← Back to Verdikt

Toyota Camry vs Toyota Prius

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Toyota Camry (7.3) and Toyota Prius (7.4) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 CamryPrius
Reliability & Durability 8.2 8.2
User Sentiment 5.9 8.1
Complaint Severity 7.7 7.7
Consensus Strength 3.0 3.8
Value for Money 5.1 2.0
Owner Advocacy 8.6 8.8
Toyota Camry

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.

Toyota Prius

For twenty years, the Prius was the car everyone respected but nobody wanted to be seen in, reliable as gravity, efficient as physics allows, and styled like a melted bar of soap. The 2023 redesign finally fixed the looks, added genuine driving enjoyment, and turned it into something you might actually want. The problem is dealer greed: markups are pushing new models to $40k-$50k, which is lunacy for what should be a $30k-$36k hybrid. At MSRP, the current Prius is the best version Toyota's ever built. At dealer markup prices, walk next door and buy the Camry Hybrid, it's quieter, roomier, and actually available at reasonable prices. If you're shopping used, Gen 2 models are bulletproof appliances that'll outlive your mortgage.