Standard AWD and a quiet, roomy cabin make this sedan a natural for snow-belt commuters who value traction over thrills. The 2010-2014 3.6R with its traditional automatic remains the enthusiast pick, real power, no CVT drama, but those are aging out fast. The 2015+ CVT models trade driving pleasure for efficiency and tech, and some owners report shuddering, solenoid replacements around 100k miles, and a generally uninspiring feel behind the wheel. If you need a midsize that handles winter without fuss and racks up miles quietly, it delivers. But driving enthusiasts should look elsewhere, and anyone buying used should know Subaru's discontinuing it after 2025, which may complicate long-term parts availability.
If boring were an Olympic sport, the Camry would take gold, and then run another 300,000 miles without needing a tune-up. This is transportation engineered by people who think 'excitement' means finding a gas station with clean restrooms, and owners love it precisely for that. The 2025 redesign went hybrid-only with 52 mpg and genuinely improved looks, but the real story is decades of owners pushing these past a quarter-million miles on oil changes and prayers. Steering's vague, the driving feel's about as engaging as oatmeal, and you'll pay more than an Accord for the privilege. But if you want a car that starts every morning for fifteen years without drama, and you're willing to trade fun for that kind of peace, this is still the safest bet in the class.