Hyundai built this three-row to compete with luxury nameplates at half the sticker, quilted Calligraphy leather, 360 cameras, and semi-autonomous highway driving for $50k instead of $70k, and the 2023-2025 models mostly deliver on that promise. The 2026 redesign, though, hit a wall: a power-folding seat crushed a child to death in Ohio, triggering a 68,500-unit recall and stop-sale, while owners report dead batteries from digital key drain and wiring harness failures. The interior still impresses, the space is genuinely useful across all three rows, and the warranty cushions the gamble. But if you're buying new, you're debugging Hyundai's first swing at this generation. If you're buying used, stick to 2023-2025 and budget for a dealership experience that'll make you miss the DMV.
The RAV4 is the sensible choice that everyone makes and nobody regrets, proven reliability, hybrid efficiency that actually works, and resale value that borders on absurd. The catch is you're paying luxury money for economy-grade materials and putting up with dealer markups that would make a used-car lot blush, while the 2026's overeager safety tech yanks the wheel and slams the brakes at ghosts. Buy it if you want a vehicle that'll outlive your mortgage and you can negotiate a fair price; skip it if you expect $50k to feel like $50k inside, or if the CR-V's refinement matters more than Toyota's bulletproof reputation.