QOTD: What is the Honda Ridgeline?

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

Underneath its skin, the Honda Ridgeline is a significantly altered Honda Pilot, a large three-row utility vehicle related to the next-generation Honda Odyssey minivan. That’s hardly the stuff of which traditional, body-on-frame pickups are made.

But the Ridgeline has a separate, exposed bed, an elevated ride height, and competitive payload ratings. Therefore, it’s a pickup truck.

Or is it? In one recent Honda Canada commercial, the Ridgeline is portrayed alongside the HR-V, CR-V, and Pilot under the Honda Utility banner.

“Go where you wanna go,” The Mamas & the Papas sing, as a tree-lined bike trail appears with the CR-V in the HR-V’s rear seat, as a mountainside Pilot scene materializes in the CR-V’s cargo area, as the Ridgeline’s soccer setting unfolds from the Pilot’s third row.

Has Honda decided the Ridgeline is a sport-utility vehicle? A CUV?

No.

“We view the Ridgeline as a competitor in the midsize pickup segment,” Honda Canada’s public relations coordinator Alen Sadeh told TTAC earlier this week. “We think this Ridgeline is exceptionally strong at adapting to all the different ways people use their trucks.”

As for the Ridgeline’s less-than-trucky platform, the “unibody architecture provides very competitive pickup truck capabilities, including a large standard bed space and class-leading payload capacity with fundamentally better interior packaging and driving dynamics,” said Sadeh.

The pickup truck classification was a subject brought up five times in Honda’s response to our inquiry. SUV? No mentions? Crossover? No mentions. CUV? Not a once.

Honda, confirmed Alen Sadeh, believes the Ridgeline is a midsize pickup truck.

Do you agree? And if it isn’t a midsize pickup truck, what is the Honda Ridgeline?

Timothy Cain
Timothy Cain

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  • Deanst Deanst on Mar 16, 2017

    Stay tuned for tomorrow's instalment when TTAC notices that VW Canada has a category called "SUVs and wagons", which doesn't include one SUV. It does include one CUV which is uncompetitive - Tiguan, one which is unavailable - Atlas, and one which is unaffordable - Toureg. The wagons are quite nice though!

  • Pesky Varmint Pesky Varmint on Mar 17, 2017

    Yep I own pickups. A 3/4 ton and a 1 ton. I also own three ranches. When we go to town we drive either my Mustang or the wife's Land Rover Discovery (don't start on that one, I only buy them because you can get them for a song used and I have the last engine that doesn't blow head gaskets). But here in Arizona there's lots of 1/2 ton pickups in the cities, but it's pretty much all hat and no cattle. The people willing to pay extra for 3/4 or 1 ton generally intend to use it.

    • Art Vandelay Art Vandelay on Mar 18, 2017

      Agree with that. The "truck as a car" types stick with the half tons.

  • Michael Gallagher I agree to a certain extent but I go back to the car SUV transition. People began to buy SUVs because they were supposedly safer because of their larger size when pitted against a regular car. As more SUVs crowded the road that safety advantage began to dwindle as it became more likely to hit an equally sized SUV. Now there is no safety advantage at all.
  • Probert The new EV9 is even bigger - a true monument of a personal transportation device. Not my thing, but credit where credit is due - impressive. The interior is bigger than my house and much nicer with 2 rows of lounge seats and 3rd for the plebes. 0-60 in 4.5 seconds, around 300miles of range, and an e-mpg of 80 (90 for the 2wd). What a world.
  • Ajla "Like showroom" is a lame description but he seems negotiable on the price and at least from what the two pictures show I've dealt with worse. But, I'm not interested in something with the Devil's configuration.
  • Tassos Jong-iL I really like the C-Class, it reminds me of some trips to Russia to visit Dear Friend VladdyPoo.
  • ToolGuy New Hampshire
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