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Infiniti QX60 vs Jeep Grand Cherokee

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Infiniti QX60 comes out ahead overall (3.8 vs 2.3), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Infiniti QX60Jeep Grand Cherokee
Reliability & Durability 3.8 1.6
User Sentiment 3.2 1.8
Complaint Severity 6.7 6.7
Consensus Strength 1.6 1.0
Value for Money 1.9 0.8
Owner Advocacy 2.2 2.8
Infiniti QX60

Infiniti's three-row family hauler splits cleanly at 2022: before that year, you're buying a Pathfinder in a tuxedo with a CVT that grenades itself before 100k miles, and after it you're getting a genuinely improved interior wrapped around a wheezy turbocharged four-cylinder that takes eight full seconds to drag 4,700 pounds to highway speed. The current version looks sharp and undercuts German rivals by $15k, but the ride is stiff and loud for something wearing a luxury badge, and you're still paying a $15k premium over the mechanically identical Pathfinder for nicer leather and a different grille. One owner made it to 400k miles on a 2015, but that's the exception that proves the rule, most pre-2022 owners are nursing failed transmissions, dead alternators, and $5k timing chain bills while watching their resale value crater. Buy the new one if you want Highlander space without the Toyota tax and can live with the gutless engine, or skip the brand entirely if you're shopping used.

Jeep Grand Cherokee

This is a truck with a split personality that depends entirely on when it rolled off the line. The 1999-2010 models with the 4.0L inline-six built a cult following by refusing to die, owners routinely push them past 200k miles with nothing but oil changes and the occasional sensor swap. The 2011-2020 generation trades some of that bulletproof simplicity for refinement, and while the 3.6L Pentastar has a known oil cooler weakness (plan for a $1,600 repair eventually), plenty of these trucks still deliver reliable service once that's addressed. Then 2021 arrived and quality control fell apart: transmissions failing at 3k miles, electrical systems going dark, the kind of catastrophic breakdowns that make you question whether anyone test-drove these before shipping them. If you're buying used and find a well-kept pre-2021 model, you're getting proven capability. If you're considering anything current-gen, you're gambling on whether Stellantis sorted out the gremlins, and right now, the house is winning.