This three-row crossover delivers surprising space and features for the money, but only if you spec it right. The 2.0L engine is a false economy, it whines and struggles with passengers and cargo, making highway merges an exercise in patience. Spring for the 2.4L AWD or skip it entirely; the fuel economy difference is negligible and the drivability gap is enormous. The CVT demands religious fluid changes every 30-40k miles, treat it like an oil change you can't miss, or budget for a $4,000 replacement. Current models (2022+) share bones with the Nissan Rogue and feel genuinely upscale inside, a pleasant surprise at this price point. The real wildcard: Mitsubishi's US dealer network has collapsed 16% since the pandemic, with 35 franchises terminated in 18 months. If your nearest dealer closes, you're stuck driving an hour for warranty work or routine service. For families who need affordable three-row space and have a stable dealer nearby, it's a smart buy. If you value driving engagement or worry about orphaned-brand risk, the Honda CR-V or Mazda CX-5 are safer bets.
Nissan redesigned the Kicks for 2025 and fixed what needed fixing: it's bigger inside, offers AWD, and delivers 40-51 MPG on highway runs without breaking a sweat. Early owners love the value at $22k-$30k and report zero drama in daily use. The shadow hanging over it is Nissan's CVT reputation, not because this generation has failed (it's too new), but because older Nissans poisoned the well. If you're diligent about 30k-mile fluid changes, first-gen owners sailed past 150k miles trouble-free. Skip that service and you're gambling on a $5k repair bill. This is the right crossover for the calendar-reminder type who wants excellent mileage and doesn't need thrills. If you treat maintenance like a suggestion, the Toyota Corolla Cross won't punish you as hard.