A RAV4 in a tuxedo that'll run forever without surprising you with a repair bill, but you're paying luxury money for Toyota bones. The 2022 redesign finally dragged the interior into the current decade, big touchscreen, materials that feel worth the price, and enough physical buttons that you won't curse at a screen while merging. The catch is size: genuinely tight if you've got kids and car seats, with a trunk that vanishes the moment you load a stroller. Families stretching into this over an RX regret it within a year. But if you're single, childfree, or empty-nest, it's the right size and the hybrid models are shockingly efficient (real owners hitting 40+ MPG). It rides smoother and quieter than the Germans, dealership service is famously painless, and it'll still be starting every morning when the X3 down the street is on its third turbo. Just replace those miserable run-flats the day you buy it. Buy if you want a compact that'll last 200k miles without drama. Skip if you need actual family space.
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.