2022 Nissan Pathfinder Platinum AWD
Class: Midsize SUV
Miles driven: 174
Fuel used: 9.7 gallons
CG Report Card | |
---|---|
Room and Comfort | B |
Power and Performance | B |
Fit and Finish | B+ |
Fuel Economy | C+ |
Value | B- |
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 Guy | A |
Tall Guy | A |
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. | |
Drivetrain | |
Engine Specs | 284-hp 3.5-liter |
Engine Type | V6 |
Transmission | 9-speed automatic |
Drive Wheels | All-wheel drive |
Real-world fuel economy: 17.9 mpg
Driving mix: 65% city, 35% highway
EPA-estimated fuel economy: 20/25/22 (mpg city/highway/combined)
Fuel type: Regular gas
Base price: $48,090 (not including $1175 destination charge)
Options on test vehicle: Carpeted floor mats ($255), Lighting Package ($795; includes illuminated kick plates and welcome lighting), two-tone paint ($350)
Price as tested: $50,665
Quick Hits
The great: Quiet cabin, comfortable ride, generously equipped with useful technology features
The good: Attractive new styling, 6000-pound towing capacity trumps most class rivals
The not so good: Our observed fuel economy fell short of EPA estimates, third-row seat space can be a bit cramped for adults
More Pathfinder price and availability information
John Biel
You would think that something named Pathfinder could find its way back home after wandering off the trail.
After skipping a year, Nissan’s 3-row midsize crossover SUV returns to showrooms as a 2022 model with hunkier exterior styling, an up-to-date interior design, and a raft of new features. Having sampled the pinnacle of the new Pathfinder range—the 4-wheel-drive Platinum—Consumer Guide likes some of those things better than others but still finds the final product a welcome advance.
As before, the Pathfinder comes in ascending S, SV, SL, and Platinum trim levels, all of which are available with the choice of front- or all-wheel drive. (AWD versions cost $1900 more than their front-wheel kin.) With delivery, CG’s top-line tester started at $49,265. It topped out at $51,395 with a quartet of individual options.
The sole engine choice is a carryover 3.5-liter V6 that makes 284 horsepower and 259 lb-ft of torque. It is, however, newly paired with a 9-speed automatic transmission in place of the previous automatic continuously variable transmission (CVT). Though the CVT in Nissans has given us less to criticize than similar devices found in other makes, the change is welcome as it improves engine flexibility—there’s quicker building of power than with the previous transmission’s slow-but-steady style. As for fuel economy, one of the CVT’s supposed benefits, the new stepped-gear transmission exacts little penalty—at least on paper. The EPA estimates for the AWD Pathfinder’s 9-speed autobox are 20 mpg in the city, 25 mpg on the highway, and 22 combined, which are one mpg short of the CVT’s highway rating but one mpg better in the city. That said, this reviewer recorded just 17.9 mpg in a 74.8-mile test stint in which 63 percent of his driving was in city-type conditions.
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While steering-wheel paddle shifters are now included for the benefit of drivers who may want more hands-on (or fingers-on) control of the available gear ranges, the console “shifter” is a block-like device that works with a back-and-forth action. Also found on some other new Nissans, its unconventional operation grows on a driver pretty quickly. The standard drive mode in all-wheel-drive Pathfinders is accompanied by a wider selection of condition-specific modes including “Mud/Rut,” “Snow,” “Sand,” “Tow,” “Sport,” and “Eco.” Tow mode utilizes Downhill Speed Control that helps reduce the transmission’s tendency to hunt for the “right” gears. Towing capacity remains at 6000 pounds.
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If appearance and driveline operation make the new ’22 Pathfinder seem a little more like a bona fide SUV again, on-road ride and handling won’t turn off even the most reliable commuters. The comfortable ride—even on the Platinum’s standard 20-inch alloy wheels—doesn’t feel the least bit “trucky,” while a nice level of composure keeps the vehicle from being too soft or flabby over bumps and around corners. Steering effort tightened up a little in Sport mode but not enough to make it a chore to work the helm.
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Inside, SLs and Platinums come with a big, new 9-inch touchscreen with a row of buttons to summon audio functions, maps, and apps. Physical volume and tuning knobs help make it easy to set up audio inputs for the 13-speaker Bose audio system that’s standard in the Platinum. The top model also features a digital instrument display. The instrument area is a large 12 inches, with lots of space for information display. We’re glad that the tri-zone climate system has dials for temperature settings, though buttons govern all other tasks. Second-row riders have their own climate panel, albeit with a repetitive-push control for temperature.
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As might be expected, the Platinum comes with most of what the Pathfinder has to offer. Standard equipment—some of which is found in lower-tier models—includes things like a panoramic moonroof, full LED exterior lighting, power-adjusted and heated side mirrors, motion-sensing hands-free liftgate, 10-way power driver’s seat and 4-way power front-passenger seat, Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone integration (wireless for CarPlay), satellite radio, Wi-Fi hotspot, wireless charging pad, head-up display, and remote engine start. In Platinums, the ProPILOT Assist, which pairs adaptive-cruise control with automatic lane-centering steering assist (though the driver’s hands must keep contact with the steering wheel) also has “Navi-Link” that uses navigation-system data to “predict” upcoming road features and slow the vehicle accordingly for curves and freeway exits. The safety-technology complement for all ’22 Pathfinders includes automatic emergency braking, blind-spot monitor, rear cross-traffic alert, lane-departure warning, and forward-collision warning.
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Platinum luxury touches include quilted semi-aniline leather upholstery. Front-row seats are heated and ventilated; second-row seats are heated. Drivers grip a heated, leather-wrapped steering wheel. Passengers enjoy the feel of soft surfaces on door tops and centers and a little on the console, though the underlying padding is thin. Platinums are 7-passenger vehicles with captain’s chairs and a center console in the second row. First- and second-row seats provide good support, and the latter recline quite far. Access to the third row isn’t easy, and for adults (two at most) there’s only enough headroom and knee room to tolerate for a while. Plus, feet get hung up in the tracks for the middle-row seats. Kids—up to three—might have fewer space problems. The seat back is fairly upright.
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A “purse porch” under the center console augments modest glove and console boxes. Front doors have pockets with bottle holders; rear-door pockets are little more than bottle holders. Pouches are on the backs of the front seats. Exposed cup holders reside in the front- and middle-row consoles, and in the sidewalls next to the third-row seat. There’s limited cargo space behind the third-row seats but a good-sized bin under the floor is a bonus. Rear seat folds flush with the cargo floor once headrests are folded via pulls in their backs. Dropping the second-row seats extends the cargo area, though you’ll have to work around the removable console.
The Pathfinder has found its way back to the Nissan SUV lineup with enough improvements to be a competitive draw for shoppers’ attention.
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2022 Nissan Pathfinder Platinum Gallery
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2022 Nissan Pathfinder Platinum
2022 Nissan Pathfinder Platinum