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Nissan Leaf vs Nissan Sentra

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Nissan Leaf (6.3) and Nissan Sentra (6.5) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 LeafSentra
Reliability & Durability 3.0 7.3
User Sentiment 6.9 2.9
Complaint Severity 6.7 8.0
Consensus Strength 3.0 3.3
Value for Money 6.8 6.6
Owner Advocacy 7.5 6.9
Nissan Leaf

For a decade, the Leaf was the EV that taught buyers what not to buy, air-cooled batteries that cooked themselves into 50-mile paperweights, resale values that cratered faster than the range, and a charging port the industry abandoned. The 2026 redesign finally fixes everything: liquid cooling, 303 miles of range, Tesla-compatible fast charging, and a $25k-after-incentives price that undercuts the Bolt's old throne. It's comfortable, well-equipped, and genuinely competitive now. The catch is you're trusting a company that spent ten years selling a fundamentally broken product and whose financial health is shaky enough to make warranty coverage a gamble. If you need a cheap commuter and can stomach the brand baggage, the new Leaf is legitimately good. Just know you're betting on Nissan's survival as much as the car's.

Nissan Sentra

The Sentra is Nissan's bet that you'll trade long-term confidence for $5,000 in your pocket today, and honestly, it's not a terrible wager if you know the terms. The current generation looks sharp, rides comfortably, and delivers 40+ mpg, but the CVT's catastrophic 2014-2019 failure history casts a long shadow even though the redesigned unit seems genuinely improved. The 149hp engine wheezes on highway merges, and oil changes require removing 28 belly-pan fasteners with no access door, turning routine maintenance into an expensive ordeal. Buy it if the price gap matters more than resale value and you'll commit to 30k-mile CVT fluid changes; walk if you need a car you can confidently drive past 100k miles without a transmission fund.