This subcompact crossover tries to deliver Buick refinement in a budget-friendly package, and mostly succeeds, until you need to merge onto a highway. The turbocharged three-cylinder engines feel genuinely sluggish under load, turning acceleration into a patience exercise rather than a confidence boost. Families with three kids consistently report the cabin feels cramped, though the cargo area punches above its weight class. The current generation (2020+) uses different engines than the troubled original Encore, and early owners report solid reliability with regular oil changes, but there's not enough mileage out there yet to call it proven. Buy it if you want a quiet, comfortable commuter with nicer materials than the Chevy Trax, skip it if you need quick merging power or room for a growing family.
This luxury EV SUV handles like something half its size and delivers lane-keeping that actually holds the lane for 1,900-mile road trips. The problem is timing: early 2025 Launch Editions suffered systematic GHCA module failures that left cars undrivable for two months while owners waited on parts, plus software crashes that required a processor retrofit. Late-2025 models with the Orin chip and redesigned GHCA part (number 36000418) appear to have fixed the worst issues, and 2026 models are reportedly problem-free. If you're shopping used, verify those fixes were applied or find a 2026 build, you'll get a genuinely excellent SUV at a steep discount. Buy an unrepaired early model and you're inheriting someone else's warranty nightmare. For buyers who can confirm the updates or go new, this is a compelling alternative to the BMW iX or Audi e-tron.