Honda built the CR-V to haul families and their gear for 300,000 miles without drama, and the current hybrid actually delivers on that promise, smooth, quiet, genuinely efficient at 35-40 MPG, with more rear legroom than crossovers costing twice as much. But if you're shopping used, the 2007-2012 models have a structural rust problem serious enough that Honda bought them back in Canada: trailing arms snap off the subframe in salt states, taking chunks of the floor with them. That's not a repair. Current models are clean of that nightmare, but they're also missing the tech the RAV4 and CX-5 offer at similar money, no panoramic roof, no 360 camera, no ventilated seats. Buy new or recent if you want maximum space and efficiency without fuss. Skip anything from the rust-belt era unless you enjoy catastrophic suspension failures.
The RAV4 is the sensible choice that everyone makes and nobody regrets, proven reliability, hybrid efficiency that actually works, and resale value that borders on absurd. The catch is you're paying luxury money for economy-grade materials and putting up with dealer markups that would make a used-car lot blush, while the 2026's overeager safety tech yanks the wheel and slams the brakes at ghosts. Buy it if you want a vehicle that'll outlive your mortgage and you can negotiate a fair price; skip it if you expect $50k to feel like $50k inside, or if the CR-V's refinement matters more than Toyota's bulletproof reputation.