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Chevrolet Blazer EV vs Toyota Sequoia

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Chevrolet Blazer EV (7.5) and Toyota Sequoia (7.4) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Chevrolet Blazer EVToyota Sequoia
Reliability & Durability 5.0 9.0
User Sentiment 9.2 8.1
Complaint Severity 7.3 7.3
Consensus Strength 3.4 4.4
Value for Money 6.0 2.6
Owner Advocacy 9.0 7.2
Chevrolet Blazer EV

GM's stylish electric crossover delivers genuinely fun acceleration, a roomy cabin, and smooth highway manners, but the 2024 launch was a mess of software bugs and quality hiccups that sent early adopters back to dealers repeatedly. By 2025 most gremlins were squashed, leaving a handsome EV that undercuts the Cadillac Lyriq by $15k while sharing its platform. The tradeoffs: it charges slower than the Hyundai/Kia twins, locks you into Google's infotainment with no CarPlay escape, and a troubling number of owners report coolant leaks on vehicles barely a year old. Steep used-market discounts make lightly used 2025+ models tempting if you can live without CarPlay and don't mind the charging speed penalty. Skip any 2024 unless the price is irresistible and you enjoy surprise service appointments.

Toyota Sequoia

Toyota built a reputation on the 2008-2022 Sequoia's unkillable 5.7L V8, owners routinely cruise past 300k miles on oil changes alone, and one just hit 500k before needing spark plugs. The 2023 redesign looks sharp and the 437-hp hybrid hauls hard, but the cargo area is a mess: the battery placement means the third row won't fold flat, leaving you with a stepped floor where the Tahoe gives you actual usable space. The twin-turbo V6 is unproven long-term, fuel economy still hovers around 16 mpg, and you're paying $75k+ for the privilege. If you need three-row towing muscle and don't mind dated tech, hunt down a clean second-gen and enjoy bulletproof engineering. If you want the new one, load it with your actual gear first, that weird tiered trunk might be a dealbreaker, and at this price the American competition suddenly looks reasonable.