-inch wheels (one inch shorter in diameter than the Adventure’s wheels) wrapped in rugged Falken Wildpeak A/T Trail all-terrain tires. Appearance details include LED fog lights, dark-gray front and rear lower fasciae, red interior stitching and trim elements (including TRD logos sewn into the headrests), and TRD all-weather floormats and cargo-area liner.

Test Drive: 2021 Toyota Venza XLE

Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

Back-seat passengers get HVAC vents and dual USB charging ports, and enough headroom and legroom for average-sized adults to ride in comfort. Likewise, the rear door apertures are large enough for unencumbered entry and exit.

The Adventure and TRD Off-Road are all-wheel-drive-only models—no surprise there—with dynamic torque vectoring that can send as much as 50 percent of torque to the rear wheels, and also disconnect the rear driveline when front-wheel drive is enough to move the vehicle. Ride is firm and the tires can be a little noisy on the highway, but they didn’t produce the wandering tramlining effect we’ve experienced on some other off-pavement specials where constant small steering corrections were required.

Test Drive: 2020 Honda CR-V Hybrid Touring

2020 Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

RAV4s boast generous cargo volume for their size, and a helpfully low load floor. There’s 37.5 cubic feet of cargo volume behind the rear seats, and 69.8 cu. ft. with the rear seats folded. Rubber floor mats are standard in the TRD Off Road.

All gas-only RAV4s have a 2.5-liter 4-cylinder engine of 203 horsepower and 184 lb-ft of torque, and an 8-speed automatic transmission. Power output is acceptable for most driving situations, but transmission shifts are not the timeliest. “Sport” driving mode seems to have more effect—and slight at that—on steering than it does on acceleration. The TRD and Adventure both have a 3500-pound towing capacity that is tops among RAV4s—by at least 2 to 1—and about as good as it gets in the entire compact-crossover class. EPA fuel-economy estimates for the TRD Off-Road are 25 mpg in city driving, 32 on the highway, and 27 combined, which Consumer Guide’s experience backed up. In fact, in a test that consisted primarily of a long highway road trip, we averaged 32.4 mpg–a bit better than the EPA highway number.

Android Auto smartphone compatibility is added for all 2020 RAV4s. (Apple CarPlay connectivity already was included.) Otherwise, the TRD Off-Road’s standard-equipment complement was much like that of the ’19 RAV4 Limited that CG tested: LED headlights; power moonroof; power liftgate; SofTex leatherette upholstery; dual-zone climate control; satellite radio; and Toyota Safety Sense 2.0 suite with pre-collision warning and pedestrian detection, dynamic cruise control, lane-departure alert with steering assist, lane-tracing assist, automatic headlight high-beam control, and road-sign recognition. It shares the Adventure’s raised roof rails and a 120-volt power outlet in the right side of the cargo compartment. An extensive load of options that raised the final price to $42,567 added things like navigation, heated steering wheel, heated and ventilated front seats, Qi wireless smartphone charging, and an overhead-view camera.

Test Drive: 2020 Chevrolet Equinox Premier

2020 Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

TRD Off Road models are powered by the same 203-hp 2.5-liter 4-cylinder as other gas-engine RAV4s. Flow-formed TRD 18×7-inch wheels on Falken Wildpeak A/T Trail all-terrain tires are standard equipment. Thankfully, despite their aggressive-looking tread pattern, those tires don’t significantly upset the vehicle’s highway road manners.

Like some previously tested fifth-gen RAV4’s, the TRD Off-Road has a nicely done cabin with generous use of soft-touch surfaces, easy-to-use controls and infotainment system, but middling cabin-storage capacity. There’s good passenger space for four adults (a fifth might squeeze into the middle of the back row). There’s good cargo space in back, and 60/40-split rear seats fold almost flat for plenty more capacity.

The TRD Off-Road is docile enough for the middle-school drop-off lane but ready for the trails beyond.

Test Drive: 2019 Subaru Forester Touring

2020 Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road

The new-for-2020 TRD Off Road model imbues Toyota’s likable compact SUV with better off-road capabilities and rugged looks. We suspect it will win over at least a few Jeep Compass and Subaru Forester shoppers.

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Toyota RAV4 TRD Off Road Gallery