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Test Drive: 2018 Lexus NX 300h

2018 Lexus NX 300h
2018 Lexus NX 300h in Eminent White

2018 Lexus NX 300h

Class: Premium Compact Crossover

Miles driven: 670

Fuel used: 20.3 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 33.0 mpg

Driving mix: 40% city, 60% highway

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 33/30/31 (city, highway, combined)

Fuel type: Regular gas

Base price: $38,335 (not including $995 destination charge)

CG Report Card
Room and ComfortB
Power and PerformanceB-
Fit and FinishA-
Fuel EconomyA
ValueB-
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide's impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big GuyB
Tall GuyA
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. "Big" rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, "Tall" rating based on 6'6"-tall male tester.

Options on test vehicle: Auto-dimming inside rear mirror with Homelink garage-door opener ($125), Luxury Package ($4705), navigation system with premium audio ($1800), hands-free power liftgate ($550), body-side moldings ($199), illuminated door sills ($459)

Price as tested: $47,168

 

Quick Hits

The great: Nicely integrated hybrid powertrain offers fine fuel economy

The good: Decently spacious interior with classy trimmings

The not so good: Touchpad infotainment interface can be distracting

More Lexus NX price and availability information

 

John Biel

Lexus dived into the compact sport-utility vehicle at an opportune time when it brought out the NX for 2015. Smaller crossovers were on the rise, and Lexus certainly made a nice one with the choices of front- or all-wheel drive and gas or gas/electric-hybrid powerplants. Since then, the NX has been incrementally improved—for 2018 there is revised styling and the extension of the Lexus Safety System + technology suite as standard equipment for all models—but it hasn’t deviated much from the original form.

Though its aggressive styling is a bit too ostentatious for some shoppers, the NX offers a nice ride/handling balance.

Given that, it was nice to renew acquaintances with the 300h hybrid version, especially one that blended its commendable fuel economy with ample luxury for a price safely below $50,000.

To be sure, the ’18 NX 300h that Consumer Guide tested was no “stripper.” Among its $7838 worth of options were the $1800 Navigation Package (also including a 10.3-inch display screen and uplevel 10-speaker audio system) and the $4705 Luxury Package (with 18-inch alloy wheels; leather upholstery; wood interior trim; heated and ventilated front seats; heated leather-wrapped steering wheel; power liftgate; rain-sensing windshield wipers; premium LED daytime running lights; power moonroof; memory-function driver’s seat, power mirrors, and tilt/telescoping steering column; blind-spot monitor; and rear cross-traffic alert). It all made for cushy and convenient vehicle, yet the full list price with delivery came to $47,168.

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The NX’s interior boasts convincingly upscale materials and, for the most part, agreeable ergonomics. The rear seat is spacious enough to accommodate average-sized adults, especially when the seat backs are reclined to free up headroom.

Standard items start with the 194-system-horsepower hybrid powerplant and automatic continuously variable transmission (CVT). The 300h is solely all-wheel drive—its front-drive companion was dropped after 2016—but with a different system than the front/rear-linked AWD in the NX 300. The hybrid model uses a separate electric motor to drive the rear wheels when necessary. (The rear motor also acts as a generator during regenerative braking, increasing the amount of recovered kinetic energy.) Safety System + bundles precollision alert and braking, pedestrian detection, adaptive cruise control, high-beam assist, and lane-keeping assist. The console-mounted Remote Touch Interface connects drivers to multimedia, automatic-dual-zone climate, and navigation systems. LED lighting, tire-pressure monitor, Enform safety and service telematics (and remote mobile app), HD and satellite radio, 8-way power front seats, and keyless entry and starting are also included.

The NX 300h’s nicely finished cargo area offers a respectable 16.8 cubic feet of storage space behind the rear seats and 53.7 cubic feet with the rear seat backs folded.

One other thing the 300h brings to the swanky party is downright good gas mileage for an SUV. The brunt of the driving load is born by a 2.5-liter 4-cylinder engine that the EPA rates at 33 mpg in the city, 30 mpg in highway driving, and 31 combined. This reviewer saw 33.9 mpg following a trip of 220.7 miles with 50 percent city-type operation—about as close to “combined” as it gets—even without dipping into the “Eco” driving mode that manipulates throttle response, engine output, and climate settings to optimize economy. The fuel-saving arsenal also includes an “EV” mode that permits driving short distances at speeds up to 20 mph solely on battery power.

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Eighteen-inch wheels and all-season tires are included in the $4705 Luxury Package. Seventeen-inch wheels are standard.

The hybrid powertrain delivers confident merging and highway-cruising power, though off-the-line jump is a bit muted. In addition to Eco, other available driving modes are “Normal” and “Sport,” the latter of which coaxes a modicum of quicker response from the accelerator. Transitions between electric and gas-engine operation are quite seamless. The NX is a pleasingly nimble handler, and derives a composed ride from its tight unitized body structure and suspension of MacPherson struts in front, double wishbones with trailing arms in the rear, and 4-corner coil springs. If there’s any real soft spot in the NX 300h’s driving dynamics, it’s the slowly building brake force that often plagues hybrids as they capture braking energy to feed back to the battery for the electric drive motor.

Inside, passengers see and feel soft-touch materials atop the dashboard, around the glove box, and on the upper halves of the door panels. The touchpad-directed Remote Touch Interface lets users “pinch,” double tap, or push to access info or change views on the display screen in the dash. It is hardly the most aggravating such system around, but it still has quirks that require some precious attention from the driver. Climate and some audio settings can be managed through buttons on the center stack, but they are displayed on the screen. A programmable, easy-to-follow thin-film-transistor vehicle-information display appears between the main dials in the instrument cluster. Storage is handled by a sizeable glove box, a modest covered console box that houses USB and power ports, front-door pockets large enough to have room for a bottle holder, smaller pockets in the rear doors, and pouches on the backs of the front seats. There are two exposed cup holders in the console and two more that pop out of the pull-down center arm rest in the rear seat.

Front-row headroom and legroom are very good, but there’s not a lot of space for legs and knees between the console and door panels. That’s why soft knee-level pads on the sides of the console are a nice touch. Second-row legroom is sufficient for the vast majority of adults. Three children will fit across the rear seat—or maybe even three fit grown-ups in a pinch, thanks in part to a low floor tunnel. Rear-seat headroom isn’t as good as in front, but adjustable seat backs recline, which opens up additional space. Doors open wide and are shaped for easy entries and exits. Thick, sloping roof pillars reduce over-the-shoulder vision for the driver, and rear head rests reduce the field of view to the rear.

There’s bumper-height loading of the ample cargo bay. Tie-down hooks and a tray for incidentals under the floor pad are provided, too. For much more cargo room, the 60/40-split rear seats fold nearly flat with the load floor, though a very slight gap runs between the cargo bay and the lowered seat backs.

Any Lexus NX can deliver the space and luxuries described here, but only the 300h can do it with the bonus of such potential fuel economy.

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If you’re comfortable with its rather radical styling, the Lexus NX is a thoroughly likable compact luxury crossover SUV, and the 300h delivers excellent fuel economy with little sacrifice to all-around drivability.
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