The internet loves to tell people small sedans are dead in the United States, but the reality is far from true. Cars like the Honda Civic and the Toyota Corolla are some of the best-selling vehicles in the country. The humble Nissan Sentra—the second-cheapest new car in America, behind the Versa—is among those best-sellers. And it’s just received a huge update.
The 2026 Nissan Sentra gets a new design and a modernized interior, but keeps the same 2.0-liter naturally aspirated four-cylinder powertrain. Most importantly, the Sentra’s dimensions haven’t changed much, which means it’s still a small, economical sedan that’ll have mass appeal. Let’s get into it.
The Sentra’s design reminds us a lot of the updated Nissan Sylphy, the Sentra’s sister car made for China. Unsurprisingly, the proportions are the same. The only real difference is the grille area—as was the case with the last Sentra. For the SR trim, most of the frontal area is blacked-out plastic, with a red nose piece that flows into the hood up top. Go for the top-level SL, and you get more body color in the nose, bringing it closer to its Chinese-market counterpart.
The looks do more than bring the Sentra into the modern era. A lot of these updates have economic benefits, too. From the release:
Nearly every part of the vehicle’s exterior plays a role: the shaping of the trunk and rear fenders helps control air flow to reduce the rear wake behind the vehicle, the wheel opening areas have been reduced and the side-view mirrors are specifically shaped to reduce drag. Underneath, flat floor covers and tire deflectors further enhance aerodynamic efficiency.

Thankfully, the Sentra’s size will remain small. Overall length is up just 0.6 inches to 183.3 inches, while height has grown by just 0.1 inches, to 57.1 inches. The Sentra’s width is exactly the same, at 71.5 inches. The wheelbase is actually shorter, down from 106.8 inches to 106.5 inches. In a world where every car seems to grow by feet with every lifecycle, these are welcome figures.

As nice as the exterior looks, it’s the inside of the Sentra I’m most excited about. The outgoing model’s cabin was acceptable at best, but this one is a huge step up. The design of the doorcards flows into the dashboard nicely, culminating in a standard 12.3-inch touchscreen infotainment display in the middle—a gigantic leap forward from the outgoing car’s eight-inch display.

The steering wheel reminds me of something you’d see on an electric Audi, with its widely shaped airbag module. The gauge cluster screen is a seven-inch unit as standard, but if you opt for any trim above the base model, you get a 12.3-inch unit instead. Similarly, you’ll have to go for the SV, SR, or SL trim to get wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. Choosing the base S trim means you’ll have to go wired.
For what will likely be a very cheap car, some useful features come as standard, including a suite of active safety systems, including adaptive cruise control, emergency braking, pedestrian detection, and forward collision warning. Stuff like a heated steering wheel, a wireless phone charger, and a sliding sunroof are also optional. Go for either of the highest trims, and you even get an eight-speaker Bose stereo system.

For all of the exterior and interior updates, not much has changed under the hood of the 2026 Nissan Sentra. The only powertrain available is the same 2.0-liter naturally aspirated inline-four, making the same 149 horsepower and 146 pound-feet of torque. It gets power to the front wheels via a CVT. The only other updates sound like they’d be undetectable unless you drive the old car and the new one back to back:
Thanks to significant reinforcement of the unibody, the all-new Sentra has 6% greater rigidity than its predecessor. The steering wheel features an enlarged dynamic damper that effectively reduces road vibrations, ensuring a more composed driving experience. New shock absorber valving helps better mute impact harshness from bumps. Finally, engineers reduced the size of body openings throughout the vehicle to help reduce sound levels.

Nissan has yet to release fuel economy figures for the 2026 Sentra, though considering the powertrain hasn’t changed at all, I suspect the new car won’t deviate wildly from the old Sentra’s 32 mpg combined EPA rating. The new Sentra is set to hit dealers later this year, but there’s no pricing available right now. With no big changes under the skin, I don’t think this new car will stray too far from the current Sentra’s $22,785 base price. And that’s a good thing.
Top graphic image: Nissan
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“It gets power to the front wheels via
a CVTSADNESS”There… fixed it for accuracy.
At the very least, they should also offer a hybrid option… using the same powertrain that is in the X-Trail
It’s odd. I don’t like it in red, but I don’t mind it in the silver. In red I think it looks unbalanced, but somehow the silver doesn’t give me the same feeling.
I think it looks better than Elantra and K4. Sedans now should all just be “liftbacks” by default, what with the steep rear rakes. Nissan should just double the transmission service interval, and include it as “free” maintenance.
Keeping the diabolical CVT around instead of a modern torque converter auto is criminal.
For $23K this thing looks pretty good, of course not for enthusiasts. I had a Kicks as a rental about a year ago and it wasn’t terrible. It was a little pokey but otherwise it was comfortable enough and got great mileage. If the Sentra can do that, it’s a fine choice for a lot of people.
I rented a (not a bottom of the barrel trim) 24 or 25 Sentra a few weeks ago and it was surprisingly good. Much better than the Corolla I rented a couple of weeks prior. It was through Alamo and Expedia, and I wasn’t given a choice. It was just a compact.
But it was decent to drive. I wouldn’t hate life driving it. The safety nannies weren’t overly intrusive. It soaked up bumps decently and was pretty quiet. Audio was fine for 68-year-old ears.
The new one? Interior looks ok. Front end isn’t Toyota horrible, but overall, it looks terrible in orange. The silver-ish looks nice. (Not sure about how those headlights are going to work, but ok…)
And I don’t get shortening the wheelbase. That probably is not going to help ride quality. And having to make the necessary changes to the assembly line, especially if you are cash-challenged as what I read about Nissan these days suggests? How does that make sense? But, what do I know? I just rent them. I don’t buy them.
Underwhelming. The interior isn’t actually that much of an upgrade, the press shots just show the top trim. Your rental spec Sentra will still be the plastic mess it always was.
Carry over powertrain with CVT is tragic – the 1.5 from the Rogue is right there to modernize the platform.
Honestly, with the reliability nightmare that the 1.5 is, it’s a good thing it didn’t make it to the Sentra.
The interior is a huge improvement. Is B the new L?
Why can’t Nissan release a hotted-up version of the Sentra? Sure, it’ll never be as good as a Type R, a GTI, or a GR Corolla, but imagine if they stuck a turbo on that two litre and gave it an actual transmission.
Not looking for race-spec track day cars, but a 225hp Sentra would be a fricking hoot.
+1. It’s about time they brought back the Sentra SE-R Spec-V!
https://www.completecar.ie/img/testdrives/12734_large.jpg
Heart of a Renault, face of a Peugeot. How miserable.
Oh, I like that. While it uses the same basic design cues as the upcoming Leaf, it has far nicer proportions. And that looks to be a very nice interior. The quilted seats and blue dash really help to make it feel less dreary than what one would expect from this price point.
I’m just not feeling it. The proportions are odd… there’s a lot of real estate between the wheel arches and the beltline, and even the top-trim wheels look too small as a result. On 16’s with wheel covers it’ll look tragic. The fake rear quarter window is doing a lot of heavy lifting trying to make the greenhouse more appealing and why, WHY is this not a hatchback with that fastback roofline? Last year’s engine and transmission are probably fine for the intended market (Kia did the same with the base Forte/K4) but the fact that the overall platform is just reheated leftovers speaks volumes about where Nissan is right now. At least the top-trim interior seems pretty nice.
Big Sentra Energy – Coming soon to a single-car freeway crash near you.
It’s Big Smalltima Energy
I really hope that sporty red SR comes with a black headliner. The Sentra currently has that oatmeal beige on everything.
Thank The Maker that LEDs headlights are standard now. Welcome to the 21st century, little guy!
Dummy moment: Gear shift has a B on it… Not being much of a new car guy I ashamedly had to google what B is… a Brake mode used for city driving/braking regen especially on EV/hybrids… is this something also used on a newer na vehicles as well or is this hinting at a future hybrid for the sentra?
That’s a sharp eye and a good question.
Checked 2025 Sentra interiors and it appears they’re marked with an L gear so it’s a definite change 🙂
The Sentra could use some sort of hybrid to get MPG closer to Corolla hybrid levels, for those buyers who need/want a hybrid and MPG closer to 50 than 30. Also, Toyota’s hybrids get eCVTs, which are supposed to be better than regular CVTs (from what I’ve heard… I haven’t driven one yet).
Put it in H!
This is fine I guess. I think the current one is a little better looking. The grille is giving more Kia than anything.
If they manage to keep the pricing from inflating too much, these should be a decent value. Most other decently equipped sedans are hovering in the 30k range. I see Sentras regularly listed at 25k. Keep that up, and they’ll sell a ton of them.
Yes, it looks nice… but it’s using a wheezy mill that’s a few decades old now and a sack of crusty rubber bands for a transmission.
Base models are destined to fill out rental fleets country-wide.
Yeah, they showed the two top models but most of what they sell will be the “Prices Starting At” spec.
Powertrain straight out of 2005! Mileage and power sucks, is it MPFI only?
Pros: simple engine, that I think is reliable for long-term ownership (I haven’t researched it yet, but am making this assumption because it’s a regular, naturally-aspirated four… I don’t know if it’s belt or chain, wet belt, direct or port injection, how much of it is plastic, etc…). The price is still good (presumably) for a new car in the year of our Lord 2025/6.
Cons: kind of ugly, overstyled nose (not a deal killer for me), CVT only (not even an eCVT, which would be better), piano black on the interior, no hatch or wagon variant, no true automatic or manual transmission option. No hybrid version (yet).
Still, if I had to choose between this and the Corolla sedan, I’d probably get the Corolla sedan because it offers a good hybrid with an eCVT and (of course) Toyota. But I’d likely prefer a Mazda 3 or CX-30 or Toyota Corolla hatchback instead. If Toyota offered the Corolla wagon here, especially as a hybrid with the eCVT, that would be almost perfect, though I expect it’d cost closer to $30K.
Not awful, and that’s saying a lot for a Nissan these days. I could actually imagine driving one of these new Sentras myownself.
I like that blue dash, really nice choice outside of the brown ones some cars use.
I agree. The car itself ought to be available in more actual colors though. It’s a common affliction these days of course.
I can’t decide if the front end looks of French or Chinese influence.
That grille area looks hideous. Not as bad as Lexus though.
Agreed on both points. 🙂