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Hyundai Ioniq 5 vs Toyota 4Runner

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Hyundai Ioniq 5 (8.3) and Toyota 4Runner (8.2) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Hyundai Ioniq 5Toyota 4Runner
Reliability & Durability 8.0 9.4
User Sentiment 9.1 8.3
Complaint Severity 5.9 8.1
Consensus Strength 6.0 5.7
Value for Money 7.2 3.0
Owner Advocacy 9.1 9.5
Hyundai Ioniq 5

The Ioniq 5 delivers the EV trifecta, 18-minute charging, 300-mile range, and genuinely fun driving dynamics, wrapped in retro-futurist styling that either delights or confuses, rarely in between. The ICCU (Integrated Charging Control Unit) can fail without warning and strand you, sometimes mid-drive, requiring a tow and potentially weeks sidelined waiting for parts; Hyundai's 15-year warranty extension acknowledges the pattern but doesn't eliminate the risk. If you can tolerate warranty-covered downtime for a car this capable at this price, it's a compelling buy; if you need a vehicle that simply works every single day, walk.

Toyota 4Runner

Here's what you're actually buying: a truck that refuses to quit. Owners routinely push 250k-400k miles on original drivetrains, and the only thing that kills the old ones is frame rust, not mechanical failure. But the 5th gen (2010-2024) makes you pay for that immortality with 16 mpg, a ride like a lumber wagon, and an interior that feels frozen in 2005. You're spending $50k-$60k on something bulletproof but outdated, and unless you're actually using the body-on-frame toughness off-road, a Highlander does the daily-driver job better for less. The brand-new 6th gen modernizes with a turbo-4 and hybrid, but it's too green to trust, dealers are tacking $10k markups onto polarizing styling, and they killed the fold-flat rear seats. If you off-road seriously or want a vehicle that outlives your mortgage, grab a clean 4th gen V8 or late 5th gen and accept the compromises. If you're pavement-only, this is an expensive way to burn gas.