Honda's luxury three-row splits the difference between sport sedan reflexes and family hauler practicality, torque-vectoring AWD that actually makes winter fun, a V6 that runs forever, and enough cargo space to shame the Germans. The catch is a generation-specific landmine: 2016-2020 V6 models grenade their rod bearings at 30k-60k miles, stranding owners with five-figure engine replacements now covered under recall 23V-751. Avoid that window entirely. The current 2022+ generation sidesteps the issue and earns genuine owner loyalty, but it drinks premium like a pickup (16-21 MPG real-world) and costs nearly X5 money while delivering a noticeably less plush cabin. Buy it if you value sharp handling and Honda durability over German badge prestige, and you're fine burning a tank every 350 miles. Skip it if fuel economy matters or you need that third row for actual adults.
The BMW X5 reputation varies dramatically by generation and ownership context. Current G05 models (2019+) with the B58 inline-6 earn praise for driving dynamics, luxury, and reasonable reliability when maintained, though a systematic sunroof explosion issue affecting 2024 models raises serious safety concerns that BMW is reportedly denying coverage for. The community consensus is emphatic: avoid older generations (especially 2007-2014 with problematic V8s and early turbo engines) unless you have substantial maintenance budget and mechanical knowledge. Multiple users warn that $15K used X5s will quickly consume another $10K+ in repairs including driveshaft failures, valve cover issues, and electrical problems. For those who can afford proper maintenance or buy CPO with extended warranty, the X5 delivers excellent driving experience. For budget-conscious buyers, the community universally recommends Honda/Toyota alternatives instead.