Test Drive: 2021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

2021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

2021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition in Midnight Black Metallic

2015 Audi Q52021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

Class: Premium Large SUV

Miles driven: 595

Fuel used: 56.4 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort C
Power and Performance B+
Fit and Finish A
Fuel Economy D
Value C
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B-
Tall Guy B
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 381-hp 5.7L
Engine Type V8
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels 4WD

Real-world fuel economy: 13.4 mpg

Driving mix: 20% city, 80% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 13/17/14 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Premium gas recommended

Base price: $87,845 (not including $1365 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: None

Price as tested: $89,210

Quick Hits

The great: Build quality, classy interior materials

The good: Smooth power from naturally aspirated V8, sterling reputation for durability and reliability

The not so good: Poor fuel economy, limited cabin space versus class competitors, on-road driving manners can be ponderous

More Land Cruiser price and availability information

John Biel

Ah, the “Heritage Edition.” It’s a badge that automakers have been known to slap on a well-worn nameplate as a marketing device now and again. Sometimes it’s an anniversary present, a recognition of a significant number of years on the market. Other times, though, it is the figurative gold watch that a vehicle gets right before it is retired.

2021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

The Land Cruiser is the priciest–and oldest–vehicle that Toyota sells in the United States. It’s scheduled to be dropped (at least for a while) after the 2021 model year, but the similar Lexus LX 570 will remain available. Toyota has hinted that a new-generation Land Cruiser could be introduced on our shores at some point in the future.

The Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition could be both. This version of the V8-powered body-on-frame premium SUV appeared for 2020 ostensibly to mark 60 years on the U.S. market (though the first sale of a Toyota vehicle named Land Cruiser took place in 1958). However, as the ’21 model year was starting, the Internet was buzzing with an “insider” rumor that the Cruiser would not return to the U.S. for 2022.

As it turns out, the rumor is true… Toyota recently confirmed that the Land Cruiser will be discontinued in America after the 2021 model year, though we wouldn’t be surprised to see a new-generation model appear at some point in the future. And for the time being, the current-generation Land Cruiser is still here in all its hardy and high-riding glory, and the Heritage Edition is still around to celebrate the vehicle’s history.

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2021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

The Land Cruiser’s instrument panel is understated and much more traditional than newer-design rivals, which is a plus for some shoppers. The classy materials and excellent assembly quality also impress.

The 2021 Land Cruiser Heritage Edition costs $89,210 with delivery. The only option for it is a third-row seat—a three-passenger 50/50-split bench with halves that fold up against the sidewalls—that Consumer Guide’s test vehicle did not have. (A rear-seat entertainment system optional for the base model is not available to the Heritage.) The Heritage sells for $2330 more than the standard Land Cruiser, a fee that buys:

  • distinct grille design
  • dark-chrome finish for the grille and other exterior trim
  • bronze-colored 18-inch BBS alloy wheels
  • retro-look “TOYOTA Land Cruiser” C-pillar badges
  • Yakima MegaWarrior roof rack
  • perforated-leather upholstery
  • black headliner and bronze contrast stitching on seats, steering wheel, center stack, console box, and door panels
  • cargo-area cover
  • all-weather floor and cargo mats

Curiously, the Heritage Edition does without a few things that are standard on the base job. Perhaps as a result of not automatically coming with a third-row seat, the Heritage lacks cup holders and LED lighting in the rearmost portion of the truck; the bi-level covered console box does not come with a drink cooler; and there are no running boards.

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Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

The off-road-setting controls are clustered around the shift lever in the center console, and a wireless charging pad is located behind a swing-down door in the center stack of the dashboard. The dual cupholders are on the shallow side.

Otherwise, this dressed-up elder of Toyota showrooms (the current Land Cruiser fundamentally dates to 2007) comes pretty well equipped—as it should for almost 90-large. Seats are heated and ventilated in front and heated in the second row. The driver occupies a 10-way power-adjustable seat with memory settings. Four-zone automatic climate control, heated leather-wrapped steering wheel, power sunroof, Qi wireless charging, rain-sensing windshield wipers, push-button starting, front and rear parking assist, blind-spot monitor, and rear cross-traffic alert are other comforts and conveniences. The Toyota Safety Sense tech bundle adds pre-collision braking, pedestrian detection, lane-departure warning and mitigation, and adaptive cruise control. The audio system is a 14-speaker JBL unit. A 9-inch touchscreen shows audio (including satellite radio), climate, and navigation displays.

The drivetrain starts with a 5.7-liter V8 that’s hooked to an 8-speed automatic transmission. The 4-wheel drive is full time with a 2-speed transfer case and locking center differential. Electronic drive settings keyed to the underlying terrain, crawl control, and trailer sway control are built in.

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Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

The Land Cruiser’s sole engine is a naturally aspirated 5.7-liter V8 paired with an 8-speed automatic transmission. The Heritage Edition comes standard with these bronze-finish, 18-inch BBS-brand wheels.

The 381-horsepower engine is strong and quiet, and its 401 lb-ft of torque help make it capable of an 8100-pound towing capacity. None of that comes cheaply, though. EPA gas-mileage estimates are just 13 mpg in the city, 17 on the highway, and 14 combined. This driver averaged 15.9 mpg from a 64-mile stint with 39 percent city-style driving, but another editor was alarmed to see instantaneous readings that slid below 11 mpg during a long highway drive into the teeth of high winds. This high-riding old-school SUV can seem a little tippy in corners or when braking aggressively. However, bump absorption on well-broken-in urban streets and expressways is pleasingly compliant.

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Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

Retro-look roof-pillar badges and an adventurous-looking Yakima roof rack are standard on the Heritage Edition.

Minus the running boards, step-in posed a bit of a challenge. Once in, however, both rows of the test vehicle were bestowed with comfortable seating and good headroom and legroom. Soft-touch materials were in evidence on much of the dashboard and door panels. Audio inputs were easy to make on the screen, and benefitted from external volume and tuning knobs. Climate controls were more complicated, with repetitive-push temperature settings. Fan speed must be set through the touchscreen.

In addition to the console box previously mentioned, personal-item storage is handled by a large 2-tiered glove box, door pockets with bottle holders, a deep covered bin with power point at the front of the console, and net pouches on the backs of the front seats. Twin covered cup holders are in the console and two more pop out of the pull-down storage armrest in the center of the second-row seats. The Land Cruiser tailgate is in two pieces: a transom-like liftgate and a pull-down tailgate. One benefit to not having the third-row seat is a gain in cargo space because even when folded the seat sections intrude somewhat on the load area. The 60/40 second-row seats rest flat when folded, but leave gaps in the floor.

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Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

Heritage Edition Land Cruisers wear a slightly different grille design than other models. All Land Cruisers have a split-gate design–below the chrome trim is a bottom-hinged tailgate, and above is a top-hinged liftgate.

With its size, fuel consumption, and interior-space limitations, the Land Cruiser really is the kind of nostalgia piece that the Heritage Edition winks at. The Land Cruiser is riding off into the sunset, but Toyota’s luxury brand Lexus makes the LX 570 that’s basically a plusher—and not terribly more expensive—variant of the same vehicle. The company must feel that if you’re going to spend Lexus money then you ought to actually own a Lexus.

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2021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

Toyota’s long-running luxury SUV is something of a status symbol for its excellent build quality, outstanding off-road capabilities and old-school swagger, but its high price tag, subpar fuel economy, and cumbersome on-road driving manners restrict its appeal for average premium-SUV shoppers who don’t need the Cruiser’s all-terrain capabilities.

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Listen to the very entertaining Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast

2021 Toyota Land Cruiser Heritage Edition

Test Drive: 2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Crew Cab

Nissan Titan PRO-4X, 2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X

2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Crew Cab in Red Alert red

2015 Audi Q52020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Crew Cab

Class: Large Pickup

Miles driven: 186

Fuel used: 13.8 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 13.4 mpg

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort C+
Power and Performance A-
Fit and Finish B
Fuel Economy C-
Value C+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide’s impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big Guy B-
Tall Guy A
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. “Big” rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, “Tall” rating based on 6’6″-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs 400-hp 5.6-liter
Engine Type V8
Transmission 9-speed automatic
Drive Wheels 4WD

Driving mix: 60% city, 40% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 15/21/17 (city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $49,790 (not including $1595 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: PRO-4X Utility Package ($2190),PRO-4X Convenience Package ($3390), PRO-4X Moonroof Package ($1490), Protection Package ($390), PRO-4X mud flaps ($285), PRO-4X rugged step boards ($1050)

Price as tested: $60,180

Quick Hits

The great: Gutsy V8 engine; generous list of standard safety equipment

The good: Numerous interior-storage solutions; competitive pricing

The not so good: Ride quality and occupant space don’t match class leaders; limited powertrain options compared to domestic rivals

More Titan price and availability information

John Biel

The buyers of full-sized pickups have six brands from which to choose. That means they have at least six kinds of “off-road specials” to consider if that’s the kind of truck that floats—or maybe tows—their boat.

2020 Titan PRO-4X

The PRO-4X is the off-road-oriented trim level in Nissan’s pickup lineups. The Titan PRO-4X comes standard with features such as a raised suspension with underbody skid plates, Bilstein off-road monotube shocks, and front tow hooks.

Titan is Nissan’s big pickup, and the PRO-4X is its high-riding trail wanderer. Available in “regular” or XD “heavy 1/2-ton” versions, it comes with the kinds of things the off-roaders typically do: ride height raised by two inches; special shock absorbers (Bilstein monotube shocks in this case); deep-sidewall all-terrain tires on dark-finish 18-inch alloy wheels; electronic locking rear differential; dark-painted over fenders; tow hooks; and skid plates under the oil pan, fuel tank, two-speed transfer case, and radiator. Black grille, door handles, mirrors, and tailgate finisher are all typical of the class.

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2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Crew Cab

The Titan’s control layout is straightforward and user-friendly for the most part. The PRO-4X Convenience Package is pricey at $3390, but it adds lots of welcome features, such as leather-upholstered seats with contrast stitching and PRO-4X logos; heated steering wheel with power tilt/telescoping; memory function for the steering wheel, seats, and outside mirrors; remote engine start, 360-degree around-view monitor, and auto-dimming outside mirrors.

Consumer Guide tested a PRO-4X Crew Cab with a starting price of $51,385 with delivery, which is $2200 more than a King Cab (with a shorter cab but longer 6.5-foot bed) while $4190 cheaper than an XD (Crew Cab/long bed only). The following list shows that, compared to other crew cab off-road specials, the test vehicle would be at about the middle of the pack for price. Note that the two cheapest trucks have standard V6s, not a V8 as in the PRO-4X:

  • Ford F-150 Raptor—$57,785
  • Nissan Titan XD PRO-4X—$55,575
  • GMC Sierra 1500 AT4—$54,995
  • Toyota Tundra TRD Pro—$54,525
  • Nissan Titan PRO-4X—$51,385
  • Chevrolet Silverado 1500 LT Trail Boss—$50,395
  • Ram 1500 Rebel—$49,685
  • Chevrolet Silverado 1500 Custom Trail Boss—$43,695

Aside from its mission-specific parts, the PRO-4X is like all the other Titans. The line receives a midcycle freshening for 2020 with revised styling, a single upgraded powerteam, and new safety and convenience features. (Indeed, the added adaptive cruise control, driver-attention warning, and traffic-sign recognition were standard on the test vehicle, and the new dual-pane panoramic sunroof was included as part of a $1490 option group that included ventilated front seats).

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2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Crew Cab

As is typical with full-size crew-cab pickups, there’s plenty of space in the Titan’s back-seat area. Standard on the PRO-4X are 60/40-split flip-up rear seat cushions with underseat storage and a fold-flat load floor.

A 5.6-liter V8 is the sole Titan engine. Output has been increased to an even 400 horsepower, which makes it the most powerful standard-equipment engine in the general half-ton-pickup field. (However, among the off-roaders, Ford’s turbocharged 3.5-liter V6 provides the Raptor with 450 ponies.) It is paired with a new 9-speed automatic transmission.

Considering that CG previously tested a ’20 Titan SL Crew Cab 4×4 with the same powertrain and infotainment system with navigation and 9-inch touchscreen, we will direct you to that review for comments on performance and accommodations. One slight difference is in EPA-estimated combined city/highway fuel mileage. The feds figure the PRO-4X should get 17 mpg, one fewer than other non-XD 4-wheel-drive Titans. Respective city- and highway-specific estimates are the same as the others at 15 and 21 mpg. However, our overall 186-mile test with 60 percent city driving averaged just 13.4 mpg. As configured, the test truck has payload and towing maximums of 1630 and 9210 pounds, respectively.

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2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Crew Cab

The Titan’s standard 5.6-liter Endurance V8 gets a 10-horsepower boost for 2020, to an even 400. Eighteen-inch alloy wheels with a painted dark finish are standard equipment on PRO-4X models.

CG had the chance to drive the PRO-4X off road at the press preview for the new Titans and was impressed with it on rough terrain. This latest test was on the streets and expressways in the Chicago area. Though we’ve found the ride quality of the Nissan truck to trail the higher standards established by other brands, the PRO-4X actually narrows the gap with its direct competitors because, frankly, all of the off-road specials suffer some on pavement due to their tire and suspension changes.

All Titans feature Safety Shield 360 safety and driver-assistance technologies: forward-collision warning with automatic emergency braking and pedestrian detection, blind-spot alert, lane-departure warning, rear cross-traffic alert, automatic high-beam headlights, and rear automatic braking. The tested truck hit $60,180 with plenty of add-ons designed to make roughing it less rough. Among them were leather seats—heated front and rear—with orange contrast stitching and PRO-4X-label embroidery, Fender 10-speaker audio, and heated steering wheel. There’s nothing innovative about the cargo bed, but the tester was equipped with the extra-cost “Utili-Track” system for securing cargo, electronic locking tailgate, and bed step that tucks up under the bumper when not in use. A set of running boards was added to assist entries and exits.

Titan may lag behind other large pickups in terms of refinement and features, but with the reasonably priced PRO-4X it’s not being left behind where the road ends and the trail starts.

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2020 Titan PRO-4X

Though the Nissan Titan can’t match its domestic competition in terms of features, powertrain choices, or all-around refinement, its standard V8 delivers gutsy power, and the PRO-4x model offers extra off-road capability.

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2020 Nissan Titan PRO-4X Gallery

Nissan Titan PRO-4X

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