Toyota Trademark Hints at, Yes, Another Crossover

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Toyota has hinted in the past that perhaps fielding one vehicle per segment is foolish, old-timey thinking. At the same time, automakers have fallen in love with the idea of splitting segments, shoehorning tweener models into any narrow wedge of daylight that appears in their already crowded lineups. General Motors is especially preoccupied with this.

It’s against this backdrop that a new U.S. trademark application filed by Toyota emerges, and the name provided only bolsters speculation that the company’s light truck stable is due for a new member.

The application for “4Active”, filed on December 9th and first noticed by Motor1, is naturally vague, sounding like the name of a new all-wheel drive system or a standalone utility vehicle. It’s most likely the latter.

Bolstering this assertion is a summertime announcement from Toyota regarding its yet-to-open joint assembly plant in Alabama. The $1.6 billion facility, shared with Mazda, will start cranking out vehicles in 2021, but the Corolla production originally slated for the plant will instead swap to a “new, yet-to-be-announced SUV.”

It is believed the mystery utility vehicle will be a production version of the 2017 FT-4X Concept — a small, sub-RAV4 crossover that boasts the rugged exterior and all-wheel drive capability the brand’s subcompact C-HR lacks. If you’ll recall, that concept bowed with some of the most infuriating marketing copy ever put on a page.

Shortly after the concept’s New York debut, Toyota suggested there was room for more than one vehicle in a hot segment. With the RAV4 a sales leader and the C-HR considerably less so, the low end of the Toyota CUV totem pole seems like a good place to add a new vehicle. Ford executives chose to tread a similar path for the 2020 Escape and upcoming “baby Bronco” — a butchier, alternatively styled version of the same vehicle. Mazda went the segment-splitting route in its product plan, inserting the CX-30 between the subcompact CX-3 and compact CX-5 for 2020. Not to be outdone, Chevrolet debuted the Trailblazer as its own subcompact/compact tweener.

The highly configurable FT-4X was created to attract fun-loving urban Millennials to the brand, and that demographic hasn’t fallen off Toyota’s radar in the years since. Expect to see the brand’s TNGA architecture put to use beneath the 4Active, if indeed the name heralds a new AWD CUV.

[Image: Toyota]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Bd2 Mark my words : Lexus Deathwatch Part 1, the T24 From Hell!
  • Michael S6 Cadillac is beyond fixing because of lack of investment and uncompetitive products. The division and GM are essentially held afloat by mega size SUV (and pick up truck GM) that only domestic brainwashed population buys. Cadillac only hope was to leapfrog the competition in the luxury EV market but that turned out disastrously with the botches role out of the Lyriq which is now dead on arrival.
  • BlackEldo I'm not sure the entire brand can be fixed, but maybe they should start with the C pillar on the CT5...
  • Bd2 To sum up my comments and follow-up comments here backed by some data, perhaps Cadillac should look to the Genesis formula in order to secure a more competitive position in the market. Indeed, by using bespoke Rwd chassis, powertrains and interiors Genesis is selling neck and neck with Lexus while ATPs are 15 to 35% higher depending on the segment you are looking at. While Lexus can't sell Rwd sedans, Genesis is outpacing them 2.2 to 1. Genesis is an industry world changing success story, frankly Cadillac would be insane to not replicate it for themselves.
  • Bd2 Even Lexus is feeling the burn of not being able to compete in the e-ATP arena.
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