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.
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.