2026 Passports are in transit to dealers.
Seems like every year is a first year with bugs. Very very few vehicles are depreciation proof. The most reliable are the closest.I take the advice of my mechanic. Never buy the first year of a redesign. Let them work out all the bugs first. Plus I would never buy a new car that drops in value the minute the front tires leave the lot.
Faulty reasoning.I take the advice of my mechanic. Never buy the first year of a redesign. Let them work out all the bugs first. Plus I would never buy a new car that drops in value the minute the front tires leave the lot.
Not faulty reasoning but everyone is entitled to their opinion. Brand new takes the biggest depreciation hit. And redesigns usually have the most bugs.Seems like every year is a first year with bugs. Very very few vehicles are depreciation proof. The most reliable are the closest.
Faulty reasoning.
If you’re a Costco member or AAA member they both have car buying program with a discount.
Just curious, how is the wind noise on your Passport. It is my main gripe on my 23 Trailsport. Love the ride, the room, hate how noisy at highway speed.At my local dealer getting an oil and filter change on my wife's CRV today, looked at the new 26 PP TS in the most god awful light green/mud, that had it priced at 58 K. Not sure if I like it as well as my 24 TS. I usually like the boxey look but for me it just doesn't work on the 26 PP.
Or maybe just another instance of follow the leader.Did Honda go the "wrong" way with the new Passport? That question is one of perspective.
Yes, most new Passports will be family haulers and grocery getters, not off-road warriors. And, yes, with the additional off-road capabilities engineered into the design, the new Passport is necessarily more expensive to build, and this is reflected in the price. But, respectfully, none of that matters if it sells well--or at least sells better than the outgoing model, which should be fairly easy to do.
Personally, I think Honda is going to hit a homerun with the new Passport. Without it, Honda completely misses out on the whole "off-road craze" that is gripping the North American vehicle market. Virtually every major manufacturer, except Honda, has been mining that lucrative market segment for years. Honda decided to take the Passport in the "off-road" direction because it knows there is more money to be made in that segment rather than simply offering a two-row version of the Pilot.
It does have the unified dash design common to all currents Honda's, and the same engine and trans as the current Pilot, Odyssey and Ridgeline. Otherwise, it's rather different.That's generally true, but the 2026 Passport is based off current generation Pilot which has been in production since 2023. Same engine, same transmission, same dash design (except for the infotainment screen and that's from the 2023-current Accord).
Basically only the body is different. Everything else is 4th Gen Pilot which now 3 model years in.Or maybe just another instance of follow the leader.
It does have the unified dash design comment to all currents Honda's, and the same engine and trans as the current Pilot, Odyssey and Ridgeline. Otherwise, it's rather different.