The full-sized sports utility market has no shortage of customers, and they tend to be of the well-heeled variety, allowing car companies to stack huge margins on top. Where there’s margin, there’s a niche, and where there’s a niche in the market, there’s a desire to expensively fill it. The “it’s maybe too big and definitely too fast” category ranges from the obscenely quick Lamborghini Urus to the imposing Cadillac Escalade V, with vehicles like the blue-blooded Alpina XB7 and GLS AMG in between.
While cars in this class offer quite the range in size, the one characteristic they share is a tax-bracket minimum. Even the Escalade V is a $150,000 proposition when you fire out of the dealership. Could Nissan do the same? Sure, they could. Within the wide range of possibilities in this universe, including a movie based on the musical based on the movie Mean Girls, it’s one of the outcomes. I’m not sure it’s a predictable one.


NISMO is the motorsports/in-house tuning arm of Nissan (think NISMO Z), an automaker that I want to continue to exist and continues, for unknown reasons, to make its own survival improbably difficult. Nissan is an automaker in the same way that the Cleveland Browns are a football team, if that makes sense to you.
The Armada has never been a top-of-mind player in this space, but with the underpinning of the globally popular Patrol, there’s been some indication that the newly redesigned Armada might be the value play. Here’s how Thomas described the non-NISMO models when the truck debuted:
With a potent boosted V6, promise of reasonable off-road chops, and seating for up to eight, the 2025 Nissan Armada certainly takes the approach that more is more. Moreover, it replaces a seriously aged SUV, so its arrival in Nissan’s lineup is wholeheartedly welcomed.
Even better for curious buyers and desperate dealers, the price is extremely competitive:
A base two-wheel-drive Armada SV starts at $58,415 including freight, which actually works out $105 less expensive than the outgoing base model, although all savings come out of the freight charge. Want four-wheel-drive? That’ll cost you an extra $3,000, but it’s optional on most competitors, so that’s fairly apples-to-apples.
Still, here’s a brand new vehicle that’s slightly less costly than the old one, and it comes at a time when almost every competitor is growing more expensive. A base model 2025 Chevrolet Tahoe LS starts at $60,495 including freight, a base model 2025 Ford Expedition Active starts at a whopping $63,695 including freight, and a base model 2025 Toyota Sequoia SR5 kicks things up another notch with a starting price of $64,120 including freight. The base model two-wheel-drive 2025 Jeep Wagoneer is less expensive than the equivalent 2024 model, but it still starts at $61,945 including freight.
The Nissan name has fallen a bit, so the company seems to be throwing what it can at the wall and seeing what sticks. Will a sport-tuned Armada stick?
Just Look At This Fucking Thing
I initially thought this was a one-off SEMA concept when I saw this photo of the truck out in front of a PRO-4X and Platinum Reserve. Nope. It’s the real thing. The 2026 Armada NISMO.
Let’s start with the obvious. This grille is large enough to cook a whole Carolina hog and still have space for some brisket. In the exclusive “Stealth Gray” the red accents and lower front fascia obviously stand out, as do the custom side-steps.
Wheels? You get Nismo-specific, 22-inch forged nine-spokes in black. The color pattern feels very Nissan, as does the fog light treatment on the outer bumper.
It’s strange. I don’t hate it, to be clear. There’s something Dekotora about the whole thing. It’s so overdone that it becomes its own thing, like a Charburger. BTW, have you ever had a Charburger from Habit Burger? We did the giant family Charbox thing last night for David’s birthday, and it was surprisingly good. Tempura green beans? Genius!
Maybe this is good. The interior looks like Kylo Ren’s sex dungeon, but not in a bad way, if that makes sense. Almost nothing about this car makes sense.
It’s Not Just For Show
One of the features that separates the Armada from the rest of its chonky ilk is that air suspension tends to come cheaply, and NISMO’s engineers have tuned SUVs adapative electronic air suspension and steering for “more engaging and direct handling.” I find that most automakers try to make their big SUVs feel small, overboosting the power steering and otherwise deadening the experience.
It sounds like NISMO engineers are going in another direction. On the power side, the new twin-turbo V6 offers 460 horsepower, which is an improvement of about 35 horsepower over the non-NISMO versions. There’s also a louder and less restrictive exhaust.
This is at least more than an appearance package.
But Why Tho?
Don’t expect it to offer the earth-shaking boom of the Escalade’s V8, nor the corner-carving precision of an Urus. But also don’t expect it to offer the six-figure price of either of those. A NISMO starts at $79,530, with a $2,190 delivery charge. That makes it roughly half the price of a well-equipped Escalade V, and nowhere in the same universe as an Urus.
Are those vehicles better? Maybe. Probably. I haven’t driven it yet, so I don’t know. Lets’ see what Nissan has to say:
“The new Armada NISMO brings a bold, sporty edge to the lineup, joining the tough PRO-4X and the upscale Platinum Reserve. It’s all about giving drivers more of what they’re looking for,” said Vinay Shahani, senior vice president of U.S. Marketing and Sales at Nissan. “No matter where you’re headed—on the highway, off the beaten path, or way off the grid—there’s an Armada built for the journey.”
So now there’s an Armada for way off the grid, which I assume is a reference to the racing grid. You can tow your Z to the track, but you’ll probably not want to race it.
Do I want to race it, though? Sort of, yeah. I’m going to see if I can get one of these for Lime Rock’s Autocross. It’s entirely the wrong place for it, which is why it feels so right.
I’d prefer a real dekotora. This is coyote ugly.
More manufacturers should use piped red accents, even if just to screw with thesketchmonkey
I love the hustle. Props to Nissan for doing a thing and really committing. I’d honestly love to see this hustle against anything BoF that is GM produced.Now give me something that is 3/4 scale and has a similarly tallish greenhouse and I’m intrigued.
This makes as much sense as riding a three legged sheep to Costco as your form of transportation. In other words, it doesn’t. Lol
That thing is so ugly that it doesn’t matter what engine or interior or gizmos it has. The basic shape and styling are bad enough, but then to add those stupid red lines makes it look like someone blew their whole paycheck in the Accessories section at Autozone, and proceeded to stick that crap all over a vehicle in a lame attempt to make it look fancy, all without having a clue that everyone else is laughing at them except the other people in the Autozone accessories section.
I saw the Facebook post last night and thought it was another made-up car like your Ghila Monster. Bleh.
Perfect rental car for a bunch of dudes on a trip to Las Vegas, in Macy’s button-down shirts and a shared suite at the Venetian, who keep saying “Are we ready for Vegas? No! Vegas isn’t ready for us!”.
That is a really mean and shitty take and I’m 100% here for it.
I really wish they’d mention which engine under the hood. As it currently stands, the standard engine for the Armada is the VR35DDTT. One can only hope that the engine in the NISMO variant is the legendary VR38DETT. At least they are already from the same family, so the blocks should have similar characteristics… and if so, there might already be tons of headroom for tuning up further with additional mods.
Nissan has some press materials that confirm its a tuned version of the VR35. Which makes sense in a whole host of ways, from emissions to cost to the number of engines Nissan can build by hand. The fact that it is Nissan, though, and not Toyota, means that mods are possible.
I’m in the “this is deeply stupid but I don’t hate it” camp. I don’t like large SUVs, I don’t typically like hideous appearance packages. While I’m sure Nissan didn’t intend it, this SUV is very much camp. It’s not bad enough to be The Room of SUVs, but it’s close. Maybe the Troll 2 of SUVs?
So they can do this but never released an A-team package for black NV’s?
Unacceptable.
I feel like there must be something wrong with me. I hate big SUVs, but for some reason I think this thing is actually good-looking. I’d never buy one, though. Too big and too expensive.
Deeply cringe, more like.
maybe just buy it in red so the red trim doesn’t stand out at all? that’s probably not an option…
The Roush Nissan Frontier y’all wrote about today is actually pretty cool, so on some level Nissan is capable of building interesting versions of existing vehicles. But the NISMO Armada ain’t that. It’s a caricature but possesses no humor or levity associated with that word.
The Escalade V and Urus are certainly ridiculous, but they look the part, and have the price point to outweigh any lack of common sense purchasing one would infer.
The Armada looks cheap, in a JC Whitney kind of way. This is isn’t the way to save Nissan.
It looks like it’s wearing a dress. Very weird and not in a good way. I mean, if anyone around here wants to wear a dress, by all means, do what you like. However, I suppose I should augment my statement to say, it looks like it’s wearing an ill-fitting oversized dress that is not made of cotton but more like 8 mil garbage bag plastic.
This looks like one of those tastefully owner modified cars you see end up in front of your local ‘Buy Here, Pay Here’ place.
Specifically, a clapped out X5 with every dollar store ‘M’ accessory typically associated with pre-pubescent mumble rap and Monster tall boys.
All it’s missing a dozen questionable anime bumper stickers, and it’d be all set for the local forgurt meetup scene.
So many questions:
My sweet child, let me introduce you to Google, our lord and savior. Admittedly, the last one is a typo. Frogurt.
Exhibit A on why Nissan will soon longer exist.
Yah, kinda want a lowered raptor on summer tires….
While this is kinda the same, I don’t think the market cares about my ideas.
I still hate the Cullinan more… but man, this is close to being as bad.
I like this take.