This full-size SUV splits into two distinct stories. The first-generation trucks with the 4.6L V8 were unkillable, owners routinely hit 400k-500k miles with nothing but oil changes, but rust ate the bodies and air suspension failures totaled otherwise healthy trucks. The current generation (2018-2024) offers serious space, strong towing, and genuine family comfort, but the 10R80 transmission is a documented weak point: multiple owners report rebuilds or replacements before 100k miles at $7k-10k out of pocket. If you're buying used in the 60k-100k mile range, budget for transmission work or get an extended warranty that covers it. The 2025-2026 redesign brings a polarizing oblong steering wheel and touch-heavy controls that owners either adapt to or never stop resenting. Buy this if you need the space and towing capacity, can afford the warranty, and don't mind that it drives more like a truck than a luxury cruiser. Walk if you're stretching the budget or buying high-mileage without coverage.
This scrappy little off-roader will keep you safe in a crash and get you through a snowstorm, but it drinks gas like a full-size truck and accelerates like it's towing one. Owners who bought it for winter capability and weekend trail duty tend to love it, several report 150k+ miles of reliable service. But if you're commuting on the highway or hauling a family, the anemic engines (15-18 mpg combined, genuinely), cramped back seat, and frequent fuel stops will wear you down fast. The 2015-2017 models suffer electrical nightmares; stick to 2019+ if you're buying used. It's the right tool for a specific job, just make sure that job isn't 'efficient daily driver.'