This scrappy little off-roader will keep you safe in a crash and get you through a snowstorm, but it drinks gas like a full-size truck and accelerates like it's towing one. Owners who bought it for winter capability and weekend trail duty tend to love it, several report 150k+ miles of reliable service. But if you're commuting on the highway or hauling a family, the anemic engines (15-18 mpg combined, genuinely), cramped back seat, and frequent fuel stops will wear you down fast. The 2015-2017 models suffer electrical nightmares; stick to 2019+ if you're buying used. It's the right tool for a specific job, just make sure that job isn't 'efficient daily driver.'
Mazda built a compact crossover that drives like a sport sedan and lasts like a Toyota, then fumbled the 2026 redesign by burying climate controls in a touchscreen. The 2017-2025 generation is the sweet spot: upscale interior, engaging handling, and owners routinely hitting 200k+ miles with nothing but oil changes. The rotary dial infotainment that reviewers love actually works once you learn it. But the new model ditches those physical controls just as competitors are bringing them back, and the community is furious. Shopping used or hunting a leftover 2025? You're golden. Eyeing the 2026? You're the guinea pig for Mazda's cost-cutting experiment, and early sentiment suggests they read the room wrong. Buy the outgoing model while you still can.