2026 Toyota RAV4 Limited AWD

Toyota’s continuous improvement ethos means that it does mess with success—it makes it better

By Gary S. Vasilash

The first Toyota hybrid, the Prius, was introduced in the US market in 2000.

In terms of chronological time, that’s a quarter century of putting electrified vehicles on the road.

Initially that road was somewhat bumpy as while that first-gen model had some serious fans, as is the case with anything with fans, there were those who weren’t supporters. There was all sorts of grumbling about how inefficient it is to have two propulsion systems and how that was something that Toyota simply could not do. (Many of these people were the same ones who grumbled about a decade before, when Lexus was introduced: it was impossible for the LS 400 to exist with a starting price of about $35,000—Detroit had years and years of Cadillacs and Lincolns so they knew that was the case.)

But Toyota continued with the Prius, generation after generation, and in addition it began putting hybrids into other models in the Toyota showroom (as well as the Lexus facilities).

2026 Toyota RAV4 Limited. (Images: Toyota)

And it made a tremendous statement with the model year 2025 Camry, offering it only as a hybrid. Consider: it has been the best-selling car in the US for decades (with 2025 sales it has held the crown for 24 consecutive years) and Toyota had sufficient confidence in not only the hybrid tech but the market acceptance to make that switch.

Although Toyota sells a lot of Camrys—through the third quarter of 2025, 234,426—it sells a tremendous number of RAV4 crossovers:

Through Q3 2025: 358,134.

To put that in perspective, the combined sales through Q3 of the Ford Bronco Sport (103,261), Escape (114,728), and Bronco (109,921) are fewer than the RAV4 sales: 327,910.

Or the number of Chevy Equinoxes sold through Q3 (203,583) can be added to the Ford Escape sales during the same period (114,728), and that sum, 318,311, is 39,823 units shy of the RAV4 sales.

All of which is to say that the RAV4 is an awfully popular vehicle.

So what did Toyota do for the sixth-generation, all-new 2026 RAV4?

It decided every model on offer—LE, XLE Premium, Limited, Woodland, SE, XSE, GR SPORT—is powered by a hybrid system: a 183-hp four that is supplemented by electric motor(s) such that in front-drive setups there is a total 226 hp and for AWD 236 hp.*

Those models fit in three categories: “Core,” “Rugged” and “Sport.” The Woodland is the “Rugged,” the SE, XSE and GR SPORT are the “Sport,” and the remaining are “Core.”

While it might be imagined that the “Core” models, like the Limited driven for this, would be less visually rugged than, say, the Woodland, on a macro view, the exterior design of the RAV4 is more truck-like than, say, the fourth-generation RAV4—which was the first to offer a hybrid (model year 2016).

All of the 2026 models have a chiseled look.

A purposeful interior.

And that chiseled approach carries into the cabin. While there is an extensive use of polymer-based materials (e.g., while the heated steering wheel is leather-trimmed and the armrests are, too, the front seats are heated and ventilated SofTex, a synthetic leather), the execution is such that it doesn’t look “plasticky,” but the materials are used to their advantage so they look and feel (i.e., there are soft-touch surfaces were one is likely to touch) appropriate.

One nice touch is a slot in the instrument panel that contains two Qi-compatible wireless charging surfaces so the driver and the passenger each have one. (There are also two 45-W USB C ports in the front, as well as a center console media USB-C port, and two 15-W USB-C charging ports in the rear.)

There is a 12.9-inch infotainment screen that runs the Toyota Audio Multimedia system developed by Toyota’s Plano, Texas-based Connected Technology team.

There is also a 12.3-inch LCD-based digital gauge cluster. (The Limited trim comes with a head-up display, too.)

Yes, there are buttons for a variety of functions, like for the front defroster (something necessary to get to quickly on a Michigan winter morning), and a (smallish) knob for the audio.

The vehicle provides 98.9 cubic feet of passenger room and 70.4 cubic feet (second row folded) for cargo.

Which brings me back to the hybrid powertrain.

In this AWD model the fuel economy numbers are 44 mpg city, 39 mpg highway, and 42 mpg combined. Which is certainly nice. (As electric vehicles are always touting range, here’s something to consider: the RAV4 has a 14.5-gallon gas tank. If you drove it to empty, based on the combined range you’d go 609 miles. Yes, there are emissions involved. But fewer than if you were to drive a non-hybrid to empty.)

But the thing is, the fifth-generation Toyota Hybrid System used in the RAV4 is transparent. It just works.

Were I to be working in a dealership I might skip using the word “hybrid” and just say, “This RAV4 gets great gas mileage on regular fuel” and leave it at that.

One of the reasons the original Prius had some problems was because people wanted to know where you plugged it in. (“What do you mean it just uses gas? How do those motor-generator things get power?”)

I suspect there are more than a few people who stay away from hybrids because they can’t figure out how they work. (“Will I be stranded on the side of the road when the battery runs down?”)

So leave it at: this is a powertrain that Toyota has spent 25 years working on and it just works.

With the RAV4 it is wrapped in a nice package. Period.

*There is also a plug-in hybrid RAV4, which has a combined output of 324 hp.

Toyota Unveils Sixth-Gen RAV4

The market leader gets a wider suite of offerings. And hybrids across the board. . . .

By Gary S. Vasilash

A thing about the Toyota RAV4 is that when the company accurately describes it as “America’s best-selling compact SUV” it isn’t entirely clear just how much of a best selling compact SUV it is.

In 2024 Toyota delivered 475,193 RAV4s in the U.S. market

In the same period, the combined number of Chevy Equinoxes (207,730) and Ford Escapes (146,859) is 359,589. Well below the RAV4 number.

So Toyota really has something going for it, and for the sixth generation of the RAV4 it is, on the one hand, doing something expected, but on the other, somewhat unexpected.

As for the expected part, it is expanding the offerings within the marque.

That is, there are three styles:

  1. Core
  2. Rugged
  3. Sport

Then within the styles it is offering things like the Woodland trim (Rugged) and GR Sport (Sport).

The unexpected part—well, maybe not entirely unexpected as this is, after all, Toyota, the company that offers a model that is still synonymous with “hybrid”: Prius—it is offering the 2026 RAV4 as a hybrid-only vehicle.

But there are two variants of that, two, either a straight-up hybrid or a plug-in.

And, of course, front-wheel or all-wheel drive (AWD) variants are available.

The new RAV4 trio–Sport (the red one), Rugged (the left) and Core (in the rear—for 2026. (Image: Toyota)

Some Numbers

The hybrid versions produce 236 hp for the AWD models (up from 219 hp in the current generation system). There hadn’t been a front-drive RAV4 hybrid previously available so the comparison has to be with the ICE-only model: the hybrid produces 226 hp, whereas the current gen gas-only model produces 203 hp.

The plug-in version, AWD only, has an output of 320 hp. That’s up from the current 302 hp.

The all-electric driving range is 50 miles, up from the current 42 miles.

The PHEV system in the XSE trim and the Woodland feature DC fast charging: from 10 to 80% in ~30 minutes.

Both hybrid systems include a 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine.

Some Platform Mates

The first-gen RAV4 in the U.S.—model year 1996—shared a platform with the Corolla.

This sixth-gen RAV4 has literally gone up in the world, as it is based on the TNGA-K platform, which also underpins vehicles including the Camry, Highlander, and Crown.

David Christ, group vp and general manager, Toyota Div., TMNA—a virtual one at the Cosm Dallas—introducing the 2026 RAV4. As you can see, they’ve sold a lot of the vehicles over the years. (Image: gsv)

Woven

Toyota has a company named Woven by Toyota.

Woven is undertaking some huge projects, like the creation of Woven City, a municipal testbed in Japan for things ranging from autonomous mobility to advanced logistics for goods and services.

No less notable but certainly on a smaller scale, Woven personnel have developed “Arene,” a software development program for vehicles. It facilitates things like advanced safety, connectivity and multimedia features. It allows Toyota and its suppliers to develop software that can be readily integrated into vehicles.

As the company describes it:

“Arene is built on the concept of kaizen, or continuous improvement. Rather than traditional linear development, the Arene platform is designed to make use of the latest iterative development methodologies. And Arene’s vehicle data capabilities allow these improvements to continue after-market based on in-market insights, extending the value of the vehicle.”

So it is not one-and-done.

There is the wherewithal for additions.

The 2026 RAV4 is the first vehicle deploying Arene.

A Thought

Now there will be a set of RAV4s for varying tastes: straightforward, utile and sporty.

One could argue that the Ford Escape sales numbers in 2024 were as low as they were because some customers opted for the Ford Bronco Sport, which is based on the Escape platform. That would add 124,701 units to the 146,859, which is a solid 271,560, but still far south of the 475,193 of the RAV4. . .and now there is something like the RAV4 Woodland.

And what other company is offering—in the mainstream market—a sporty crossover like the GR SPORT?

Although there are certainly externalities—like the tariffs—that could completely distort things, but odds are that the RAV4 is going to stay at the top of shopping lists in U.S. households with this sixth generation.

Hybridized CUVs Matter

By Gary S. Vasilash

Here’s a fun fact: the Honda CR-V hybrid was the best-selling hybrid vehicle, bar none, in the U.S. market in 2023.

197,317 were delivered.

Honda CR-V Hybrid under its skin. (Image: Honda)

Meanwhile, over at Toyota, 161,125 RAV4 Hybrids were sold and an additional 26,073 RAV4 Primes, the plug-in hybrid, for a total of 187,198 hybrids.

GM has zero hybrids.

Ford has hybrid versions of the Escape, Maverick, Explorer, and F-150.

Combined, it delivered 133,743 hybrids.*

Ford sold 140,986 Escapes in 2023. That’s with all powertrain options.

Fewer than the Honda and Toyota hybrids.

Chevy sold 212,701 Equinoxes—none of which are electrified, and not all that many more than the CR-V hybrid (15,384, non-trivial, but when you take into account that Honda sold 361,457 CR-Vs in 2023, well. . . ).

Clearly, compact CUV hybrids are appealing.

Surprising GM is ignoring the market and Ford probably needs to ramp up its output.

Dodge has a hybrid version of the Hornet available, a crossover that launched last Spring, so its efforts are still nacent in this space. It sold a total 9,314 Hornets in 2023, of which 3,591 were the hybrid version, so there’s evidently some traction.

(Jeep has the Wrangler 4xe plug-in and the Grand Cherokee 4xe plug-in, of which it sold 67,429 and 45,684, respectively. Neither, of course, is likely cross-shopped with a CR-V or RAV4, but still nice numbers.)

*Here’s a big number–the electrified Toyotas sold in 2023: 565,800. With the exceptions of 2,737 Mirai fuel cell electric vehicles and 9,329 bZ4X BEVs, all hybrids.