Home » A New 2026 Chevy Trax Is Better Than A Nice Used Car And Probably Cheaper

A New 2026 Chevy Trax Is Better Than A Nice Used Car And Probably Cheaper

Chevy Trax Review Ts3

I did a remarkable thing the other day. I drove a press car that was darn near close to a base trim. I almost didn’t believe it when I glanced at the Monroney–the pedantic journalist name for a window sticker–and saw only a few options. That’s rare. Even better, one of the extras on this 2026 Chevrolet Trax 1LT was an inviting shade of blue metallic paint. Good colors are always worth the money.

A common complaint is that there are no great affordable new cars. That’s maybe true. There are, however, plenty of good, affordable new cars. The Chevy Trax is possibly the goodest of all of them. It’s not that it does anything in such a superior way that it distances itself from the competition. There’s no secret here. It’s just great packaging, with most of the stuff, at what’s now an excellent price.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

My biggest debate when I drive cars in this price bracket is whether or not the potential buyer would be better off with a good certified used car. In a rational market, that would probably be true more often than not. Currently, I don’t think that’s the case. I love data, so let’s look at data.

What Can You Actually Get In An Affordable Small ‘Crossover’ These Days?

Used Car Price Chart Large

The average used-vehicle listing price in the United States is $25,287, according to Cox Automotive. As you can see in the graph above, the pandemic-induced supply crunch and the collapse in leasing led to huge price increases in 2022 and 2023. The market is a little above where it was in 2024, which is not a good sign if you’re hoping to get a low-mileage, reliable used car, but it’s at least better than 2022-23.

The Trax I reviewed was almost perfectly priced at the level of the average used car, and in considering what I’d maybe buy instead, I thought of my Honda CR-V Hybrid. That’s a 2025 model and, truth be told, it’s much better than a new Trax. It’s also a class above the Trax, and it turns out, the prices aren’t even close. If I wanted to find a used CR-V Hybrid on Carvana, I’d have to go down to at least 2021 to acquire one for a price anywhere near the Chevy. That’s terrible. If you’re buying a used car, you’re almost certainly getting worse financing, which means you should really be shopping for something 10% cheaper than your budget for a new car.

I guess it’s comforting to see that my CR-V is somehow worth more than what I paid for it. That’s comforting to me. That’s not much consolation for someone in the market who wants to spend about $25-$27,000 and has to move real humans. Want to feel better? The Chevy Trax exists, and while it’s a little more expensive than it used to be, it’s still an excellent value.

2026 Chevy Trax 7 Large

If you had a certain level of flexibility and didn’t want a sedan, the $25-$30k space used to have some interesting options. That’s back when the hybrid Maverick XLT was less than $30k. It’s much harder to find an equivalent these days. An Impreza Sport gets you a little more legroom up front, a little less in back, as well as standard all-wheel drive. But that’s $29,690 out the door if you want blind-spot detection and some other basic safety features. It’s also a car. There’s the Nissan Kicks, which I’ve also reviewed recently and will write about soon, but that gets pricey rather quickly.

The non-hybrid Corolla Cross and HR-V are both options, and will almost certainly have higher resale value on the other end. That’s probably true of the Corolla Hatchback as well, if you’re willing to entertain a smaller car. The challenge is actually getting one. You may be able to find a Corolla Cross L, but you’re likely not finding one at a price that’s below a better-equipped Trax. Also, the base Corolla Cross is a lot like the base Honda HR-V in that both are hamstrung by mediocre CVTs and an average-at-best driving experience. The hybrid Corolla Cross solves a lot of these problems and offers better fuel economy, but that’s at least a $30,000 purchase.

You Get A Lot Of Car For The Money

2026 Chevy Trax 8 Large

Thomas did a full review of the Trax a couple of years ago, and, functionally, it’s the same car. What’s changed is the environment we live in these days. While the Trax is more expensive than it used to be, plenty of the cars in this price bracket have just disappeared. The Kia Soul is on the way out, and the Jeep Renegade has been gone for years. Even delightful weirdos like the Fiat 500X and Fiat 500L have vanished.

The Trax I had, in LT trim, started at $23,100 before a $1,395 destination charge. The “Driver Confidence” package was added, which, for $795, adds lane change and blindspot alert, adaptive cruise control, rear cross traffic alert, and rear park assist. That’s worth it just for the adaptive cruise control. For another $595, the “LT Convenience Package” brought heated seats, a heated steering wheel, keyless entry, and heated power mirrors. Again, a reasonable charge for those niceties.  The only other option was $395 for the Marina Blue Metallic paint, which I support. Fully kitted out and delivered, that’s $26,280. Not bad.

2026 Chevy Trax 10 Large

It’s an attractive crossover that looks bigger and nicer than it is. For some reason, GM now sells the also South Korean-built Trailblazer as the AWD subcompact crossover, and this as the FWD-only version. The Trailblazer looks slightly off to me, like a little metallic turd wearing a baseball cap. The Trax is far more handsome, better proportioned, and comes with these excellent 17-inch aluminum wheels.

The money and effort spent on the Trax are mostly in places you care about, like these cleverly patterned seats.

2026 Chevy Trax 15 Large

They’re just nice, comfortable seats with small triangles that get slightly smaller to give them some visual texture.

2026 Chevy Trax 18 Large

The interior isn’t all soft-touch plastics and contrasting fake wood as you’d find on a luxury car. There are just honest, smooth plastic surfaces with enough angularity and little details to not feel cheap or entry-level. There’s no punishment here for getting something that isn’t the most expensive car on the lot.

2026 Chevy Trax 13 Large

And the little matching pops of color on the vents are a nice touch.

2026 Chevy Trax 16 Large

The Trax also has something a lot of more expensive crossovers lack: Physical controls!

2026 Chevy Trax 14 Large

This little panel of buttons and knobs already makes the Trax a superior automobile, and these particular controls are extremely intuitive to use. Wild, right?

The 11-inch infotainment display offers up wireless Android Auto and Apple CarPlay, which is all any reasonable human being wants, and it works with no noticeable lag or other issues found on many luxury cars these days. Is the six-speaker audio system going to make you feel like you’re at the Dokken concert in the front row? Nope. Just make the volume louder, and you’ll be fine.

Here Is The Funniest Feature On This Car

2026 Chevy Trax 3 Large

On the left are my totally average, easy-to-use Honda keys. On the right are the Chevy Trax keys. This is the keyfob equivalent of one of those cell phones for elderly people who don’t want a fancy smartphone. This is a Jitterbug-ass remote. If VTech ever sold a real car, this is what the key fob would look like. You know what? I like it. I don’t need a complex remote. I just want something that works.

This Is Maybe The Smallest Car In America That Doesn’t Feel Small

2026 Chevy Trax 2 Large

Driving around in the Trax, I didn’t get the feeling I sometimes have in traffic, where I start to wonder if I wouldn’t prefer just a little bit more mass. I liked the GR Corolla I had, but it felt small. A Miata, too, feels small and delicate when surrounded by massive SUVs.

I realize I should be more evolved than this. I often tell people they don’t need a crossover and would be happier with a small hatchback, but then I turned around and bought a decent-sized crossover. The size, the space, and the convenience of a large loading hatch at about knee height are real considerations.

2026 Chevy Trax 4 Large

No one in my family thought the car was small or ever remarked on the size, other than to acknowledge that there was plenty of room for our stuff. Behind the rear seats, there are 25.6 cubic feet of space, which is enough for a small family in most situations.

It’s Weak In All The Places Every Other Car In This Class Is Weak

2026 Chevy Trax 17 Large

I will level with you: None of these cars is great to drive. It used to be you could buy a Honda Civic Si or even a Mazda Protege for something that felt like an appropriate equivalent for the time. Those cars came with manual transmissions, were delightfully light, and were just remarkably fun to drive.

The Trax has a 1.2-liter turbo inline-three that makes 137 horsepower and 162 lb-ft of torque. It is not tuned for power; it is tuned for efficiency, and returns a reasonable 28 MPG on the EPA city test cycle and 32 MPG on the highway test. That’s pretty good for a non-hybrid. It is neither noticeably fast nor, thankfully, noticeably slow. (It’s worth mentioning that there is a lawsuit related to this engine claiming that it might catastrophically fail, although nothing has been proven yet.) The ride is neither too soft nor too harsh, the electronic power steering is communicative enough, and the brakes feel better than what you’d find on some nicer crossovers.

If there’s one place where the Trax shines relative to the competition, it’s in its transmission, which is a six-speed traditional automatic instead of a CVT. It goes a long way to differentiating the Trax in a class where most cars follow the same formula and can’t escape CVT harshness.

You Can Find Cheap Ones All Day, Every Day

2026 Chevy Trax 7 Large

If the past few years have taught us anything, it’s that an automaker might say it builds a cheap car, but it might not be possible to find that cheap trim for sale. Do you want a Trax LT similar to the one I drove? There are plenty out there advertised for a number below the already reasonable MSRP.

Badge snobbery might tell you that an equivalent Honda or Toyota is better, but my experience driving the other cars in the class for a week doesn’t support that bias. The Chevy is just as good and has a real transmission that makes driving it a little less annoying.

My original thesis is that this is better than most used cars you could get in this class, and I’ve gone back to Carvana to double-check this, and I stand by it (I recognize you might get a better deal from a private party, but Carvana is at least a consistent source of comparable cars). Something close might be this $25,000 Tuscon SEL with under 32,000 miles. There’s probably still some warranty left there, so I’d consider it.

A new Trax comes with a built-in warranty and the peace of mind of knowing every mile is a mile you put on it. What was once an alright deal has become an even better one without the car significantly changing at all.  It’s just quietly stayed a good car while its competition has either gotten way more expensive or ceased to exist.

Test my theory, can you find something that’s slightly used and roughly in this class that you’d rather have? Put a link in the comments.

All photos by the author unless otherwise noted

 

 

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Shinynugget
Shinynugget
1 month ago

Better on paper doesn’t always mean better to own. I’d treat this like most Hyundai/Kia models, fine to won while under warranty. After that…

AircooleDrew
AircooleDrew
1 month ago

I just spent a week in one of these as a rental. It was.. okay. I would personally still rather buy a nice used car if my budget was firmly 25k. Also, my sister in law’s Trax shat a turbo at 50k miles, so I don’t exactly see these as reliable. YMMV

BlownGP
BlownGP
1 month ago
Reply to  AircooleDrew

I read recently about those turbo problems. I think most say the 1.3L is way more reliable than the 1.2L.

Phil
Phil
1 month ago

If the Trax can last through 10 solid years of Normal Guy car use and abuse without creating big expensive problems, then I’d call this vehicle a home run. It looks good inside and out, they were wise to skip AWD, and it provides admirable amount of day-to-day utility for the price. I see the Trax everywhere now.

I view this is a very risk-averse price point, however, so if $24K was the top of my car buying budget I’d give an LE Corolla a very hard look. That’s not an engine you have to worry about, resale is assured, it’s more powerful, and it gets much better fuel economy. Probably worth giving up some features for.

Or if you like GM maybe pick up a lightly used Malibu. There’s a lot of 2024s and 2025s out there with <20K miles for <$20K. Hideously uncompetitive car when new, but at those prices compared to a Trax it starts looking pretty good.

Last edited 1 month ago by Phil
Horizontally Opposed
Member
Horizontally Opposed
1 month ago

All good stuff and really glad it exists.

Joe The Drummer
Joe The Drummer
1 month ago

“This little panel of buttons and knobs already makes the Trax a superior automobile, and these particular controls are extremely intuitive to use. Wild, right?”

Yes it does, and yes it is. It amazes me how much happier I am these days when I see less “technological advancement” in a new car, and not more. That shark was jumped long ago. I have the same complaint about interior controls in new or late model cars that my keyboard player friend had about synthesizers back in the early 90s: PUT THE DAMN KNOBS BACK ON IT!

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago

Nice review Matt! After having one for a work rental in February, I’m trying to get my mom to get a base one, with the real key.
And a warranty from a new car is great. Unless you’re booting the crap out of it all the time in boost, it’s going to be fine.
I’m with you, it’s a relative bargain these days.
The wet belt complaints have not manifested yet on this platform in the real world.
Internet people seemingly love to whine about everything.
Solid review- you the man

Palmetto Ranger
Palmetto Ranger
1 month ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

I used to scoff at push to start as a pointless tech upgrade, but after going from a push start vehicle back to one with a physical key I have to admit that I got really tired of the keys constantly dragging across the top of my knee. I am tall and there was really no sitting position in my truck where I could avoid the keys completely. The only option would be to have the truck key separate from the other things I need to keep on a key ring (house keys, work fob, etc.), which is just a different kind of annoying that does not really improve the situation. I just handed off the truck to my teenage son and am happy to be back in a vehicle with push start.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago

Gotcha, makes sense. In our family fleet we have 2 button, 3 key. Being in my 40s I’ve been driving mostly key vehicles till the last 5ish years.
I’m so used to shutting off the vehicle, pulling out the key, and hopping out.

On accident, I often leave the fob in the truck because it’s up on the dash because its uncomfortable in my pocket. This is definitely a 1st world problem.

Its cause my jeans are so tight they make Adrian Clarke’s skinny jeans look like JNCO jeans from 1997

Palmetto Ranger
Palmetto Ranger
1 month ago
Reply to  CTSVmkeLS6

You were able to go beyond Adrian levels of skinny jeans without serious loss of blood flow to your lower legs?

The key thing would be mitigated for me if truck manufacturers would go back to column shifters and free up space to let your knee go to the right and not be right under the ignition all the time.

CTSVmkeLS6
CTSVmkeLS6
1 month ago

Ahh yes the column shifter – I’m with you! I really dislike the rotating knob in my RAM 1500. Its so dumb. If you want to put the truck in neutral when its off, you have to pull a nylon cord behind a mystery panel. Like why do this?!?

Kidding on the pants! 34″ x 34″ straight leg since 1996 here

M SV
M SV
1 month ago

Ive looked at them a few times because they are one of the cheapest new cars you can get. I can’t help but think about 6 years ago they could be had for 10 to $12k. The buick version tends to cost almost the same. I see a fair amount of those around with younger people driving them.

Rick Garcia
Member
Rick Garcia
1 month ago

All Ferraris are autos, Chrysler only makes a minivan and Chevy makes a good small. The world has gone mad. Mad I tell you!

Melanie Fuhrman
Member
Melanie Fuhrman
1 month ago

Honestly, these do seem like quite good value for the money. The fact that one can get heated seats and steering wheel or adaptive cruise on the 2nd cheapest trim of Chevy’s cheapest car is pretty crazy. And being GM, they tend to offer pretty heavy discounts. I rolled through a local Chevy dealership on President’s day (they had just taken delivery of a Brightdrop EV cargo van, which is a super rare spot in a rural town and I wanted to take a picture) and they had these marked down 2-2.5 grand.

JL Simmons
Member
JL Simmons
1 month ago

I bought a used 2020 VW GTI SE with 38k miles for about $24,000. Is it in the same class as the Chevy Trax? No. They both are hatchbacks with FWD with turbocharged engines though. They both have decent cargo space for the exterior dimensions: 25 vs 22 cubes. Adults ride without complaint in the rear seats. My car has close to 100hp advantage (routed through a 6 speed manual), leather, a panoramic sunroof, and, oh…. personality. While the Trax does come with a warranty and new car smell.. I’m confident I made the right choice.

No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
Member
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
1 month ago
Reply to  JL Simmons

Ah, first VW?

JL Simmons
Member
JL Simmons
1 month ago

My first vw (and 1st car) was a 1969 Beetle I paid $800 for. When that proved too unreliable (shocking, right?) I bought a 1989 Jetta. I’ve always wanted a Golf though and figured this was about the last chance before manual transmissions disappear for good, so I took the plunge with the GTI. Have not been disappointed. 🙂

No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
Member
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
1 month ago
Reply to  JL Simmons

I absolutely loved mine when I wasn’t hating it. All the best!

JL Simmons
Member
JL Simmons
1 month ago

Haha! What’s your history with VWs?

No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
Member
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
1 month ago
Reply to  JL Simmons

I had a stage 1-tuned MKV. It was quick. But the ignition (as in where the key goes) failed to where the car wouldn’t turn off. Then it wouldn’t turn back on after I pulled the fuse. The number of youtube fix-it videos indicate it is a normal problem. It had a persistent slow coolant leak that I couldn’t fix. Then the intake started throwing errors. I replaced it once and vowed to sell if I had to do it again. When those errors showed up in a few months I ditched it.

Still kinda regret it, but working on anything is more fun than working on that thing.

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
1 month ago

These are selling like gangbusters here, they’re everywhere. They seem like a great value. And if you remember what the last Trax was like? Yeesh. What a sad fuck that was.

There’s a lot of talk here on reliability and while GM probably doesn’t deserve the benefit of the doubt here, I’m not going to immediately write them off. And while many here assume these folks should buy a used Toyota instead, that’s what my brother did, and so far his RAV4 Hybrid has been sort of a POS.

Dodsworth
Member
Dodsworth
1 month ago

I could take one kitted out exactly this way, right down to those 17 inch wheels. I admit I’m leary of the wet timing belt but at this point it’s hard to find a modern engine that does’t have some kind of problem. You pays your money and you takes your chances. It never changes.

Younork
Younork
1 month ago

I know several people who are shopping in the $25k range, and I’m not envious of them at all. This Trax strikes me as remarkably reminiscent of the boots theory of economics. Yes, you get out the door with a brand new car for $26k and change. But there’s no way this 3-cylinder won’t have long term maintenance issues. And 30 mpg is fine. But if you spend just a little more and get into a Honda or Toyota hybrid you’ll be pushing 50 mpg. But that’s the issue, spending that little bit more isn’t feasible for many people. So they buy this, and then get stuck upside down when the engine spontaneously disassembles itself.

I’m sorry to dog on this affordable car, because it seems perfectly suitable for many, many people. That’s now though. But in 5 years? 10 years? How many will you see on the road?

That Guy with the Sunbird
Member
That Guy with the Sunbird
1 month ago
Reply to  Younork

This is how I feel. The turbo 3-cylinder and the wet timing belt give me huge pause. 🙁

My friend just bought a Trax just like this one for his small business, except in white. He let me drive it and I found it to be a nice little appliance, but not something I’d trust long term – and I’ve had my current car for ten years – so that’s applicable.

If I was in the $25k range, I’d get a few-years-old or even a CPO Mazda CX-5 and call it a day. The MPG out of this turbo 3-cylinder is a little disappointing in that my 2016 Mazda6 with a 2.5 4-cylinder and 50+ more horsepower does better, but I imagine the 3-cylinder has to stay in boost quite a bit to keep up with traffic. Which would naturally affect gas mileage.

AircooleDrew
AircooleDrew
1 month ago
Reply to  Younork

My sister-in-law’s Trax ate a turbo at 50k miles. I would be leery of these little high-strung 3-cylinders in the long term. I’d rather have a larger, lazy n/a 4-cylinder if I had a choice.

*Jason*
*Jason*
1 month ago
Reply to  Younork

The problem is that a Honda or Toyota hybrid isn’t just a little bit more. The Trax starts at $21,700. The Corolla hybrid starts at $24,774 and the Civic Hybrid at $29,395. $3,000 or $6,000 isn’t a little bit for people shopping at the very bottom end of the new car range.

You can get a regular gas Corolla for Trax money but it is much smaller car. 9 cu ft less passenger room and 12 cu ft less cargo room.

I’ve driven the Trax and Trailblazer as rentals. They drive fine, they are roomy inside and the higher seating is very noticeable in traffic vs a compact sedans like the Corolla. Both the Trax and Trailblazer easily beat the EPA highway rating in mixed suburban driving returning 33 to 35 mpg. (IF you leave the stop / start on which also works great)

Last edited 1 month ago by *Jason*
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
Member
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
1 month ago
Reply to  *Jason*

If you need new and are shopping the bottom end of the market then a Trax can be a great choice. But these are not the cars to buy out of warranty. THAT end of the market should stick to Corollas, size difference be damned.

*Jason*
*Jason*
1 month ago

We were talking about new cars. Personally I’m a used car fan but I know lots of people that aren’t.

They buy new and trade when powertrain warranty expires. They would rather pay more overall to get a fixed monthly payment than pay less but risk paying $1,000 or more repairs out of pocket.

Anyway, after having both a Trax and a Trailblazer as a rental for a week or more at a time I can see why people buy them. Especially compared to something like a Corolla.

No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
Member
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
1 month ago
Reply to  *Jason*

Wife had a ‘rolla and we still have a Vibe in the fleet so I am partial.

*Jason*
*Jason*
1 month ago

If only we had the Corolla Wagon Hybrid sold in Europe…

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago

So buy the cheapest model in the Chevy/GM lineup and you get to keep your CarPlay. Buy a $75k Cadillac and no CarPlay for you?

That Guy with the Sunbird
Member
That Guy with the Sunbird
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

Correct! At least for now. Mary Barra said they’re gradually phasing out CarPlay over their whole lineup.

Ppnw
Member
Ppnw
1 month ago

I think this segment/type of car (basic transportation) is where electrification will make the biggest difference once costs catch up.

As you point out, the weak point of these cars is always the basic, unrefined, slow powertrain.

Making a Trax electric is way more transformational to the driving experience than something already relatively premium – where refinement and lack power aren’t issues to begin with.

MDMK
MDMK
1 month ago

A new Chevy Trax may be better than a nice used car, but good luck finding a nice used Chevy Trax.

No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
Member
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
1 month ago
Reply to  MDMK

underrated comment.

Suss6052
Suss6052
1 month ago

What a turd of an engine. No one is better off with a 1.2L 3 cylinder engine with a wet timing belt vs a used cuv with a 4 cylinder and a timing chain

That Guy with the Sunbird
Member
That Guy with the Sunbird
1 month ago
Reply to  Suss6052

Agreed. This is why I still have my car that I bought new ten years ago. The naturally aspirated 2.5 four-banger with a timing chain. Can’t beat it.

Fruit Snack
Fruit Snack
1 month ago
Reply to  Suss6052

Agreed, what a joke. Truly disposable.

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago

I like the look of it, but a 6’5 it doesn’t quite fit unless I do the gangster seat rake – nope!

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago

Great review here Matt. I would mention that being an automotive journalist you get to drive a lot of cars so your comparisons are helpful and spot on. However, the average auto buyer doesn’t have all that experience. And considering the average car on the road last time I saw it was 11 years I wonder, how does a basic new car like the Trax compare to what was a similar car 11 years old? I don’t think basic transportation needs to compete against a 2-4 years old used car as much as be better than an 11 years old car.

Harveydersehen
Member
Harveydersehen
1 month ago

That’s a very good point, though a lot of people still upgrade every three years for whatever reason, or when a lease is up.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
1 month ago
Reply to  Harveydersehen

That’s very true but from my perspective I’m still driving my 2001 Vehicross I bought new in 2002. I imagine the Trax might seem like a Rolls Royce in ride and comfort plus available options

Harveydersehen
Member
Harveydersehen
1 month ago

I’d be surprised if a 2026 Trax were still a daily driver in 2050.

Hondaimpbmw 12
Hondaimpbmw 12
1 month ago
Reply to  Harveydersehen

It’s the only reason to lease. The payments are nearly the same and you are always driving a reasonably new car. My late uncle drove about 50k miles/year. He would lease a new Mercury every other year, with maintenance included. His 100k mile cars were nicer than a 25k mile car that had spent its life in the city.

NJR-XJR
Member
NJR-XJR
1 month ago

I was recently in this exact position: cross-shopping lightly used, nicer vehicles against new subcompact crossovers for my wife. I 100% agree with Matt’s thesis. It would have been stupid not to get the new car with the full warranty.

The Trax was towards the top of our list but we ended up going with a VW Taos instead. It checks a lot of the same boxes as the Trax (most importantly, they both have actual automatic transmissions instead of CVTs, which is rare in this class. And they both come in some nice colors!) while also having a larger, 4-cylinder, more powerful engine, better fuel economy (even the AWD Taos get better than the FWD Trax), a nicer interior than the Trax, and the heated seats/wheel and adaptive cruise come standard. We got a decent deal on a new 2025 as the dealer was clearing old stock to make room for incoming 2026 models.

Last edited 1 month ago by NJR-XJR
Ppnw
Member
Ppnw
1 month ago
Reply to  NJR-XJR

Subjective, but the Taos is also way better looking.

Edrummer106
Edrummer106
1 month ago

I have a 2025 1LT with the same options (mine is a pretty nice wine red) and I’ve been pleased. The interior is far better than you would expect. Definitely better than the 2025 Trailblazer I just had as a rental last week. I came from a 2019 Corolla hatchback with 200+ horsepower NA engine in it, so I definitely feel the difference in pep, but the Trax isn’t sluggish like I was afraid it would be. It’s a perfectly fine car (in this case, that is not an insult).

DaFaRo
DaFaRo
1 month ago

I can smell the cheap plastics through the images. They come as cheap as they are.

Manwich Sandwich
Member
Manwich Sandwich
1 month ago

Apparently the engine in the Trax is a POS.
And it’s a POS because it has a wet belt design:
https://opposite-lock.com/topic/137243/gm-1-3-lawsuit
https://gmauthority.com/blog/2026/03/gm-hit-with-turbo-1-2l-i3-engine-failure-lawsuit/

Diana Slyter
Diana Slyter
1 month ago

Bonus: The Trax is probably the only new car left that can run on E85, which here in the midwest is $2.39/gallon while regular gas is $3.19 and worse!

Hondaimpbmw 12
Hondaimpbmw 12
1 month ago
Reply to  Diana Slyter

But what is the MPG penalty for going to E85?

*Jason*
*Jason*
1 month ago
Reply to  Hondaimpbmw 12

EPA says 22 mpg vs 30 mpg. Regular is still a sightly better deal. ($3.26 is the break even)

Diana Slyter
Diana Slyter
1 month ago
Reply to  *Jason*

’cause they’re using a formula vs. real world test data. My E85 capable Transit Connect does 25 MPG on E85 and 28MPG on E10.

*Jason*
*Jason*
1 month ago
Reply to  Diana Slyter

Good to know.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
1 month ago

I don’t hate it – but it would be better if it were lowered a couple inches and called a “Hatchback”

Might even get an additional MPG out of the thing.

JumboG
JumboG
1 month ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

I was behind one today, and noticed there was a LOT of empty space under the back axles and bumper.

*Jason*
*Jason*
1 month ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

….. and then it would be discontinued in 3 to 5 years.

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