2022 Honda Passport Drops Base Trim, Wears New Higher Price

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

If you’re looking to get behind the wheel of Honda’s entrant in the two-row midsize crossover segment, be prepared to open your wallet a bit further than last year. A first blush, it might appear as if Honda jacked prices skyward by five grand but the reality is actually a lot simpler – they simply binned the base model.

In the 2021 model year, it was possible to find an entry-level Passport Sport (PasSport?) wearing a sticker of $32,790. If you were able to slum it with the poors and endure the ignominy of cloth seats and a manually-operated hatch, it may have been a good fit. For 2022, the Passport EX-L now represents the entry point of Honda’s 5-passenger rig, priced at $37,870.

The company asserts this decision is “reflecting customer demand” which generally means no one was buying the cheapest model. However, we will point out the Sport had several unique bits, including those cloth seats mentioned earlier. Surely economies of scale dictate that installing the same seats in all Passports will be pleasing to Honda’s pencil-necked beancounters. There’s no need to order manual tailgates from the supplier anymore, either.

To be sure, there is a price hike to the tune of about $1,000 across the board, but that’s par for the course these days. Inserting itself into the Honda lineup, and ostensibly replacing the Touring trim in the Passport pecking order, is the new TrailSport. That variant is designed in the image of machines such as the Outback Wilderness, adding 0.4 inches of track width and more aggressive-looking front and rear bumpers. Ground clearance is exactly the same as other all-wheel-drive trims, however, at 8.1 inches. All Passports wear new clothes ahead of the A-pillar for 2022, incorporating a fresh squared-off nose and more upright grille. If you think it’s attempting to shake a minivan-ish image, you’re probably right.

Every ’22 Passport is equipped with a 3.5L V6 engine making 280 horsepower, hooked to a 9-speed automatic (no CVTs here, thankfully). American-spec models have the choice of front-wheel drive on the EX-L only, where all-wheel drive is a $2,100 option. TrailSport and top-rung Elite trims have power going to each corner as standard equipment. Passports are good for 5,000 pounds of towing, making them one of the burlier options in this segment, at least without adding extra-cost equipment.

In this topsy-turvy year of car sales, Honda has shifted 45,733 Passport through to the end of October. That’s better than Ridgeline, but well off its best-selling CR-V which found 315,533 homes over the same timeframe. The more expensive Pilot was good for 124,147 sales.

[Image: Honda]

Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

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  • Tane94 Tane94 on Dec 08, 2021

    I'm anti-leather, so dropping the cloth seats is bad. Some vegan friendly seat options are needed, Honda

  • Stuki Stuki on Dec 08, 2021

    I can't think of anything more singularly silly than electric opening and closing tailgates. Doubly so on a car which is supposed to be for rugged, and cold/snowy, environments. Get some ice around the gate area, and the tailgate won't open. Happened to me several times on a Q7. The motors are also slow as molasses. I'm sure they may make some sort of sense on tall CUVs; if you're a 95 year old, 4 foot tall Japanese woman. But if you're a normal sized person and can't operate a bloody tailgate without issue, you really shouldn't be driving a car. Here's to hoping Akio Toyoda's battle to let cars be cars, succeed (the guy even insists on H2 ICEs. And does donuts in his company's parking lots, instead of sitting inside babbling mindlessly about "mobility" nonsense). The waiting lists for the (manual tailgate, wow!! And manual transmission. And mechanical parking brake. And more buttons than touchscreens and menus. And.....) GR Yaris looks promising. Here's to hoping even people less concerned about sporty handling and performance, will still clamor for the comforting mechanicalness which is just as wonderful about it, as its horsepower and grip.

  • Daniel J I love my mazda 6. It's getting harder and harder to drive it around where I live as municipalities fail to repair roads. SUVs are just easier to drive with all of the potholes.
  • 1995 SC On the plus side, I found a sedan I want to buy
  • Teddyc73 As I asked earlier under another article, when did "segment" or "class" become "space"? Does using that term make one feel more sophisticated? If GM's products in other segments...I mean "space" is more profitable then sedans then why shouldn't they discontinue it.
  • Robert Absolutely!!! I hate SUV's , I like the better gas milage and better ride and better handling!! Can't take a SUV 55mph into a highway exit ramp! I can in my Malibu and there's more than enough room for 5 and trunk is plenty big enough for me!
  • Teddyc73 Since when did automakers or car companies become "OEM". Probably about the same time "segment" or "class" became "space". I wish there were more sedans. I would like an American sedan. However, as others have stated, if they don't sell in large enough quantities to be profitable the automakers...I mean, "OEMs" aren't going to build them. It's simple business.
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