Lexus Rx450H+ vs Ford Bronco

What's the difference?

VS
Lexus Rx450H+
Lexus Rx450H+

$105,350 - $123,650

2026 price

Ford Bronco
Ford Bronco

2024 price

Summary

2026 Lexus Rx450H+
2024 Ford Bronco
Safety Rating

Engine Type

Fuel Type
-

-
Fuel Efficiency
-

-
Seating
5

-
Dislikes
  • Relatively short EV-only range
  • No spare tyre, just a repair kit
  • Raised rear seat cramped for tall people

  • No plans for Australia… yet
  • EcoBoost offers modest performance
  • EcoBoost is thirsty too
2026 Lexus Rx450H+ Summary

Lexus has finally brought a plug-in hybrid to the Australian market with the RX450h+, and we’ve been testing the second-from-the-top Sports Luxury grade to see how it stacks up.

Promising a blend of electric efficiency and the high-end comfort Lexus is known for, this large SUV steps into a competitive segment. But does it deliver on both fronts?

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2024 Ford Bronco Summary

Have you seen that new Ford television commercial filled with its three most adventurous vehicles - the Ranger, Everest and Bronco - driving across a variety of Australian landscapes as people old and young alike have fun in a trio of the Blue Oval’s finest?

No? That’s probably because it doesn’t exist, because Ford Australia doesn’t sell the Bronco SUV here despite the fact it’s the third member of ‘T6’ family alongside the Ranger and Everest.

No vehicle sums up the state of Ford Australia better than the Bronco. It’s a rugged, capable SUV that would seemingly appeal to the Australian market and it’s built on the same underpinnings as the Ranger/Everest (the so-called ‘T6’ platform) that was developed here, in Australia by Ford’s engineering and design teams based in Melbourne.

And yet, despite that, and the fact it obviously has the capability to be made in right-hand drive, Australians are denied access to this reborn icon (Ford’s words).

The problem, it seems, is the Bronco’s popularity in the US market, with orders stretching well beyond a year the company, understandably, wants to make sure it has that resolved before it expands.

At least, that’s what Ford’s global CEO, Jim Farley told CarsGuide in September 2022, leaving the door wide open for the Bronco to eventually make its way down under.

“We can do Bronco and Bronco Sport for the globe for sure,” Farley said. “But we have, like, a year or two order bank so we have a lot of work to do on our capacity before we can even consider something like that.”

He added: “Of course it can be engineered, just like Mustang, but you have to invest in the capacity and it’s like the first or second inning of building up the Bronco line-up.

"It’s a whole family, we’ve just come out with the Heritage, we’ve got Everglades, there’s going to be a lot of iterations so just give us some time.”

And it’s the Bronco Heritage that Mr Farley referenced that this reviewer just spent several days behind the wheel of in the USA, taking it on a cross-country road trip through the country’s south-east and up into Washington.

It was the ideal drive to find out, once and for all, if the Bronco has real potential for the Australian market or if we’re daydreaming on something unworthy of our attention.

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Deep dive comparison

2026 Lexus Rx450H+ 2024 Ford Bronco

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