The Wrangler excels at its core mission, off-road capability, but is severely compromised as a daily driver. Community consensus splits sharply: dedicated off-roaders accept the trade-offs, but most buyers expecting a practical SUV are deeply disappointed. Current JL generation (2018+) shows declining quality under Stellantis, with systematic 3.6L engine issues and the 4xe hybrid being particularly problematic. Death wobble, electrical gremlins, and poor highway manners are persistent complaints. Ford Bronco competition has helped, but hasn't fixed fundamental reliability issues. Best suited as a weekend toy or dedicated trail vehicle, not a family hauler.
Mazda built this two-row SUV to deliver luxury materials and a punchy inline-six at thousands below German pricing, but the brand-new platform wasn't ready for showrooms. Rear brakes squeal so persistently that Mazda extended the warranty and redesigned the pads, yet parts remain backordered six months out. Radiators crack at 17,000 miles. Rattles infiltrate the cabin after 20,000. MotorTrend's yearlong tester called it one of their worst long-term vehicles, citing quality lapses that shouldn't exist at $50,000. The CX-90 costs the same, adds a third row, and shares these same problems. If you want Mazda's excellent driving feel without the early-adopter tax, wait for the second model year or choose the CX-50 Hybrid, which uses Toyota's proven powertrain instead of this troubled architecture. Skip this one unless steep discounts compensate for likely warranty visits.