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How Much Is the 2026 Toyota Land Cruiser?

toyota land cruiser 2026 exterior oem 01 jpg 2026 Toyota Land Cruiser | Manufacturer image

After its redesign for 2024, the off-road-oriented Toyota Land Cruiser carried over for 2025 and returns for 2026 with no major changes but a small price increase. The 2026 Land Cruiser starts at $58,650, slightly above model-year 2025’s $58,195 starting price (all prices include destination).

Related: Best SUV of 2025

Shop the 2025 Toyota Land Cruiser near you

Heritage Blue 2025 Toyota Land Cruiser 1958 SUV
Used
2025 Toyota Land Cruiser 1958
10,211 mi.
$64,970
Black 2025 Toyota Land Cruiser 1958 SUV
Used
2025 Toyota Land Cruiser 1958
16,632 mi.
$57,999 $292 price drop

Trim Levels, Powertrain Specs and Safety Features

That price is for the base 1958 trim, which wears retro-inspired round LED headlamps along with the “Toyota” heritage grille. Stepping up in the trim lineup is the confusingly named Land Cruiser trim, differentiated by a more modern-looking face with rectangular LED headlamps. It starts at $63,540, $575 more than the model-year 2025 price.

Every 2026 Land Cruiser is still powered by Toyota’s i-Force Max turbocharged 2.4-liter four-cylinder hybrid powertrain. Between the gas engine and an electric motor tucked into the eight-speed automatic transmission, the i-Force Max generates 326 horsepower and  465 pounds-feet of torque. Full-time four-wheel drive with locking center and rear differentials is again standard.

Safety standards also carry over for 2026. The Land Cruiser comes standard with the latest Toyota Safety Sense 3.0 suite of advanced safety tech, which includes adaptive cruise control, lane departure warning with steering assistance, lane-centering steering and forward collision warning with pedestrian detection. A blind spot monitor and rear cross-traffic alert are also standard.

Release Date

The 2026 Land Cruiser is slated to arrive at dealerships before the end of September.

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Jennifer Geiger

News Editor Jennifer Geiger joined the automotive industry in 2003, much to the delight of her Corvette-obsessed dad. Jennifer is an expert reviewer, certified car-seat technician and mom of three. She wears a lot of hats — many of them while driving a minivan.

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