One nameplate, two universes. The 1984-2001 XJ with its 4.0L inline-six is the unkillable legend owners drive past 600,000 miles on oil changes alone, simple, tough, easy to fix in a driveway. Then came 2014's Fiat-platform KL, where transfer cases grenade before 100k, electrical gremlins multiply like tribbles, and replacing an evaporator means pulling the doors off. Mechanics who wrench on Stellantis products all day drive Hondas home. The all-new 2026 hybrid promises redemption with premium materials and modern tech, but it's engineered by the same outfit that just spent a decade using the Cherokee name as a punchline. Hunt a clean XJ if you want the legend. Skip the 2014-2023 models unless you enjoy surprise $4,000 repair bills. Wait on the 2026 until someone else beta-tests it.
VW built a crossover with a genuinely clever AWD system and a cabin that feels more expensive than it is, then saddled it with an engine that gets outrun by a Corolla and a repair history that reads like a warranty company's nightmare. The 2025 redesign adds 17 horsepower and fixes some proportion issues, but still skips the hybrid powertrain every competitor offers. The real trouble is the 2018-2024 generation most buyers will encounter used: valve guide failures requiring cylinder head replacements, a water pump class action lawsuit, and the kind of repair frequency that turns $250/hour labor rates into a recurring expense. Lease it new and hand it back before 60k miles, or buy the RAV4 and sleep better. Long-term ownership means budgeting for European repair costs on a vehicle priced like a mainstream crossover.