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Volkswagen Touareg vs Nissan Pathfinder

What's the difference?

VS
Volkswagen Touareg
Volkswagen Touareg

$79,990 - $148,950

2024 price

Nissan Pathfinder
Nissan Pathfinder

$55,888 - $78,881

2024 price

Summary

2024 Volkswagen Touareg
2024 Nissan Pathfinder
Safety Rating

Engine Type

V6, 3.5L
Fuel Type
-

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
-

10.5L/100km (combined)
Seating
-

8
Dislikes
  • Disappointing ride quality
  • PHEV elements frustrating to use IRL
  • Limited appeal compared to other R models

  • Fuel economy
  • No third-row top tethers
  • Space saver spare
2024 Volkswagen Touareg Summary

It’s big, it’s fast, it’s luxurious, Volkswagen’s Touareg has always been a stand-out large SUV.

This one, the full-fat R is the latest take on the halo Volkswagen model. It has big shoes to fill.

See, top-spec Touaregs in the past are hardly rivals to the Toyota LandCruisers and Hyundai Palisades of this world. They’re a different breed, with the first-generation Touareg powered by a variety of engines up to a 5.0-litre turbo-diesel V10, and the second-gen version packing petrol and diesel V8s in its upper levels.

They were the ultimate sleeper family SUV, ridiculous engines with rich VW Group lineage in a seemingly mainstream family-friendly package.

But this third-generation version can’t quite replicate the over-engined craziness of its predecessors. It has to think outside the box as emissions regulations crack down the world over.

This Touareg R is a plug-in hybrid. A performance-focused one at that. Can it hope to replicate the unhinged nature of its forebears and find an appropriate place atop the hierarchy of Volkswagen’s R models? Let’s find out.

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2024 Nissan Pathfinder Summary

The Nissan Pathfinder has evolved over the years from what was quite a rough-and-tumble Ford Everest style vehicle to a remarkably plush three-row family SUV.

Although it took a while to reach Australia, when the fifth-generation version landed in late 2022 it was a huge leap over its predecessor. And yet it has been a relatively slow seller in Australia.

In the first half of 2024 only 405 were registered, less than a tenth of the segment benchmark Toyota Kluger (5861 sales).

This can be largely attributed to a lack of choice in the Pathfinder range, following Nissan culling entry-grade variants early on leaving only the relatively expensive Ti and Ti-L grades, both fitted with a V6 petrol engine. 

To increase customer choice, Nissan has reintroduced the ST-L mid-spec trim with the option of front-wheel drive for under $60,000, before on-road costs. But is it a good buy?

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Interested in a Nissan Pathfinder?

Deep dive comparison

2024 Volkswagen Touareg 2024 Nissan Pathfinder

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