Home » Why The New Jeep Cherokee Hybrid Should Be Cheaper

Why The New Jeep Cherokee Hybrid Should Be Cheaper

Jeep Cherokee Price Topshot
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When Jeep first showed off the new Cherokee, it felt like the brand had turned a corner when it came to product. A standard hybrid powertrain, 37 MPG combined, the right sort of size, the right sort of look. If it were smartly priced, it could’ve been exactly what Jeep needed to do battle in the hottest new vehicle segment on the entire planet after three years away from the table — three years that everyone else has used to grow stronger. Well, pricing is now out, and — though I haven’t driven the vehicle yet — the value of this crossover now seems, at the very best, meh.

Jeep has announced that this new hybrid crossover run you $36,995 including freight for the base trim. What do you get? Well, beyond the standard 210-horsepower hybrid all-wheel drive powertrain, LED lights, and alloy wheels, there’s dual-zone climate control, some driver assistance stuff, and not a ton more.

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At that price point, Jeep doesn’t offer a moonroof, or heated seats, or a power driver’s seat, or even a glovebox light. That doesn’t seem like tremendous value, but the Cherokee isn’t quite a compact crossover on exterior dimensions. After all, it’s 188.1 inches long, which means it’s basically a midsize crossover, right? Not really. See, the Cherokee offers 107.361 cu.-ft. of passenger volume and 33.622 cu.-ft. of SAE cargo volume behind the second-row seats, which puts it on the level with several compact hybrid crossovers when it comes to practicality.

Base Jeep Cherokee
Photo credit: Jeep

For instance, the Hyundai Tucson hybrid may be 5.4 inches shorter than the Cherokee but it seems to beat it on space efficiency, serving up 107.9 cu.-ft. of passenger volume and 38.7 cu.-ft. of SAE cargo volume behind its rear seats. At the same time, a Tucson Hybrid Blue with its standard mechanical all-wheel-drive system will run you $34,960 while essentially matching the base Cherokee on feature content, and the SEL Convenience trim gets you a panoramic moonroof, a power liftgate, leatherette upholstery, heated front seats, a power driver’s seat, and an auto-dimming rearview mirror for $37,960.

On a typical 60-month financing term, the extra $965 for a mid-range Tucson Hybrid over a base Cherokee works out to a Happy Meal a month. That sounds worth it for heated seats alone.

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2026 hyundai tucson hybrid
Photo credit: Hyundai

Then there’s the popular and trusted Honda CR-V Hybrid, and while its 103.5 cu.-ft. of passenger volume might not quite measure up, that could be apples-to-oranges, and you’ll want to sit in both to check them out. It seems Jeep measures passenger volume without a sunroof, and not only is the passenger volume of a hybrid CR-V identical to that of a purely combustion-powered CR-V, the base sunroofless CR-V has 106 cu.-ft. of passenger volume. That’s close enough to play ball, and the CR-V Hybrid’s 36.3 cu.-ft. of SAE cargo volume behind the second-row seats beats the Jeep by roughly 2.7 cu.-ft.

Although the least expensive CR-V Hybrid with all-wheel-drive stickers for $38,580 including freight, it comes standard with heated seats and a moonroof. You’d need to step up to a $39,995 Cherokee Laredo to get heated seats in an equivalent Jeep, and a moonroof is a $1,995 option on top of that.

31 2026 Honda CR-V Sport Touring Hybrid
Photo credit: Honda

For the outdoorsy sorts, there’s the Subaru Forester Hybrid, with 106.6 cu.-ft. of passenger volume, right in the ballpark of what the Cherokee offers. Granted, the Subaru is down on cargo volume behind the rear seats by 6.1 cu.-ft. (again, with all of these measurements, it’s worth checking the vehicles out in person). Regardless, the Forester Premium Hybrid gets a power driver’s seat, heated front seats, and a panoramic moonroof as standard for $38,015 including freight. A comparably equipped Cherokee Laredo with the optional panoramic moonroof will run you $41,990.

2025 Subaru Forester hybrid 02
Photo credit: Subaru

In addition to base and Laredo trims, two more variants of Cherokee will be available before the off-roady Trailhawk trim arrives. The Limited trim adds wireless smartphone charging, a power liftgate, and leatherette upholstery, but costs $42,495. Want a loaded example? The Overland trim with its kick-activated power liftgate, 20-inch wheels, and premium audio will run you $45,995 before options like a hitch receiver or ventilated front seats. That’s a strong ask, one that’s likely to turn some consumers off.

Jeep Cherokee 2026
Photo credit: Jeep

Though Car and Driver says “Jeep’s Pricing for the 2026 Cherokee SUV Should Be Popular,” from where I sit, for the features people want, the new Cherokee seems a bit expensive, and I’m not sure Jeep is in a position to charge such a premium over more well-established hybrid crossovers.

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Part of what made the XJ Cherokee an icon was that it wasn’t pricey. In the early ’90s, it undercut competition like the Ford Explorer and Toyota 4Runner on price, and partly because it was relatively affordable, it sold in the millions over its lifespan. Given the basic feature content of the cheapest new Cherokee, I think it should be less expensive than it is, and the walk-up to get desirable features shouldn’t be so dramatic. On paper (and again, maybe this will change when I drive it), it appears Jeep is charging more than equivalent competitors simply due to the name on the hood, even if the name on the hood, to many, mostly just stands for heritage. In this segment, a name on the hood that stands “rock-solid reliability” might mean more.

Top graphic image: Jeep

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RallyMech
RallyMech
4 months ago

Someone here probably knows, what are the 3 cheapest vehicles in this category: 35+ mpg, heated front seats, not-EV? I wish automakers would revert to building simpler cars modularly, so you don’t have to buy a $4k option package just to have butt warmers.

Doug Kretzmann
Doug Kretzmann
4 months ago
Reply to  RallyMech

exactly that with my Maverick – the heated front seats are part of a $4k package, so did not get them. I do have faint regrets..

drove one of these Jeep hybrids as a rental, accelerator was very jerky both starting and slowing, car would slip then lurch. Not impressive.

RallyMech
RallyMech
4 months ago
Reply to  Doug Kretzmann

It would be worth checking for the harness plugs for the seat heaters. If they’re present and you can find a totaled Mav with the right parts, now will be the easiest time to add the feature.

Oberkanone
Oberkanone
4 months ago

At $31,995 the Price is Right

Oberkanone
Oberkanone
4 months ago

Why the New Jeep Cherokee should be a Chrysler

It’s too soft to be a Jeep

Badge engineering is good when used correctly

Chrysler needs vehicles

Peugeot styling is perfect for Chrysler. Style Jeep Cherokee just like Peugeot 5008

Kelly
Kelly
4 months ago

thinking like “it’s only $X/month over the 1000 year loan you’re taking” is yet another reason cars are expensive. all those extras add up year after year and suddenly heated/ventilated/massaging cup holders are “required features for the modern driver”.

death by a thousand cuts.

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
4 months ago

I think the price is reasonable when going up against the competition, but at the end of the day, you’re still stuck with Stellantis garbage.

Scott
Member
Scott
4 months ago

Sad but true. From what I’ve read, almost all Jeep products depreciate much faster than Japanese equivalents, and every single time I see any kind of chart/ratings about reliability, Jeeps are in one of the bottom (worst) few spots. Even if this were cheaper, it’d be a difficult sell, though some would probably pick it up on lease.

I’d love it if Stellantis would really revise Jeep (and Dodge, Chrysler) so that any future models from these brands were able to really compete w/Toyota and Honda in relevant metrics. I won’t hold my breath waiting for this to happen though.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

I was quoted invoice price on factory order of a Wrangler over email. I paid about $5000 below MSRP for it but it was way back in 2014, when Italians from Fiat were making them.
On previous Cherokees the engines would fail and stop working when drivng and consume all the oil. Used prices reflect that.
Maybe some things do not change

ioDara
ioDara
4 months ago

I think the missing answer is the Compass that’s no longer coming to America, this would offer similar space at a cheaper price with a lower power hybrid powertrain. It would probably meet the expectations of what people think when they hear hybrid better. The Cherokee would have better justification for it’s price with larger engines and a nicer interior that its platform could support.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
4 months ago

That Hannibal Lecter fascia just screams no sale for me. Toss in its Stellantis origins and Porky Pig pricing and I won’t even slow down going by a Jeep dealership.

Ottomottopean
Member
Ottomottopean
4 months ago

They’re just pricing in future rebates ahead of time. It’s Jeep. Other than the Wrangler, none of what they sell stays at MSRP unless the buyer is really desperate or has few options due to bad credit or something.

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
4 months ago
Reply to  Ottomottopean

This. When you look at a list of vehicles with the “lowest depreciation” what you are really looking at is a list of vehicles that are rarely discounted new. And vice-versa. There is really very little difference in a given segment from worst to first.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago
Reply to  Ottomottopean

I was quoted invoice price over email on a Wrangler that I was going to factory order.
Then negotiated another $3500 off when placing an order.

Citrus
Citrus
4 months ago

But if you made it cheaper then your local Dodge Jeep RAM dealer couldn’t have it say “$5,000 off for TRUCK MONTH” in the ad!

The Mark
Member
The Mark
4 months ago

Now, strip out all the off road stuff, “pretty it up,” and give it to Chrysler too.

Ash78
Ash78
4 months ago

I declared this $5k too pricey on the top end trims, maybe $3k on the low end. Glad to know I’m not alone.

Kiundai sell for a wee bit less than Honda and Toyota; or where they’re equal, the Korean(-Americans) offer several nicer features instead.

The Jeep seems like it’s trying to price itself on part with Toyonda and the selling point is…a little more space? Hard sell with their reputation. This isn’t a Wrangler. You don’t just wave a magic wand and make people forget about Stellantis.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago
Reply to  Ash78

I was quoted invoice price over email on a Wrangler that I was going to factory order.
Then negotiated another $3500 off when placing an order.

Drive By Commenter
Member
Drive By Commenter
4 months ago

Meh. Some folks will pay sticker and not a dollar more. The rest of us will wait for the inevitable sale, play some dealers off against each other and walk away paying $5k less.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
4 months ago

We’ve all been trained to shop for the inevitable sales.

G. R.
Member
G. R.
4 months ago

It should also look better. That front end design is shite.

Angel "the Cobra" Martin
Member
Angel "the Cobra" Martin
4 months ago

Stellantis reliability plus a not really competitive price equals DOA.

JD
Member
JD
4 months ago

Why is the comparison for the new Cherokee always against the XJ? The KL existed and replaced the XJ, the XJ is beyond old news.

JurassicComanche25
Member
JurassicComanche25
4 months ago

Everyone here is saying that the price is fine, and i agree to a point. The price is fine.

But the content is not. If i can get more for less with the hyundai or kia, ill go that route. Better warranty to boot! And its not like Jeep is known for reliability. Want to keep it for 10 years and not worry about problems? Honda, with heated seats and all that. For that price, it should have heated seats. Or even a glove box light! Thats sad.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago

David’s instagram inflatuencer career of photographing his coffee cup’s back only lets him afford cars made before 1999.

Man With A Reliable Jeep
Man With A Reliable Jeep
4 months ago

Hate to be one of those “ackshually” guys, but I have to beg to differ with this:

Part of what made the XJ Cherokee an icon was that it wasn’t pricey.”

There was an original window sticker on one of the last XJs produced (in 2001), and it had a base price of $21,915. Adjusted for inflation? $39,997. With options it was $25,080. Adjusted for inflation, that comes to $45,774.26.

Seems to me like they’re about on point with current pricing of the new Cherokee. I think the perception that XJs are cheap is survivor bias. They were so simple and durable, that many survived to the point that they were highly-depreciated. That, coupled with people viewing them as disposable gas guzzlers further devalued them until their resurgence in mainstream popularity in the last several years.

NC Miata NA
Member
NC Miata NA
4 months ago

Part of what made the XJ Cherokee an icon was that it wasn’t pricey…

for the 3rd owner…

prior to the mid-2010s.

Mike B
Mike B
4 months ago

Whenever anyone says cars were cheaper 20 years ago, I always run the price through an inflation calculator.

My buddy was recently lamenting how expensive the Tacoma has gotten compared to the new one he bought in 2001, I looked it up and adjusted for inflation it was 39k.

IIRC, the same year 4Runner adjusts to about 50K today.

DialMforMiata
Member
DialMforMiata
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

My 1995 Miata M-edition stickered for about $24,000. That equals about $50,500 in 2025 dollars. A new Miata 35th anniversary edition (basically the same idea, right down to the Merlot over tan color scheme) is about $37,000. The past is only cheap if you’re looking at the numbers without context.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

Yet my pay did not increase at the same rate as inflation or new car price so I will continue to complain as it costs more to me than it did in 2001.

Mike B
Mike B
4 months ago

You can say that again. Wages have remained relatively stagnant since the late 70’s, things just keep getting worse for the working class.

06dak
06dak
4 months ago

Yeah, this comment is really revisionist history. The XJ wasn’t considered “cheaper” until the ZJ came out to replace it in the early 90s. They dropped the XJ pricing to move metal on the old bodystyle, people started buying more, so they kept it around. Before the Grand it wasn’t considered the affordable choice.

Man With A Reliable Jeep
Man With A Reliable Jeep
4 months ago
Reply to  06dak

Exactly. And thank you for the term I was looking for. Revisionist History is very fitting.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago

Yet my pay did not increase at the same rate as inflation or new car price so I will continue to complain as it costs more to me than it did in 2001.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
4 months ago

I dunno, man. It seems pretty fair to me and maybe I’ve been ruined by the market over the last 5 years but a new hybrid midsized crossover starting at $37,000 seems downright reasonable. One thing to note is that Jeep makes their entire safety suite standard, which includes adaptive cruise control and lane centering. I believe that’s an up charge on some competitors.

The Jeep also has mechanical all wheel drive which gives it a leg up traction and capability wise over the CRV/RAV4 and can tow 3500 pounds, which is way more than the CRV. The Hyundai is a better buy on paper but the Hyundai is always the better buy on paper. Ownership wise I’d call it a toss up between a Santa Fe and a Cherokee. Neither Hyundai nor Stellantis are reliability or dealership quality stalwarts.

We don’t have the new RAV4 prices yet but they’re gonna be high because Toyota is going to keep raising prices until they can’t anymore. Toyota will also do what they always do as well-create artificial scarcity to drive up the value and prices. For the first year you’re going to be paying over MSRP for the new RAV4 because Toyota hates their customers.

With all that in mind, it seems like a fine buy to me. I also think it’s easily the most attractive out of all the midsized crossover blobs out there, but that’s subjective. Idk, this car is getting an inordinate amount of backlash but I honestly might look at one in a few years when I need a simple efficient dad car.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
4 months ago

The Jeep will also have Stellantis’ 96-month financing as a option that, I’m sure, Toyota wouldn’t.

Which makes it more approachable for those only interested in the smallest monthly number

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
4 months ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

Oh you bet. Stellantis will happily give a credit challenged person a 96 month loan at 200% APR, but they’ll also have 0% over 48 months for people with good credit. Toyota’s in house financing will be like 4.9% for well qualified buyers or “there’s a Nissan dealership down the street” for credit challenged ones…in addition to the $5,000 ADM they have slapped on the RAV4 Woodland or whatever the fuck it is you want.

Kelly
Kelly
4 months ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

Do they actually have 96 month financing? I mean it wouldn’t shock me but would make me sad.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
4 months ago

“It’s a Jeep thing, you wouldn’t understand.”

I think that phrase speaks to why people some people might have Jeep on their shopping list at all.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
4 months ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

This all came full circle to me a few years ago when I parked behind a Compass or Liberty or whatever (it was so anonymous I can’t even remember the model lol) that was covered in hiking/national park stickers, had a bumper sticker that said “I’m the black Jeep of my family”, and had a line of rubber duckies on the dashboard.

I couldn’t stop laughing, to the point that my wife was like “I don’t get why this small crossover is humorous to you”…and then it dawned on me. For the average normie it’s still, somehow, a Jeep, and just as valid as a Wrangler or classic Wagoneer. I’m sure actual Wrangler owners probably have a laugh at that person’s expense but like…only real sickos like us even realize why the whole situation is so silly.

For 99% of people a front wheel drive Fiat crossover is just as much of a Jeep as anything else is. For those reasons, I think the new Cherokee will be a huge hit…and I’m a bit ashamed at admit that I really like it.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
4 months ago

My comment was more tongue-in-cheek stab at Stellantis’ build quality, but your comment definitely helps illustrate how Jeep stays relevant in the market – some people just don’t care beyond the badge/image.

There’s a lot of badge-tax out there, ready to take someone’s money.

4jim
4jim
4 months ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

yep and the toyota tax costs as much or more than the jeep tax.

Ottomottopean
Member
Ottomottopean
4 months ago

That typically only lasts a few years before the attitude trickles from the car guys/brand loyalists down to the normal people.

It is surprisingly easy to erode a brand’s image with a few year’s worth of bad product.

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
4 months ago

Content tsunami!
“Why the blankety blank should be cheaper” could apply to almost any model available today.

Mike B
Mike B
4 months ago

I was just thinking about how much I hate Jeep as of late, and it occurred to me that Jeep hasn’t had a solid lineup since 2001.

In 2001 you could go down to your local Jeep dealer and choose between a TJ Wrangler, a V8 WJ Grand Cherokee Overland, or the last year of the XJ Cherokee.

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

In 2001 those models would’ve shared a showroom with Plymouths.

4jim
4jim
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

Yes jeep with 3 models was as good as jeep got.

JDE
JDE
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

except if you go back far enough, the XJ was the not jeep enough jeep of it’s era. It is all relative. I think this could have been a Chrysler name on it and it would have been an even tougher sell. as it is, it is a wait and see how it is accepted spot for me.

Mike B
Mike B
4 months ago
Reply to  JDE

I had a ZJ Grand Cherokee from 2001-2012, and when I first got it, I remember people seeing it for the first time saying “Oh, I thought you meant you got like a REAL Jeep”. (of course meaning the TJ)

Man With A Reliable Jeep
Man With A Reliable Jeep
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

Sometimes, I can’t tell if the Autopian commentariat hates Jeep because of the average driver, the smugness of the brand (they’re not the only ones guilty of that), or the parent company itself. That, or there’s a concerning trend of said commentariat being overall down and negative on cars these days, for various reasons, whether it’s cost, design, image, and so on. I thought this was an auto enthusiast site?

Mike B
Mike B
4 months ago

Auto enthusiasts don’t have to be enthusiastic about every single model/brand.

Reliability and cost aside, I think the Wrangler is fantastic for what it’s intended to be. It may be that I’m less angry at Jeep than I am Stellantis as a whole. It just seems that nearly everything they do is substandard yet pricey. I’ve watched the option list get more and more expensive for the JL over the years. The automatic is now a 4,500 option. JFC! In a time when other makers can’t give away manuals, that’s just robbery and fleecing the customer.

Man With A Reliable Jeep
Man With A Reliable Jeep
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

I’d say that’s fair, appreciate your perspective.

4jim
4jim
4 months ago
Reply to  Mike B

Yes that is a horrid charge for an automatic exp when the manual is junk. And dealers are not loading up on manuals so really it is a $4500 bait and switch on the advertised price.

TheCoryJihad
TheCoryJihad
4 months ago

Pricing like this is why domestics offer rebates within six months of a new model drop and the Asian competition just prices them correctly from the beginning.

I’ve worked for a multitude of brands and can say confidently that when at Ford or Chevrolet, the haggling was brutal. When at Honda or Kia, most people shockingly paid sticker or damn near.

Price your shit right, give a solid value proposition, people will pay it.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
4 months ago
Reply to  TheCoryJihad

Yeah, this is pricing to make room to put cash on the hood.

JDE
JDE
4 months ago
Reply to  TheCoryJihad

Rarely does the big three give up profits up front. outside of the maverick and maybe the Lightning, the more likely business model is start at the high or middle of the segmanet for pricing and sell as many as you can for this price and then discount the rest that they forced a dealer to take if they have them on the lot still. often use bait and switch selling techniques once someone comes down looking for the one or two odd spec’d units that “look good on paper” because of price.

Kelly
Kelly
4 months ago
Reply to  TheCoryJihad

some people really like the ‘deal’ aspect of things. 97% off! is more important than quality or value for the money.

Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago
Reply to  TheCoryJihad

Domestic design and build crappy vehicles, then price them higher than competition because they think they are actually better than imports just because they are domestic.
Never mind that it was built in Mexico on machines from the lowest bidder. While imports sell everyone they have and won’t even haggle away from MSRP if you find one in stock

NC Miata NA
Member
NC Miata NA
4 months ago

Thomas probably has the follow up article “Jeep is offering crazy discounts on Cherokees to clear a huge inventory backlog” saved in his drafts already.

Goof
Goof
4 months ago
Reply to  NC Miata NA

Grand Wagoneer sales fell off an absolute cliff down to 400-ish/month now.

I’m wondering who was forking over 6-digits-plus for them in the first place.

Last edited 4 months ago by Goof
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
Adam EmmKay8 GTI
4 months ago
Reply to  Goof

How many did they sell last month? 410-ish?

Selling 5000 $100,000+ vehicles seems a lot since they sold 8000 S classes in 2024.

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
4 months ago
Reply to  NC Miata NA

Also in the drafts are “something, something…bricked at 500 miles” and “something, something…unexplained fires are a matter for the courts.”

Dan G.
Member
Dan G.
4 months ago

Stellantis Jeep marketing meetings: “This is the way”.

The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
4 months ago

I’m not sure Jeep is in a position to charge such a premium over more well-established hybrid crossovers.

Stellantis not being in a position to charge more for their product just cuz has never stopped them before and it won’t stop them now, either.

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
4 months ago

Stellantis is the Dashcon of automakers.

The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
4 months ago
Reply to  GhosnInABox

Not even two extra hours in the ball pit could save them now.

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