This GM Ultium-based EV wears a Honda badge but carries the baggage of an abandoned product line. When it works, it's a spacious, comfortable cruiser that glides quietly and charges fast enough for road trips, many owners rack up 20k+ miles without drama beyond a CV axle click that dealers won't fix. The catch: Honda pulled the plug on EVs in early 2025, leaving buyers with one EV tech per dealership and no future updates. A vocal minority report high-voltage system failures that strand the car for weeks, plus software that got buggier after the recall fix. Lease deals are killer ($300, $400/month), making it a solid short-term bet if you can tolerate orphan-product risk. Long-term buyers should consider the Blazer EV or Ioniq 5 instead, same platform or better tech, with manufacturers still committed to the segment.
This scrappy little off-roader will keep you safe in a crash and get you through a snowstorm, but it drinks gas like a full-size truck and accelerates like it's towing one. Owners who bought it for winter capability and weekend trail duty tend to love it, several report 150k+ miles of reliable service. But if you're commuting on the highway or hauling a family, the anemic engines (15-18 mpg combined, genuinely), cramped back seat, and frequent fuel stops will wear you down fast. The 2015-2017 models suffer electrical nightmares; stick to 2019+ if you're buying used. It's the right tool for a specific job, just make sure that job isn't 'efficient daily driver.'