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Chevrolet Equinox vs Volkswagen Atlas

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Chevrolet Equinox (6.5) and Volkswagen Atlas (6.5) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Chevrolet EquinoxVolkswagen Atlas
Reliability & Durability 4.0 6.0
User Sentiment 7.5 6.5
Complaint Severity 7.2 7.1
Consensus Strength 3.2 3.3
Value for Money 6.7 4.4
Owner Advocacy 6.3 7.2
Chevrolet Equinox

Three vehicles wear this badge, and only one deserves your attention. The Equinox EV promises 250+ miles of range for potentially under $25k after tax credits, if GM actually ships the base trim instead of burying it under dealer markups and option packages. That's legitimately game-changing pricing for a long-range EV, though ditching CarPlay will cost them sales. The current gas Equinox (2018+) is competent appliance-grade transportation that's genuinely improved from the pre-2018 disaster years, but noisy cabins and cheap plastics remind you it's built to a price. Pre-2018 models earned their bad reputation with timing chains that jump and engines that burn oil before 100k miles. If you're shopping the EV and can live without CarPlay, it's the value play of the decade. If you're considering a used gas model, 2018 or newer only, and even then, a RAV4 will age better.

Volkswagen Atlas

The Atlas is VW's bid for the family-hauler crown: genuinely cavernous inside, with third-row space that actually fits adults and a ride smooth enough to make the school run feel civilized. The catch is concrete: 2024+ models develop brake squeal so persistent that owners are swapping pads before 20k miles, infotainment screens freeze or glitch routinely, and the EA888 turbo-four carries known oil-system vulnerabilities, all while VW cut the warranty from six years to four. Buy if you need maximum space on a tighter budget and have a trusted independent shop lined up; walk if you want Toyota/Honda peace of mind or can't stomach the depreciation hit.