← Back to Verdikt

Honda Passport (2026) vs Subaru Outback

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Honda Passport (2026) comes out ahead overall (7.6 vs 6.9), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Honda Passport (2026)Subaru Outback
Reliability & Durability 7.5 6.0
User Sentiment 8.7 7.0
Complaint Severity 7.4 7.8
Consensus Strength 4.8 3.2
Value for Money 4.9 3.5
Owner Advocacy 7.4 8.7
Honda Passport (2026)

Honda finally built the off-road SUV it should've made years ago, boxy, capable, and $10-15k cheaper than a 4Runner while driving better on pavement. The 2026 redesign nails the look with aggressive styling and backs it up with real hardware: 8.3 inches of ground clearance, steel skid plates, and an AWD system that'll handle more trail than most owners will ever see. The naturally aspirated V6 is a proven workhorse in a segment going turbo-four. But you're paying for that capability at the pump, owners report 17-20 mpg in mixed driving, and that 19-gallon tank means gas stops every 300 miles. The 10-speed transmission is a lottery: some units shift smoothly, others buck and hunt constantly, and dealers say that's normal. If you can stomach feeding it premium and frequent fill-ups, and you value Honda's reputation over a hybrid powertrain, the Passport delivers genuine adventure capability without the 4Runner's penalty box interior or dated tech. If fuel economy matters or you want buttery-smooth power delivery, the CR-V Hybrid is sitting right there in the showroom.

Subaru Outback

The 2020-2025 Outback hits a sweet spot: spacious, safe, snow-capable, and reliable if you change the CVT fluid every 30-40k miles like clockwork. Owners genuinely like them, crash protection is stellar, and the wagon shape still feels practical without crossing into bloated SUV territory. Then comes 2026, and Subaru torched the recipe, literally went boxy-SUV styling that's splitting the fanbase hard. The interior finally ditches the all-touchscreen nightmare for real buttons (thank god), but early units are showing infotainment glitches out of the gate. The base 2.5L engine has always felt gutless for a vehicle this size, and the CVT still demands religious maintenance or you're gambling on a $7k repair. If you want the Outback people actually trust, grab a 2024-2025 before they vanish. If you're eyeing the 2026, wait a year for the bugs to surface, and maybe test-drive something with the turbo engine, because the base motor is a chore.