GM's midsize contender pairs a punchy turbo four-cylinder with an 8-speed that can't decide what gear it wants and software that freezes mid-commute. The 2024 redesign earned a sales stop within months, infotainment screens go dark, remote start is a gamble, and one ZR2 owner burned through three torque converters before 15,000 miles. The previous generation splits owners into camps: some sailed past 180k with zero drama, others became dealer regulars. The ZR2 off-road package impresses when the truck cooperates, but you're betting GM patches the bugs before your warranty expires. If you need a midsize that starts reliably and doesn't strand you hunting for cell service on a trail, the Frontier costs less and the Tacoma holds value better. Buy this if you like the look enough to gamble on future software updates, and spring for the extended warranty.
You're buying Toyota's reputation tax with the current Tacoma, and whether that's worth it depends entirely on the generation. The 1996-2023 trucks earned their cult status honestly, owners routinely clock 300k, 500k, even 988k miles on original engines with nothing but oil changes, and resale stays absurdly strong even after a decade of use. The 2024 redesign modernized everything (better ride, nicer interior, hybrid option) but lost the value plot: $65k for a TRD Pro when a Ranger Raptor costs $10k less and tows more. If you're shopping used and can find a rust-free 2016-2023, you're buying a truck that'll outlive your mortgage. If you're paying new-truck money in 2025, you're funding nostalgia, not current value.