Here's what you're actually buying: a truck that refuses to quit. Owners routinely push 250k-400k miles on original drivetrains, and the only thing that kills the old ones is frame rust, not mechanical failure. But the 5th gen (2010-2024) makes you pay for that immortality with 16 mpg, a ride like a lumber wagon, and an interior that feels frozen in 2005. You're spending $50k-$60k on something bulletproof but outdated, and unless you're actually using the body-on-frame toughness off-road, a Highlander does the daily-driver job better for less. The brand-new 6th gen modernizes with a turbo-4 and hybrid, but it's too green to trust, dealers are tacking $10k markups onto polarizing styling, and they killed the fold-flat rear seats. If you off-road seriously or want a vehicle that outlives your mortgage, grab a clean 4th gen V8 or late 5th gen and accept the compromises. If you're pavement-only, this is an expensive way to burn gas.
This crossover splits the difference between a lifted Corolla and a downsized RAV4, and that compromise shows most in the powertrain: the hybrid is genuinely efficient (40+ mpg real-world) with enough electric assist to feel adequate, but the gas-only version struggles so badly on highway merges that owners call it stressful. Both suffer from intrusive road noise above 65 mph and rear legroom tight enough that tall passengers complain immediately. The interior feels cheaper than the $28-30k price suggests, though Toyota's reliability reputation and strong resale value soften that blow. Buy the hybrid if you're doing mostly city miles and value predictable ownership costs over driving engagement. Skip it entirely if you road-trip often or need real backseat space, the RAV4 or Honda HR-V are worth the stretch.