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Lincoln Corsair vs Mazda CX-90

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Lincoln Corsair (7.2) and Mazda CX-90 (7.2) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Lincoln CorsairMazda CX-90
Reliability & Durability 6.0 4.0
User Sentiment 9.3 8.7
Complaint Severity 7.5 7.5
Consensus Strength 3.1 4.9
Value for Money 4.1 6.6
Owner Advocacy 7.3 7.6
Lincoln Corsair

Lincoln's compact luxury SUV prioritizes serenity over sport, supremely comfortable seats, whisper-quiet ride, genuinely luxurious materials, but it splits buyers cleanly. If you're coming from a GTI expecting driving excitement, you'll be disappointed; if you have back problems and value comfort above all, you might love it. The catch: Sync infotainment is a recurring headache (freezing, memory seat failures, connectivity bugs), rattles are common in newer models, and the Grand Touring PHEV has been stuck with battery recall limits for months. The 2.3L engine in 2020-2022 models is well-regarded, but 2023+ redesigns brought increased quality control complaints. Owners either adore theirs enough to buy multiples for family members, or regret not getting a Lexus. Buy a well-discounted 2022 with the 2.3L if you can find one; approach 2023+ models with caution unless the dealer discount is steep.

Mazda CX-90

Mazda built a $50k SUV that drives like it costs $70k, sharp handling, a silky inline-6, and an interior that embarrasses the Highlander, but shipped it before the transmission learned its lines. The 8-speed shudders and hesitates at low speeds across enough reports to call it systematic, not a lemon-lottery issue, and early PHEVs needed steering racks and 12V batteries replaced under warranty. If you prize driving feel over appliance-smooth operation and can live with first-year quirks (2026s show real improvement), the CX-90 delivers shocking value; if you need bulletproof out-of-the-gate execution, wait a year or stick with the boring-but-reliable competition.