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Honda Pilot vs Toyota Grand Highlander

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Honda Pilot (7.9) and Toyota Grand Highlander (8.0) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Honda PilotToyota Grand Highlander
Reliability & Durability 8.0 8.0
User Sentiment 8.1 8.6
Complaint Severity 7.7 7.0
Consensus Strength 5.5 5.0
Value for Money 5.1 5.9
Owner Advocacy 8.6 8.3
Honda Pilot

Here's what you're actually buying: a spacious, dependable family hauler with a third row that fits humans, a removable middle seat that's genuinely clever, and a proven V6 that'll run to 200,000 miles without drama. The tradeoff is fuel economy, no hybrid option means high-teens MPG while Toyota sells Highlander Hybrids as fast as they can build them, and at $4/gallon that's real money over ownership. Interior materials on lower trims feel a step behind the CX-90 and Grand Highlander, and the styling won't turn heads. Buy it if you need maximum space and proven reliability and don't mind feeding the tank. Skip it if fuel economy or luxury feel matter more, the Grand Highlander Hybrid and CX-90 both answer those needs better.

Toyota Grand Highlander

The Grand Highlander is Toyota's answer to families who need genuine three-row space without the fuel bill, the standard hybrid delivers 34+ MPG in real-world driving and a third row adults can actually sit in. The gas tank won't fill past 12 gallons on many units (there's a TSB, but dealers often charge $400+ for the fix once the warranty expires), and infotainment freezes are common enough to plan around. Buy the standard hybrid if you need the space and efficiency and can live with those quirks; skip the Hybrid Max unless you're towing, and avoid the 2026 model year entirely until the early check-engine-light problems get sorted.