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Nissan Rogue vs Tesla Model X

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Nissan Rogue (4.8) and Tesla Model X (5.0) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Nissan RogueTesla Model X
Reliability & Durability 6.7 3.8
User Sentiment 1.1 3.6
Complaint Severity 6.4 7.5
Consensus Strength 1.5 2.3
Value for Money 2.3 2.2
Owner Advocacy 6.7 7.0
Nissan Rogue

Nissan's plastic oil pan cracks during the first oil change so often that dealers now stock replacements and some independent shops refuse to service new Rogues entirely. The 3-cylinder VC-Turbo engine (2022-2024 models) grenades head gaskets before 50,000 miles, requiring full long-block replacements under warranty. Add a recall that requires pulling the entire dashboard to fix an airbag, and you've got a vehicle that spends more time in service bays than most buyers bargained for. The 2021+ redesign brought genuinely nice interiors and strong fuel economy, and some owners rack up 200k+ miles without drama, but those successes feel like lottery wins when mechanics report near-universal oil pan failures and catastrophic engine problems on low-mileage examples. If you're leasing or buying new with plans to trade before warranty expires, the problems stay Nissan's. If you're buying used or keeping it long-term, you're inheriting known failure points with expensive fixes. The CR-V and RAV4 cost more upfront but don't gamble with your oil pan.

Tesla Model X

The Model X is Tesla's swing-for-the-fences family hauler, falcon-wing doors, a windshield that feels like a greenhouse, and Plaid acceleration that pins you to your seat, but it's also the poster child for ambitious engineering meeting real-world entropy. The 2019 battery packs fail catastrophically (sense wire defects forcing $12, 21k replacements), brake lines corrode early from poor placement, and the falcon doors that wow at pickup become alignment headaches years later; add tire bills every 15k miles, half-shaft swaps, and steep depreciation, and you're looking at a high-maintenance relationship. Buy a low-mileage post-2021 refresh if you need three rows and love the Supercharger network enough to budget serious upkeep, but skip the early years entirely, and walk if you want a luxury SUV that just works.