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Genesis G80 vs Toyota Avalon

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Genesis G80 (8.3) and Toyota Avalon (8.5) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Genesis G80Toyota Avalon
Reliability & Durability 6.0 8.5
User Sentiment 9.0 8.8
Complaint Severity 7.5 7.5
Consensus Strength 5.8 5.8
Value for Money 8.0 6.5
Owner Advocacy 9.3 9.5
Genesis G80

This is what happens when a luxury upstart stops apologizing and just builds a genuinely excellent sedan. The current G80 nails the fundamentals, a cabin that feels $20k richer than the sticker, a ride that dissolves highway miles, and styling confident enough that strangers assume you paid BMW money. The infotainment will test your patience with menus buried three layers deep and touch controls that occasionally ignore your finger, but that's the tax for entry. Depreciation is brutal if you're the first owner, glorious if you're the second: $82k lease returns selling for $33k with under 30k miles. Buy it if you want S-Class comfort without the S-Class payment. Skip it if the nearest Genesis dealer is two states away.

Toyota Avalon

Toyota built this full-size sedan to outlast your mortgage, owners routinely push 300k, 400k, even 486k miles before anything critical breaks. It's a Camry stretched to Lexus proportions, sharing the ES platform but costing thousands less, and the hybrid models deliver shockingly good fuel economy (40+ mpg) for something this spacious. The catch: Toyota discontinued it after 2022, so you're shopping used-only, and the older generations that dominate owner forums come with age-related quirks like seal leaks and the infamous 2008 dashboard melt. If you want a highway cruiser that'll run forever and don't need the latest tech, this is one of the smartest used buys in the sedan graveyard, just budget for the fact that even Toyotas need parts when they hit drinking age.