← Back to Verdikt

Mercedes-Benz GLE vs Nissan Pathfinder

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Mercedes-Benz GLE (7.0) and Nissan Pathfinder (7.0) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Mercedes-Benz GLENissan Pathfinder
Reliability & Durability 6.7 6.0
User Sentiment 6.2 6.7
Complaint Severity 8.2 7.1
Consensus Strength 3.2 3.8
Value for Money 4.7 7.0
Owner Advocacy 7.9 7.2
Mercedes-Benz GLE

The 2020+ Mercedes GLE (W167) is a capable, refined luxury SUV that excels in comfort and interior quality but shows clear use-case fragmentation. The GLE 450 with I6 engine receives strong praise for performance and reliability, while the base GLE 350 4-cylinder is consistently criticized as underpowered. Long-term owners of current-generation models report good reliability with routine maintenance, though AMG variants face expensive tire wear. Critical context: 2018-2019 models suffer from timing cover leaks that do not affect current production. The GLE trades some of the X5's sportier dynamics for superior ride comfort and luxury ambiance. Coupe variants are polarizing, loved for looks but questioned for practicality trade-offs.

Nissan Pathfinder

Three Pathfinders exist under one name: the pre-2013 body-on-frame trucks that owners drive past 250k miles, the 2013-2021 CVT models that die expensive deaths around 140k, and the 2022+ reboot that ditched the CVT for a V6 and 9-speed automatic. The newest generation undercuts Toyota by $10k-20k and looks promising on paper, but it's only three years old, too soon to know if Nissan fixed what they broke. Two 2025 Platinums have had alternators fail completely at highway speed, and rear windows are spontaneously shattering in sunlight. If you're shopping used, grab a 2012-or-older model with the VQ engine and you'll likely outlive the loan. If you want new, you're betting on a turnaround that hasn't earned trust yet.