Honda's practical small crossover nails reliability and space but stumbles badly on power. The 158hp naturally-aspirated engine takes 9-11 seconds to hit 60mph, genuinely slow for 2024, making highway merging stressful and passing maneuvers require serious planning. You'll floor it constantly and the CVT will scream in protest. The real frustration: Honda sells a hybrid HR-V globally with better power and 40+ mpg but won't bring it stateside, leaving U.S. buyers with the slowest option while Toyota's Corolla Cross Hybrid dominates. If you drive mostly city streets and value Honda's bulletproof reliability over any sense of urgency, it's sensible transportation that'll run forever. Daily highway commuters or anyone at elevation should test-drive first or spend the extra $3k on a CR-V.
Subaru built this three-row hauler for families who prioritize crash protection and winter capability over fuel bills, and the tradeoff is real. The turbo four moves 4,500 pounds with surprising punch, standard AWD handles snow confidently, and the safety structure is legitimately impressive (owners walk away from nasty wrecks). But 17 mpg in mixed driving will hurt every week, and the 2019-2020 models had CVT failures serious enough to warrant full transmission swaps at 40-70k miles. The third row barely fits kids, let alone adults. If you're shopping used, the 2019-2020s are a hard pass, aim for 2023+ when Subaru finally debugged the powertrain. Buy this if you need the safety, the AWD, and can stomach premium gas at SUV-worst efficiency. Skip it if you actually need three usable rows or want a vehicle that won't punish you at the pump, the Honda Pilot does both jobs better.