Toyota Teases Yet Another Crossover

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

It seems Toyota is bent on covering every single niche in the crossover segment, currently slinging vehicles ranging from the pert Corolla Cross to the jumbo Grand Highlander. Now, another bundle of joy is on the way – but they’re not telling us its name.

As with most teasers, we are deemed worthy of but the slightest glimpse of taillight and a couple of badges. This is akin to other, more human levels of infuriating tease but VS lawyers are not permitting us to elaborate on such activity here. The shot does provide us with a clue about this rig’s name thanks to the plastichrome letter ‘C’ stuck above the license plate cutout. Given the general size and shape of that area and the badge’s positioning, it is reasonable to say the model name has five letters; Camry or Crown, perhaps? It’d be funky – though highly unlikely – if they resurrected the Cresta or Carina names from other markets, but if they apply the Celica name to an SUV there will be riots. Just sayin’.


The Crown is an intriguing thought, one with which several other outlets are running. Some sort of Crown Cross or Crown SUV would certainly thrust that nameplate in front of a whole array of new customers, folks who would likely never consider the new Crown sedan as their next vehicle. To be sure, the company did heave out a PR photo last year showing four vehicles that could possibly bear the Crown name; amongst them was a large SUV. This may very well be that machine – and it could be the same one whose Prius-like headlamps were teased last week.


Officially, the bumf for this photo promises the vehicle will have all-wheel drive and describes the thing as a “hybrid electric mid-size SUV”. Top-spec Crown models in this country are powered by an electrified setup that mates a turbocharged 2.4-liter four-banger engine with a rear-axle electric motor to produce a combined 340 horsepower. Other tunes belt out just 236 horses and use a CVT instead of a conventional automatic. Given the Crown’s elevated ride height, it’s not out of the question for Toyota to drape some sort of slinky crossover-ish body atop that car’s bones and squeeze more profit from the platform. And if we were rude, we'd totally point out the lack of alignment between the hatch and body on this pre-production vehicle being teased today.


Whatever it is, we shouldn’t have long to wait. Toyota will probably have a couple of reveals at the Tokyo Motor Show which kicks off in just a couple of days.


[Images: Toyota]


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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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  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Kwik_Shift_Pro4X on Oct 25, 2023

    I only look forward to the Toyota Stout, if it ever gets a release.

    • Analoggrotto Analoggrotto on Oct 27, 2023

      Next Generation Telluride will spawn an ATP variant with an pickup bed.




  • Ajla Ajla on Oct 25, 2023

    Not sure how it will translate to a CUV but I'm a fan of the Crown lifted sedan. The biggest downsides are the weird exterior and Toyota branding.

  • KOKing I owned a Paul Bracq-penned BMW E24 some time ago, and I recently started considering getting Sacco's contemporary, the W124 coupe.
  • Bob The answer is partially that stupid manufacturers stopped producing desirable PHEVs.I bought my older kid a beautiful 2011 Volt, #584 off the assembly line and #000007 for HOV exemption in MD. We love the car. It was clearly an old guy's car, and his kids took away his license.It's a perfect car for a high school kid, really. 35 miles battery range gets her to high school, job, practice, and all her friend's houses with a trickle charge from the 120V outlet. In one year (~7k miles), I have put about 10 gallons of gas in her car, and most of that was for the required VA emissions check minimum engine runtime.But -- most importantly -- that gas tank will let her make the 300-mile trip to college in one shot so that when she is allowed to bring her car on campus, she will actually get there!I'm so impressed with the drivetrain that I have active price alerts for the Cadillac CT6 2.0e PHEV on about 12 different marketplaces to replace my BMW. Would I actually trade in my 3GT for a CT6? Well, it depends on what broke in German that week....
  • ToolGuy Different vehicle of mine: A truck. 'Example' driving pattern: 3/3/4 miles. 9/12/12/9 miles. 1/1/3/3 miles. 5/5 miles. Call that a 'typical' week. Would I ever replace the ICE powertrain in that truck? No, not now. Would I ever convert that truck to EV? Yes, very possibly. Would I ever convert it to a hybrid or PHEV? No, that would be goofy and pointless. 🙂
  • ChristianWimmer Took my ‘89 500SL R129 out for a spin in his honor (not a recent photo).Other great Mercedes’ designers were Friedrich Geiger, who styled the 1930s 500K/540K Roadsters and my favorite S-Class - the W116 - among others. Paul Bracq is also a legend.RIP, Bruno.
  • ToolGuy Currently my drives tend to be either extra short or fairly long. (We'll pick that vehicle over there and figure in the last month, 5 miles round trip 3 times a week, plus 1,000 miles round trip once.) The short trips are torture for the internal combustion powertrain, the long trips are (relative) torture for my wallet. There is no possible way that the math works to justify an 'upgrade' to a more efficient ICE, or an EV, or a hybrid, or a PHEV. Plus my long trips tend to include (very) out of the way places. One day the math will work and the range will work and the infrastructure will work (if the range works) and it will work in favor of a straight EV (purchased used). At that point the short trips won't be torture for the EV components and the long trips shouldn't hurt my wallet. What we will have at that point is the steady drip-drip-drip of long-term battery degradation. (I always pictured myself buying generic modular replacement cells at Harbor Freight or its future equivalent, but who knows if that will be possible). The other option that would almost possibly work math-wise would be to lease a new EV at some future point (but the payment would need to be really right). TL;DR: ICE now, EV later, Hybrid maybe, PHEV probably never.
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