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2026 Nissan X-TRAIL Pricing and Specs

From

$36,990*
Nissan X-TRAIL

The Nissan X-TRAIL 2026 prices range from $36,990 for the basic trim level SUV X-TRAIL St (2Wd) to $57,065 for the top of the range SUV X-TRAIL Ti-L (4Wd) E-Power (Hybrid).

The Nissan X-TRAIL 2026 comes in SUV.

The Nissan X-TRAIL 2026 is available in Electric/Pulp and Unleaded Petrol. Engine sizes and transmissions vary from the SUV 1.5L 1 SP Automatic to the SUV 2.5L SP Continuous Variable.

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All 2026 Nissan X-TRAIL pricing and specs

SUV

2026 Nissan X-TRAIL Specs Price
St-L (4Wd) E-Power (Hybrid) Specs: 1.5L, Electric/Pulp, 1 SPEED AUTOMATIC Price: $47,765
Ti (4Wd) E-Power (Hybrid) Specs: 1.5L, Electric/Pulp, 1 SPEED AUTOMATIC Price: $53,265
Ti-L (4Wd) E-Power (Hyb)19" Aw Specs: 1.5L, Electric/Pulp, 1 SPEED AUTOMATIC Price: $56,265
Ti-L (4Wd) E-Power (Hybrid) Specs: 1.5L, Electric/Pulp, 1 SPEED AUTOMATIC Price: $57,065
N-Trek (2Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $46,060
N-Trek (4Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $49,160
St (2Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $36,990
St (4Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $39,990
St-L (2Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $41,465
St-L (4Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $44,565
Ti (4Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $50,265
Ti-L (4Wd) Specs: 2.5L, Unleaded Petrol, SPEED CONTINUOUS VARIABLE Price: $53,265

Nissan X-TRAIL FAQs

My 2016 Nissan X-Trail T32 feels heavy and slow

Many workshops would start with a simple tune-up and service to tackle this problem. Cars lose performance over the years and it’s often as simple as a good tune-up including a change of spark plugs, filters (air and fuel), spark plug leads and a check of the ignition coils (in petrol models).

If you have the diesel-engined version of the X-Trail, it would also be worth checking to see if the intake manifold has become partially blocked with black gunk that is a by-product of the car’s emissions-control system.

A good service and tune might bring performance back to how you remember it, but don’t ignore the simply things like a faulty accelerator pedal calibration, or slack transmission that is making the car feel lazy. Even low tyre pressures can make a car feel lethargic in terms of both steering and how it accelerates.

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Shuddering and vibration in a 2014 Nissan X-Trail

If you mean shuddering and vibration when you take off from rest, then you’re possibly experiencing the same problem that many owners of this model Nissan have already reported. The problem is caused by wear in the CVT transmission which is allowing the steel drive belt to slip. As the belt slips and grips and then slips again, the driver experiences less-than-smooth acceleration.

The safety recalls (which were actually technical service bulletins) you’re referring to all occurred within the North American market and haven’t been extended to Australian X-Trails (that I know of). Unfortunately, US consumer law is quite different from ours and consumers have very different rights and obligations.

It would be worth having the car assessed and then approaching Nissan Australia’s customer service department to see if there’s any help on offer. But given the age of the vehicle, I wouldn’t be holding my breath. That said, I totally understand your point of view, and 11 years is probably not a suitable lifespan for a modern automatic transmission, given we’ve been making cars for more than 130 years, and Nissan (in one form or another) for the last 90 of those.

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Tyre problems with 2023 Nissan X-Trail

I’d be interested to know what makes you think the dealer who delivered your brand-new car has changed the tyres. Were they showing signs of wear? Did they make the car handle or ride strangely? Did they just not look 'right’?

I can’t imagine any dealership would be stupid enough to fit partly worn tyres on a brand-new car. You bought a new car, it should come with new tyres. Simple as that, and anything else is pretty shifty to say the least. The dealer might have switched to another set of brand-new tyres if one or more of the originals was damaged, but that’s not what you’ve suggested here. I’d definitely be taking it up with Nissan Australia’s customer service division as selling a brand-new car with second-hand tyres just seems crazy. Not to mention legally questionable.

If it’s simply the case that the tyres’ tread didn’t look brand-new, then the 26km it’s already covered could explain that by taking the shine off the tread. That, and the fact that the sidewalls were probably still very shiny (dealerships love tyre-shine products) could make the treads look worn when they really weren’t.

The faulty tyre-pressure monitoring system is a separate issue and can be fixed by replacing the dud parts. This is a simple warranty claim, and even though tyres are generally not covered in a new-car warranty, selling a brand-new car without brand-new tyres is a new one for me. If it really did happen, you’d be well within your rights to demand brand-new tyres.

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* Price is based on the Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price for the lowest priced Nissan X-TRAIL 2026 variant. The Price excludes costs such as stamp duty, other government charges and options.

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