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 luxury EV SUV handles like something half its size and delivers lane-keeping that actually holds the lane for 1,900-mile road trips. The problem is timing: early 2025 Launch Editions suffered systematic GHCA module failures that left cars undrivable for two months while owners waited on parts, plus software crashes that required a processor retrofit. Late-2025 models with the Orin chip and redesigned GHCA part (number 36000418) appear to have fixed the worst issues, and 2026 models are reportedly problem-free. If you're shopping used, verify those fixes were applied or find a 2026 build, you'll get a genuinely excellent SUV at a steep discount. Buy an unrepaired early model and you're inheriting someone else's warranty nightmare. For buyers who can confirm the updates or go new, this is a compelling alternative to the BMW iX or Audi e-tron.