Gmc Yukon vs Ford Tourneo Custom

What's the difference?

VS
Gmc Yukon
Gmc Yukon

$153,990 - $199,990

2025 price

Ford Tourneo Custom
Ford Tourneo Custom

$57,990 - $73,990

2025 price

Summary

2025 Gmc Yukon
2025 Ford Tourneo Custom
Safety Rating

Engine Type
V8, 6.2L

Inline 4, 2.0L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Diesel
Fuel Efficiency
14.7L/100km (combined)

0.0L/100km (combined)
Seating
8

8
Dislikes
  • Big rims
  • Terrible tyres for off-roading
  • Lacks prestige look and feel at this price

  • Side window blind spot
  • Huge, unassisted tailgate
  • Fiddly manual gear selection
2025 Gmc Yukon Summary

If you're in the market for a premium-style four-wheel drive wagon with eight seats and a petrol V8 engine and you live in Australia, your choices have been rather limited. You'd be looking at something like the Nissan Patrol or the Land Rover Defender 130. 

Well, that has now changed as General Motors Specialty Vehicles (GMSV) is importing the GMC Yukon Denali to Australia. This top-of-the-range Yukon arrives here as a left-hand drive vehicle and is converted to right-hand drive at a facility in Victoria to suit our market. 

The Denali has a price tag just under $175,000, though, and that makes it a lot more expensive than most vehicles that could be considered rivals in the Aussie market. Is it worth it?

Read on.

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2025 Ford Tourneo Custom Summary

This idea hasn’t always worked out too well. Take a parcel-van (in this case the Ford Transit Custom) strip out the rubber matting and cargo barrier and bolt six or seven seats into what was the load area. Sure, the original vehicle to use this concept, the Volkswagen Kombi way back in the 1950s, got away with it, possibly because there wasn’t anything better around.

Ford has plenty of history with this notion, too. The first Transit of 1965 was also available as a mini-bus, but worked okay because the Transit itself was such a car-like departure from the commercial-vehicle norm.

Things didn’t go so well for Ford in the early 1980s, however, when the Econovan-badged parcel van it shared with Mazda (the E2200) was fitted with eight seats, given some fuzzy velour trim and dubbed the Spectron. And it was dreadful. In fact, so bad, that it made the contemporaneous Mitsubishi Nimbus and the even more forgettable Nissan Prairie seem like vastly superior alternatives to the job of moving people. Only because they were.

Early versions of the Spectron retained the Econovan’s crude suspension, wheezy (and fragile) little engines and even the tiny dual rear wheels that entirely deprived the vehicle of any traction. In fact, dreadful doesn’t even cover it.

So you can see why Ford might be a bit antsy about me referring to the new Tourneo (a badge that has been around in Europe for decades) as a Transit Custom with extra seats and windows. Yet that kind of sums it up (up to a point, anyway). Luckily, the Transit Custom itself is a pretty sorted thing these days, so maybe Ford has nothing to worry about. Maybe…

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Deep dive comparison

2025 Gmc Yukon 2025 Ford Tourneo Custom

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