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Kia Telluride vs Subaru Outback

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Kia Telluride (6.9) and Subaru Outback (6.9) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Kia TellurideSubaru Outback
Reliability & Durability 6.0 6.0
User Sentiment 7.2 7.0
Complaint Severity 7.6 7.8
Consensus Strength 3.2 3.2
Value for Money 4.9 3.5
Owner Advocacy 7.6 8.7
Kia Telluride

This three-row SUV convinced America a Kia could feel like a $60,000 vehicle while costing $40,000, spacious, quiet, loaded with features, and genuinely pleasant to drive. The catch: oil consumption creeps in on some 2020-2021 models after 60k miles (owners report adding quarts between changes with no warning light), and the recall parade gets old fast, nothing dangerous, but trim pieces fall off, screens freeze, and you'll know your service advisor by name. If you can buy at MSRP and stay on top of oil checks, it's still one of the best values in the segment; at $50k with dealer markup, you're overpaying for a Kia when a Highlander or Pilot makes more sense.

Subaru Outback

The 2020-2025 Outback hits a sweet spot: spacious, safe, snow-capable, and reliable if you change the CVT fluid every 30-40k miles like clockwork. Owners genuinely like them, crash protection is stellar, and the wagon shape still feels practical without crossing into bloated SUV territory. Then comes 2026, and Subaru torched the recipe, literally went boxy-SUV styling that's splitting the fanbase hard. The interior finally ditches the all-touchscreen nightmare for real buttons (thank god), but early units are showing infotainment glitches out of the gate. The base 2.5L engine has always felt gutless for a vehicle this size, and the CVT still demands religious maintenance or you're gambling on a $7k repair. If you want the Outback people actually trust, grab a 2024-2025 before they vanish. If you're eyeing the 2026, wait a year for the bugs to surface, and maybe test-drive something with the turbo engine, because the base motor is a chore.