Test Drive: 2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced in Cardiff Green (A $500 option)

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

ClassPremium Compact SUV

Miles driven: 447

Fuel used: 21.5 gallons

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort B
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish A
Fuel Economy C+
Value A
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 A
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 300-hp 2.5L
Engine Type Turbo 4-cylinder
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

Real-world fuel economy: 20.8 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 22/28/24 (mpg city, highway, combined)

Fuel typePremium gas recommended

Base price: $41,000 (not including $1045 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Cardiff Green paint ($500), Select Package ($4000), Advanced Package ($4150)

Price as tested: $50,695

Quick Hits

The great: Posh, comfortable cabin; quietness; long list of available comfort and convenience features

The good: Respectable acceleration from 4-cylinder engine; confident, distinctive styling; competitive pricing

The not so good: Our mediocre observed fuel economy trailed EPA estimates; some control-interface quirks

More Genesis GV70 price and availability information

John Biel

Perhaps Genesis mislabeled its brand-new premium-compact SUV by calling it the GV70. It is derived from the platform of the G70 sedan and styled in the same vein. But the available engines, rotary-dial gear selector, and console dial for the infotainment system are straight out of the midsize G80 sedan and GV80 sport-utility. Maybe the newcomer ought to really be called the GV75.

Of course, there are numbers that truly are more important to shoppers and we’ll get to them by and by. What really counts is that with the GV70 Genesis has created an excellent, value-packed entry in this busy market segment.

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

The Genesis GV70 launches for 2022 as the second crossover SUV in the growing Genesis-brand product lineup; in size and price, it slots in below the midsize Genesis GV80, which debuted for 2021.

Riding a wheelbase of 113.2 inches and ranging 185.6 inches from bumper to bumper, the 5-passenger GV70 is, respectively, 3.1 and 9.1 inches shorter in those categories than the GV80 that’s set up to carry seven in some models. Where the G70 premium-compact sedan offers the choice of a 2.0-liter turbocharged four or a 3.3-liter twin-turbo V6, the GV70 engines are a similarly aspirated 2.5-liter four and 3.5-liter V6.

All-wheel drive is standard in every GV70. Prices (with delivery) begin at $42,045 for the base 4-cylinder version and rise to $63,545 for the V6 Sport Prestige. Consumer Guide sampled a 2.5-equipped Advanced—it sits second from the top of four 4-cylinder models—with a starting price of $50,195. Only a spray of Cardiff Green paint nudged the final tab to $50,695.

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Consumer Guide Test Drive

The GV70’s interior is dazzling in terms of both design and materials. The infotainment system can be controlled via a center-console dial (which is unfortunately easy to grab when you intend to use the rotary-dial gear selector mounted just aft of it) or the extra-wide, 14.5-inch high-definition touchscreen.

Typically for a Genesis, trim levels are treated as packages added to the core model. To get two steps up from the base vehicle, CG’s tester first had to absorb Select equipment (19-inch alloy wheels, panoramic sunroof, 16-speaker Lexicon premium audio, ventilated front seats, and brushed-aluminum interior accents). Then came the Advanced package with leather upholstery, heated steering wheel, interior trim with a “Waveline” pattern, surround-view monitor, blind-spot view monitor, front parking-distance warning, rear parking-collision avoidance, Remote Smart Parking Assist (to jockey the vehicle in and out of tight spaces while the driver stands outside), and advanced rear-occupant alert.

Test Drive: 2022 Genesis G70 3.3T Sport Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

There’s ample space in the GV70’s front seats, but the rear-seat legroom and headroom can be tight for adults.

All that is the frosting on the cake. It builds on GV70 basics like LED headlights and taillights, heated exterior mirrors, heated front seats with power adjustment, dual-zone automatic climate control, front and rear 12-volt power outlets, and hands-free liftgate. Tech items include an infotainment system with 14.5-inch screen, navigation, satellite and HD radio, and Apple CarPlay/Android Auto compatibility; dual front and rear USB ports; wireless device charging; and fingerprint recognition for one-touch starting. Safety and driving assists consist of adaptive cruise control, forward collision avoidance with pedestrian and cyclist detection, lane-keeping and following assist, rear parking-distance warning, and blind-spot and rear cross-traffic monitoring.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

The GV70’s cargo volume is a bit better than most premium compact SUV rivals–there’s 28.9 cubic feet behind the second-row seats, which grows to 56.8 cubic feet when the second-row seat backs are folded.

The Advanced’s luxury additions fill out a cabin that’s pretty lush for the price, with lots of soft-touch material—even far down on the doors past the point at which lots of other manufacturers default to plastic. Knurled surfaces adorn the ends of the wiper and light-control stalks, steering-wheel thumb buttons, and the transmission selector dial. Metal accents brighten the doors, dash, console, and steering wheel. The big infotainment display atop the instrument panel is vibrant, easily legible, and can show two things at once (for instance radio settings and navigation map). Fortunately, it is a touchscreen, which means you don’t have to use the remote console controller—and this one reminds us a little of the Lexus Remote Touch get-up that we’ve never particularly liked. By the way, it’s uncanny how easy it is to reach this round controller when you really want the trans selector. Easy-working temperature dials mix with numerous buttons for climate control.

Quick Spin: 2021 Genesis GV80 3.5T Advanced

2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

A 300-hp turbocharged 2.5-liter 4-cylinder is GV70’s base engine; a 375-hp turbo 3.5-liter V6 is also available. Choosing the Select package upgrades the standard 18-inch wheels to 19-inch alloys.

Comfortable seats welcome four adults. The front row is roomy; the second row slightly less so—but it would be wrong to call it cramped. Headroom is quite good, too, and driver sightlines are fairly unobstructed. Personal-item storage is accomplished in a large glove box, decent covered console bin, door pockets with bottle holders, and net pouches behind the front seats. Exposed cup holders are found in the console and the pull-down center armrest in the rear seat.

Overall cargo space is good, even if the rakish rear shape might stand in the way of certain loading options. The cargo bay holds at least 28.9 cubic feet of stuff. Drop the 60/40-split rear seats, which fold absolutely flush with the load floor, and a further 28 cubic feet open up.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

The GV70’s attractively athletic body shape is highlighted by nicely executed styling details, such as the Genesis brand’s signature shield-shaped grille and slim “Quad Lamp” LED headlights and taillights.

The 2.5 engine, rated at 300 horsepower and 311 lb-ft of torque, is attached to an 8-speed automatic transmission. This powerteam is an eminently competent pairing for moderately lively performance that gets a little zestier (and a touch louder) in “Sport” mode, with its quicker throttle response and more patient upshifts. Still, you can happily cruise all day in subtler “Comfort” mode. “Eco” and “Custom” settings are available as well. We wish the GV70 was a little stingier with gas—premium, wouldn’t you know. EPA ratings are 22 mpg in city driving, 28 on the highway, and 24 combined. When this driver put 81.5 miles on the test vehicle—with 69 percent city-style operation—it returned just 20.3 mpg.

With a suspension that’s a retuned version of the G70’s front struts and multilink rear, ride quality is luxury-brand good, with fine bump absorption and isolation from road noise. Steering is nicely weighted and responsive in the Comfort setting. Maybe the more resistant Sport-mode steering is a help on twisty roads where you wouldn’t want to overdo inputs, but in lazier urban-expressway driving it just feels heavy. Brakes are easy to modulate and predictably reliable.

The inaugural GV70 finds its strength in numbers—the number of things it does right. That would be true no matter what number Genesis assigned to it.

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2022 Genesis GV70 2.5T AWD Advanced

The new-for-2022 Genesis GV70 might be the Genesis brand’s most impressive vehicle so far; it delivers an athletic driving character, attractive styling inside and out, and a high level of luxury and available technology features, all at prices that handily undercut its primary European luxury-brand rivals.

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced Gallery

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

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Genesis GV70 2.5T Advanced

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Test Drive: 2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL in Alloy Silver Metallic

Consumer Guide Test Drive

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL S-AWC

Class: Compact Crossover

Miles Driven: 222

Fuel Used: 9.8 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 22.6 mpg

Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway

CG Report Card
Room and Comfort A
Power and Performance B
Fit and Finish B+
Fuel Economy B
Value B+
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 A
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 181-hp 2.5L
Engine Type 4-cylinder
Transmission CVT automatic
Drive Wheels All-wheel drive

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 24/30/26 (mpg city/highway/combined)

Fuel type: Regular gasoline

Base price: $33,745 (not including $1195 destination charge)

Options on test car: Accessory tonneau cover ($195), Welcome Package ($160; includes carpeted floor mats, touch-up paint pen, center-console tray mat)

Price as tested: $35,295

Quick Hits

The great: Excellent passenger space/comfort and cargo versatility; broad range of available comfort and driver-assist features

The good: Competitive pricing; topline SEL trim delivers upscale interior ambiance and several desirable features; pleasant driving character; additional flexibility of third-row seating (albeit very cramped)

The not so good: So-so acceleration; only one powertrain is available for now; Mitsubishi brand’s sparse dealer network in some markets

More Outlander price and availability information

John Biel

After stepping aside for a year, a gasoline-engine Outlander compact SUV is back in Mitsubishi showrooms for model-year 2022. It’s totally new of course, but Mitsubishi didn’t have to reinvent the wheel to make it happen. That’s because this Outlander shares its platform and powerteam with the redesigned-for-2021 Nissan Rogue.

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Mitsubishi Outlander is completely redesigned for 2022 on a platform shared with the redesigned-for-2021 Nissan Rogue. The Outlander is a bit bigger all-around the the Rogue, however, with unique styling inside and out.

Don’t think that means the Outlander is just a Rogue in a fresh Mitsubishi wrapper. While they share a 106.5-inch wheelbase, at 185.4 inches long, 74.7 inches wide, and 68.8 inches high the Outlander is a little more than 2 inches bigger in all those dimensions than the Nissan. That gives the Mitsu enough space for its third-row seat, an extremely rare feature in the class that the Nissan doesn’t have. Plus, the Outlander’s all-wheel-drive system is its own, and features more and different terrain settings than those used by the Rogue.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

Much of the new Outlander’s switchgear and digital displays are shared with the Rogue, but Mitsubishi manages a distinctive look and feel nonetheless. SEL models come nicely equipped with lots of desirable features.

The Outlander didn’t go completely dark during 2021, just its previous 4- and 6-cylinder gas models; a plug-in hybrid kept the nameplate alive for the year. For ’22, though, the only way to go is a 2.5-liter four and continuously variable transmission (CVT) picked up from the ’21 Rogue (the ’22 Rogue loses this 2.5 engine and gets a turbocharged 1.5-liter 3-cylinder instead). In the all-wheel-drive SEL model that Consumer Guide tested, the 181-horsepower engine proved itself a better highway cruiser than an in-town jackrabbit. The engine operates surprisingly quietly for a four, helped to an extent by a better-than-average CVT that doesn’t make the powerplant moan with exertion in pursuit of its power peak.

EPA fuel-economy estimates for the AWD Outlander are 24 mpg in city driving, 30 mpg in highway use, and 26 combined. (Note that projections for higher-trim AWD Rogues are a mile or two per gallon higher.) However, in this tester’s 89.9-mile stint that included 66 percent city-style motoring, the truck averaged 23.2 mpg.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Outlander shares its unconventional push/pull gear selector with the Nissan Rogue. The center console is also home to a drive-mode selector knob and a wireless charging pad located in the cubby bin forward of the shifter.

Mitsubishi’s S-AWC all-wheel drive (for “Super All Wheel Control”) is available on all models at an $1800 upcharge from front-wheel drive—though the line-topping SEL Launch Edition has AWD as its lone driveline. Five drive modes—“Tarmac,” “Gravel,” “Snow,” “Normal,” and “Eco”—are available to all at the twist of a knurled console dial, but a “Mud” setting is added to those with S-AWC. All-wheeler Rogues have five modes, one of which is “Sport” for different power delivery. Ride isn’t especially disturbed by highway cracks or expansion joints but the all-season tires sound off with loud thwacks. Handling is easy and maneuverability is good.

The test vehicle had a starting price (with delivery) of $34,940. SEL is the trim level at which body-color bumper and side-sill accents, roof rails, leather seat upholstery, heated rear seats, auto-dimming rearview mirror, key-linked memory of driver’s-seat settings, 3-zone automatic climate control, and a 12.3-inch LCD instrument-cluster display are added as standard equipment. The climate system and instrument display are features new to the Outlander/Rogue.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

In SEL trim, the Outlander boasts a surprisingly classy cabin ambiance; handsome quilted leather upholstery is standard. Occupant space is quite generous in both the front and rear seats.

Note that most of those items are found inside. Indeed, the test vehicle felt like a step up in cabin execution for Mitsubishi. SEL seats and imitation-leather door panels are done in the currently popular diamond-quilted pattern. There is good distribution of padded surfaces on the dash, doors, and armrests—even a little on the console sides. Driver instruments and info displays show up bright and legible. Large windows make for good outward vision all around.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

Unlike the Nissan Rogue (and every other compact SUV save for the VW Tiguan), the Outlander offers a third-row seat. That seat is exceptionally cramped, but it can still be useful for small children and/or very short trips. There’s a slim 11.7 cubic feet of cargo space behind the third row. The extra-tall headrests must be removed when the seats are folded down (there’s a handy storage spot for them underneath the cargo floor; see pic in the photo gallery below).

There’s plenty more in packed into the Outlander by the time it gets to SEL territory. Exteriors sport LED headlights and fog lights, 20-inch two-tone alloy wheels, and a hands-free power liftgate with adjustable height limit. The power-folding side mirrors and front seats are heated, and leather covers the shift knob and steering wheel. Infotainment features—navigation included—are displayed on a 9-inch touchscreen and conveniences run to Android Auto and wireless Apple CarPlay smartphone mirroring, wireless smartphone charging, satellite radio, and keyless entry and starting. The biggest of the driver-assistance features is Mi-PILOT (Mitsubishi’s name for Nissan’s ProPILOT system) that pairs adaptive cruise control with automatic lane centering to steer and change speeds with the driver’s hands contacting the steering wheel. Also included are front and rear automatic emergency braking, blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts, lane-keeping assist, and front parking sensors.

The audio system works with clarity and ease. The drive selector looks like it a conventional shift lever but only the grip moves forward or backward to go into Drive, Reverse, or Neutral, with Park activated via a button. In our experience, it wasn’t hard to get used to. Climate management consists of two handy dials to set up-front temperature with all other functions entrusted to lots of buttons.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Outlander offers fine overall cargo space for a compact SUV; there’s 33.5 cubic feet of space behind the second-row seats, which expands to 78.3 cubic feet with the second-row seatbacks folded.

First- and second-row legroom dimensions vary between the Outlander and Rogue but both offer plenty of room in these areas. The Mitsu’s second row is quite spacious—especially if there’s nobody in the third row, because with seats back, there’s almost no third-row legroom. In truth, children are the only people with a legitimate shot at being able to inhabit the third row.

Personal-item storage is all right, but just. There’s a modest glove box, small console box, slits in the sides of the console, four small door pouches with bottle holders, and pouches on backs of the front seats. Cup holders are placed in the console, the pull-down second-row center armrest (which creates a pass-through when retracted), and in the sidewalls that flank the third seat.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The Outlander loses its V6 engine with its redesign; for now, the sole powertrain is a 181-hp 2.5-liter 4-cylinder paired with a continuously variable automatic transmission. SEL models come standard with 20-inch alloy wheels.

Cargo space with the third-row seats in use is tight—just 11.7 cubic feet (there is some organized small-item storage under the floor). It expands to 33.5 cubic feet with the seats down. The rearmost seats fold flat, but you’ll have to remove the tall, paddle-like headrests. Sidewall flipper levers make it possible to remotely drop the 40/20/40-split second-row seats for more than 70 cubic feet of cargo capacity.

While the reduction in engine choices appears to be a shortcoming for the new Outlander, it has gained other features that should tickle the fancies of today’s car buyers (and a new plug-in-hybrid version is slated to return soon, probably as a 2023 model). Its passenger room and seating/cargo flexibility add another layer of appeal.

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

The redesigned-for-2022 Mitsubishi Outlander inherits plenty of strengths from its Nissan Rogue platform, and tops them off with distinctive looks, an upscale interior, and an occasional-use third-row seat–all at competitive prices.

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL Gallery

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2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

Test Drive: 2021 Nissan Rogue Platinum

2022 Mitsubishi Outlander SEL

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