The class took a hit to its popularity around the first time gas prices reached $4 a gallon, but lately sales have been roaring back. Jeep's Grand Cherokee is Chrysler's second-best-selling vehicle this year after the Ram 1500 pickup truck, and it's a reason the joint venture with Fiat is booming. Ford's Edge, while not as successful as sister SUVs Explorer and Escape, still outsells Ford's largest and smallest cars, the Taurus and Fiesta.
The shift in thinking about what makes an SUV has resonated with car shoppers, and it has led to even more midsize SUVs for families to consider. Of the six in our test, two — the Edge and Toyota Venza — weren't even around 10 years ago while another, the Kia Sorento, made the transition from a truck- to a car-based platform.
Here's the full list of competitors:
- 2013 Ford Edge
- 2013 Hyundai Santa Fe Sport
- 2014 Jeep Grand Cherokee
- 2014 Kia Sorento
- 2013 Nissan Murano
- 2013 Toyota Venza
Our $38,000 price ceiling resulted in a group of SUVs with a range of features and equipment. All but one had V-6 power, though the Santa Fe Sport's turbocharged four-cylinder produced V-6-like power numbers. Three had two-wheel drive and three had all-wheel drive. Our price limit also allowed some models to have features such as a panoramic sunroof and heated and ventilated seats that in a prior time would have been reserved for luxury models.
See a complete rundown of what you get for $38,000
How did we sort it all out and arrive at a winner? Testing, testing, testing:
- We spent a day driving these midsize SUVs on a carefully planned route to observe real-world gas mileage.
- We spent a day where our experts drove all the SUVs back-to-back on the same route to gather additional impressions.
- Finally, our real-world family, Brian and Melissa Brown and their two children, joined us for a day of driving and to rate the models with an eye toward which features would be most important in their next car.
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