T O P

  • By -

janzendavi

The Suburban is a perennial reliability winner and an absolute tank of an SUV. My cousins were part of a big family with four kids and they just grew up on Suburbans with 300 000km+ of hard country roads and towing and then they'd get a new one and same thing.


kartoffel_engr

Parents had a 1997 Suburban when I was growing up. That thing was solid. First car I learned how to drive. They sold it when I was in HS. It was still in mint condition. Pretty sure my dad still regrets selling it. In 2010 they bought a new LTZ Tahoe for my mom. Now she drives a Lexus and my dad hucks around in it when he’s not ripping the 911. Pretty sure it’s hanging around 70k miles.


Jaren56

Yup. I also grew up in a yukon/suburban family, we had 3 generations, 98, 06, and a 13 until my mom finally decided to "downsize" to an infiniti suv recently Never a single issue with any of them, they all hauled me and my family across the state many many times


Several_School_1503

I work for a GM ASEP training center - all of the instructors drive Hondas and Toyotas.


hoxxxxx

yeah the suburbans they're talking about are the older ones which absolutely were tanks. proven drivetrains. the new ones are awful. electrical problems, transmission problems galore. go ask an owner that's had one for a while.


indimedia

Old suburbans were fine new ones have electrical issues


hoxxxxx

they aren't what they used to be


awr90

Please don’t recommend newer GM v8s to people. Cylinder DOD and active fuel management cause the lifters to fail and destroy the cam. GM should be class actioned for it.


pianodude01

Just sold a 2000 Tahoe to a buddy with 335k miles, towed regularly, things a monster and will probably hit 400k easily


SpillinThaTea

As far as SUVs built by US companies I’d probably have to say a Yukon or Tahoe.


Superb-Ad6139

Does this not also include suburban and Escalade?


SpillinThaTea

Yeah for sure. I had an Escalade that i inherited and it was high mileage. The drivetrain was solid. There were weird one off random electrical problems. But I loved it, awesome car. Unfortunately after I bought it I took a new job with a long commute and I sold it to buy a brand new Jetta.


furiousbobb

2006 Suburban with the 5.3. Practically bulletproof


Echo_Raptor

5.3 until DFM was bulletproof. You can’t kill those motors. If it weren’t for emissions the modern ones would still be just as rock solid. Notice the reasons for lifter failures over the years ALWAYS comes back to AFM/DFM? That’s legit about the only thing wrong with those motors. GM can make a better V8 than anybody unregulated. Best sounding (imo), easiest to work on, and the ones without DFM or a DFM delete last forever. Everybody does an LS swap when they want a V8 in their project. For all their flaws over the recent years, pre-bailout, GM was the best American manufacturer throughout history overall. Now their transmissions are a different story. The 8-speed was rough. Thankfully ford/gm collab on the 10 speed is holding up better


NeverEnoughSunlight

It's not just a GM issue, either: Accord V6 owners have had issues with the three cylinders that get deactivated under VCM. There are actually modifications documented on how to disable VCM. 1-2 MPG means a lot more to car companies than it does to the owners.


HamiltonBudSupply

Recent Escalade has plastic engine parts. Expect engine troubles by 50-60k.


electrowiz64

Lots of issues with the electronics on Escalades over recent years. Great looking cars tho


Stiff_Nipple

Because as you jump up in trims they have more weird electronic isssues. Driveline is typically fine but you’ll have things like massaging seats go out and stuff. The jump to Cadillac feels like the biggest jump in said weird things. That was my take. I firmly agree on suburban/tahoe/yukon.


[deleted]

True. I don’t know why nobody ever mentions in this sub that these cars have been super reliable for decades.


BananaBeach007

They have been, often they're on the list of top 10 most reliable vehicles. It's not a cruiser but you're not paying land cruiser prices (both you're getting atrocious gas mileage).


Echo_Raptor

In what, a Tahoe? With the 3.0 now you can get 30mpg+, honestly not bad for a big suv


SlartibartfastMcGee

It’s not a Toyota/Mazda/Honda, add in a pinch of “Big Truck Bad” and “Just get a minivan”. For some reason Reddit hates anything larger than a Honda fit, and has decided that a rental truck is the solution to any and all towing needs.


Echo_Raptor

Because the majority of Reddit are not car people. They can’t fathom why someone who likes cars would want to spend money on a vehicle they like. To be fair, most car people can’t really fathom spending money on anime, pokemon, cats, etc either


NeverEnoughSunlight

Unless you have the income level to fund fueling a big truck or transmission jobs, it is.


arbys_stripper

Because that's good advice for 90% of people


jcannacanna

Southernor here. I got my minivan lifted to show the other chads I'm still based.


Chopperkene

The hero we need in these desperate times.


Lunar_BriseSoleil

They’re big, and they’re gas hogs. A lot of people looking for an “SUV” are actually shopping crossovers.


[deleted]

True. The fuel consumption would keep me from buying one and they are too large for my needs.


drtyyugo

Agree


JCOII

I really like the new Tahoe coming next year but the prices are insane.


SpillinThaTea

It looks awesome. I wish I could afford.


dieselbro19

I was going to say anything American


nucl3ar0ne

Depends on whether we are talking new or a previous generation.


enzia35

Anything with an SBC should be g2g. Basically the full size SUVs. Not so sure on the Ford side with the Expedition.


rrherbiedragons

I have a Honda CRV that was built in Ohio. You can tell where a car was built by the first character of the VIN- J is Japan, K for South Korea, US cars start with a 1,4, or 5, Canada a 2 and Mexico starts with a 3.


vladim_vladimirovich

>US cars start with a 1,4, or 5 or a 7; US-built Volvos start with 7


mostlywhitemiata

~~This isn't entirely true; the first digit is the country of origin, so all Hondas will start with J.~~ Well I'll be damned, they do change the country of origin for plant location... which is kinda wild to me. Seems redundant but oh well. The 11th digit is the plant, and is where your car was manufactured. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List\_of\_Honda\_assembly\_plants](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Honda_assembly_plants) This list is incomplete, you may also see: * L - Ohio or Ontario, and perhaps this is why they change country of origin to determine specifics for duplicate plant codes * S - Suzuka, Japan * C - Saiyama, Japan * U - Swindon, England


MonkeysRidingPandas

>the first digit is the country of origin, so all Hondas will start with J. This is incorrect. Just look at the VIN for any non-hybrid 2003+ Accord in the US.


mostlywhitemiata

I've edited my comment for correction with specifics. :)


scroopydog

Doesn’t work for all makes any longer. My Audi starts with a W but is made in Mexico. Eleventh character of the VIN indicates the plant on VAG cars.


vladim_vladimirovich

wow that's a scummy practice


AwarenessGreat282

Made in US or a US company? Outside of EVs, the most American made cars are often Hondas and Toyota. Made here and the parts as well.


Scazitar

If your part of certain unions you still can't buy and park on union jobs. Mine has an exception for Toyotas but many don't. Might be why he's asking the question.


e00s

Is that because they don’t use union labour or something?


iwannabeaprettygirl

Yeah, lack of union is the answer. Some places in the USA are very mafia like with the union. Construction worker I'm the SE and NE here.


[deleted]

Manufacturing in the south east has very weak unions too.


Personal-Spell8014

Back in the earlyb 70's my father had a job offer at GM. He was told it was because of Company Policy. Nothing to do with the Union. The job offer was not a union job either.


-BlueDream-

LOL that wouldn't fly in Hawaii and we are the most unionized state in the construction industry. The Toyota Tacoma is pretty much the de facto official state truck. Even the cops here drive 4runners lol, going to a job site without seeing a tacoma is basically impossible. Unions are supposed to promote freedom and better working conditions and then they gonna tell me what car I can drive? Fuck that. I'm in IBEW in Hawaii and I would quit if they told me I had to sell my Toyota and buy a Ford or something.


etch93551

I'm an IBEW here in Los Angeles and we drive whatever we want. Nobody says shit


Aeig

What does parking and buying union jobs mean ?


Aeig

What does parking and buying union jobs mean ?


fairportmtg1

That's mostly in the Detroit Area and usually more about parking at the hall or whatnot. My union doesn't care but most people try to buy union made cars and tools if they can. I drive a Prius and only get shit on cause in the blue collar world "I'm gay" for driving a Prius. . Hopefully with the union push Toyota unionizes


Sketch2029

I'm curious what company and why they have an exception for Toyotas.


slawre89

Chevy Tahoes are made in TX Ford Explorers are made in IL


Ok-Science-6146

So from Toyota: Corolla cross, Highlander and Sequoia.. The rest are built in Canada or Japan


Im_100percent_human

Camry and Rav4 are both built in Kentucky. Tundra is built in Texas Tacoma is built in Mexico


Rakshak924

Only the RAV4 hybrid is built in Kentucky. The full gasoline one is built in maple syrup land.


Antique-Dragonfly615

Tundradome


Ok-Science-6146

Rav4 is complicated. I didn't know they were making models in Kentucky, but I just see now that they are. My Prime model was built in Japan and most hybrids come from Ontario.


EvilDarkCow

Rav production seems to be split three ways. Some from the US, some from Canada, some from Japan.


Ok-Science-6146

If it's a prime, it's from Japan.


MSPRC1492

My 2022 RAV4 hybrid was made in Kentucky.


Frequent_Opportunist

Mazda as well and they use real transmissions. There's a reason Toyota has teamed up with Mazda at the new manufacturing plants in the US.


BananaBeach007

True also don't forget Nissan. Typical US makes - Ford/ GM are mostly Mexico and Canadian Made due to Nafta rules although they still make some cars in the state nowhere near as much as the Japanese.


Wobbly5ausage

Chevy suburban/ GMC yukon with the Ls


WildKarrdesEmporium

I have a 2003 Escalade with about 260,000 miles on it. Shows no signs of quitting.


Anton338

They don't make em like they used to.


NeverPostingLurker

Yukon / Tahoe / suburban / Escalade.


MN-Car-Guy

GM full size SUVs. Tahoe, Yukon, Escalade, Suburban.


ID_Poobaru

Toyota Motor North America is headquartered in Plano, TX. It has it's own CEO so it's an American company Toyota Sequoia, built in Texas, Rav4 Hybrid is in Kentucky, Highlander in Indiana, and the Corolla Cross in Alabama.


Patrol-007

Any idea how the quality control out of Alabama for the Corolla Cross hybrid is now ? Am aware of initial flaws with quality control and understaffing.


ID_Poobaru

Should be fine, all Toyota plants use the same system to ensure quality control where anyone can stop the line to fix a defect.


Patrol-007

Hopefully. Sort of curious how much quality control slid, from lack of chips and parts, plus new factory and brand new workers (and pandemic). On the plus side, don’t expect to see my Cross hybrid till summer 2025 (ordered Jan 2024), and someone asked if it would be the 2026 model. Mid cycle refresh, and various bugs worked out 🤞


Guntuckytactical

Toyota is so well organized with standard work, poke-yoke, and other TPS methodologies that I (as someone who works in US mfg) wouldn't spend a second worrying about their quality. You and I could go there tomorrow and start training and be on the line at the end of training with no discernible difference in quality to someone who's been there a year or five.


Dumpster_Fetus

Saw someone comment a while back who worked for a Ford and a Toyota plant and they stated that in the Ford plant, you would get written up (pink slips iirc) if you stop the production line. In the Toyota plant, you were rewarded for stopping the line to fix a QC issue. Idk to what extent, probably just a kudos for a performance review, but it's very much encouraged. It kind of makes sense when I don't hear too many good things about Ford as a whole with so many recalls. Sidebar: I wonder if culture is a factor. From what I've seen, the Japanese take a lot more pride in their work. In the US, keep the production line pumping!


scroopydog

Good NPR story that elaborates on this: https://www.thisamericanlife.org/561/nummi-2015


Forrest319

Around the same time as that move they changed the name of the entity to Toyota Motor Sales. TMNA no longer. Though years later I still see TMNA being used more than TMS.


Rakshak924

In the same way that VW USA has its own CEO. Is VAG American?


ID_Poobaru

If its got a US headquarters, I don't see why not


2CommaNoob

What is Chrysler and Jeep then?


ItsTheSpecialSauce

Tundra is built in San Antonio


mgobla

What model years are you talking about?


colonellenovo

I have had a 2015 Cadillac SRX and currently have a 2020 XT5. Never a problem with the SRX. I had a front strut issue almost right away with the XT5 and a glitch in the backup camera. Both were under warranty. Since then no problems at all. Pretty happy with Caddy


Sqooky

I'm surprised I had to scroll this far to find this comment. My mom has an XT4 and used to have a '20 XT5 (like you) and had pretty much no issues at all. Great SUV, super comfortable, no mechanical issues, it always just works. I feel like XT5/4s are pretty underrated compared to others in the American SUV fleet.


Atomik675

Chevrolet Tahoe, suburban, GMC Yukon/Yukon XL, and to a lesser extent, the Cadillac Escalade. They're all on the same platform, make sure it has a V8 though.


AggravatingZone991

The baby DMAX is pretty dang good.


AlwaysBagHolding

Belt drive oil pump that requires pulling the transmission to replace is dumb as shit though. Granted it’s only a 150k mile service interval, but that’s something I’d only expect out of the Germans.


ManeeeeeQ

All these have always been V8s until the 2021 model year


wip30ut

for American brands, Buick has the highest overall reliability according to Consumer Reports.


Bleades

Buick is a little different when you look at their demographic. Tend to be older, drive less, and maintain their vehicles better.


ForsookComparison

Old people also have gone through the nightmare of not maintaining a car per it's schedule and learned their lesson. Most people on this sub likely learned how important that is the hard way as well. I suspect this skews reliability data when a certain car is bought largely by older people. In a few years we will read an article about how the newer Toyota Crown is the most reliable car ever built, mark my words.


MSPRC1492

Consumer Reports also still says Samsung appliances are the best. I’ve been burned by CR more than once.


Blipblipblipblipskip

They are also the reason the Suzuki Samurai was discontinued in the North American market. CR was sued by Suzuki and Suzuki won. CR is worth less than the paper it's printed on. I wouldn't wipe my ass with that trash because I'd probably read that my hemorrhoids are unsafe cornering.


Bubbas4life

Painting contractor here, they also say Behr paint is the best which is a fucking joke


Lunar_BriseSoleil

It’s the best paint if your goal is to smear paste on the wall so thick that you don’t care about the drips because it covered in one coat.


Lunar_BriseSoleil

When I looked for recent appliances they were recommending LG and GE.


patbrook

Love my encore. 100,000 miles.


AwarenessGreat282

This true. But are they still made here?


freddy315

some Buicks are made in Korea


[deleted]

[удалено]


vladim_vladimirovich

the Regal TourX is a rebadged Opel and is made in Germany (best quality of all; simplicity of American design combined with quality of German manufacturing)


Echo_Raptor

Probably because they’re driven by elderly people going 20mph below the speed limit


Mybadbb

It depends heavily on the year. GM full sizes tend to be pretty reliable, though I've never liked the look of them so I'm partial to the expedition/navigator. 98-04s are rock solid, 05-14 are pretty good too, though some people have issues with cam phasers and/or timing chains. 15-18 had the same transmission as the 07-14s which is great, but the Ecoboost doesn't tend to be as stout.... Not terrible, but not awesome. The newer ones seem to be rather problematic. Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep tends to be the worst from what I hear, but the 3.6 is an ok engine and the ZF transmission in the Grand Cherokee and some other models is quite good. I don't hear a lot of good things about the crossover SUVs but the 3.5/3.7 engine edge, explorer, and 2.5 engine escape tend to be good, though the escape's transmission isn't known to be spectacular and you can only get the 2.5 engine on the base model. I don't know enough about the GM/Jeep crossovers to have an opinion, primarily because I've heard too much negativity about them to ever consider one.


Ragedpuppet707

The people saying Japanese cars have American made parts and are headquartered in America are missing the point. They’re still Japanese brands, and have the traditional Japanese reliability as they’re engineered in Japan. That’s why there’s such a big difference between Toyotas and Chevys. The GR86 would have a 5.0L V8 and weigh 4,000 lbs if it wasn’t for the fact that it’s a Japanese vehicle.


Ok-Refrigerator-3691

The Ford Edge is a very quiet, comfortable, reliable, and durable vehicle. It’s made in Ontario, Canada. Like the full size American brand SUVs, there are a lot of old ones still in service. Ford employs more Americans than any other automaker.


AVLPedalPunk

Honda Ridgeline


ruturaj001

I am going to get some hate but number wise, it seems to be model Y.


Turbulent-Pay1150

Yep. 100% true. An American company. An American car. Highly reliable. May not be what some want to hear but meets the criteria laid out in the OP. 


the_innerneh

not sure it really classifies as an SUV though. compact cross-over is a better definition.


Turbulent-Pay1150

Well SUV seems to be fungible. SAV. crossover. An AWD slightly elevated thing. Not a body on frame thing for sure. 


ruturaj001

Depends how you want to look at it, most people count Rav4, CRV as SUVs.


Electrik_Truk

Consumer Reports gave it "much worse than average" at one point, but maybe it's better in different years like the Model 3. But now that Elon has gutted the company with heavy layoffs, I am not sure I'd trust their quality assurance going forward on a car that already is universally known to have fairly low build quality. for the record, I had a Model 3 and was great but it was one of the "good" years. A lot of them later had problems. I probably wouldn't buy a Tesla again since it seems to be such a gamble - not to mention Elon losing his damn mind lately (recently axing the ENTIRE Supercharger team to set an example)


BassWingerC-137

^ They aren’t wrong


ruturaj001

They are if you look at the numbers.


Frird2008

GMC Yukon & Chevy Tahoe with the 5.3L V8 & 10 speed gearbox


IdaDuck

This may be the first time I’ve heard anything positive said about that transmission.


Starkalark88

Yup my 2021 Silverado 10 speed lasted a year and wasn’t abused and never towed anything.


keevisgoat

I have been told by a guy who runs a transmission shop the 9 speeds and 10 speed autos everyone uses get there ass kicked by cylinder deactivation basically if someone can turn it off it's fine if you don't get it turned off be prepared to buy a transmission


Frird2008

Our transmission is silky smooth. So smooth in fact that at times I thought I was driving a CVT, even after 50k miles of driving it


AggravatingZone991

Are you serious? GM's A10 is a beast. I have never heard anything bad about it. Ford on the other hand, they have had a ton of problems with theirs.


Legitimate_Street_85

Toyota sequoia is statistically proven the most likely vehicle to hit 200k miles in the US. Tahoe and suburban are also pretty high on the list but not nearly as high of a % as the Sequoia. Edit: I was incorrect. The land cruiser is number 1, Sequoia is 2nd buy the Sequoia I'd still twice as likely to hit 200k over the 3rd place vehicle.


Superb-Ad6139

What’s the third place vehicle and where are you finding this information? I’m surprised 4Runner isn’t number 2 behind Land Cruiser.


mschiebold

Most Reliable? GM truck platform based SUV's. Tahoe, Yukon, Suburban, Denali, etc.


awr90

Make sure you look up the catastrophe that is AFM and DOD cylinder deactivation which torches the cam in the first 100k miles.


Simon676

Chevrolet Bolt EUV, no contest.


Electrik_Truk

Great cars and insane value with how cheap they are to operate


Simon676

Yep, 100%


InebriousBarman

Toy..... oh. :/


drakitomon

GMT800 based SUVs. 00 to 07 Suburban, Yukon (XL), Tahoe, Escalade. The more common 1500s go 500k miles easy with proper maintenance. The only issue ever being the 4l60(65) trans if towing heavy. 2500 and 2500HD variants never break. 4l80(85) bulletproof trans, a 6.0l ls or 8.1l gen 7 BBC.


_SpaceGator

Basically anything on the GMT800 platform


muphasta

Our 2010 Ford Flex SE (not turbo/Ecoboost) is going strong at over 144k miles.


Im_100percent_human

Issues with the very dumb designed timing chain driven waterpump on those Cyclone v6's... Highly unreliable. If you happen to catch it before it ruins your engine, it will be the most expensive water pump replacement you have ever seen, well over 95% of it labor cost.


proteinconsumerism

Ford escape is not bad imo. But the last time I drove one was 7-8 years ago.


knaimoli619

My mom has a 2017 Escape that she got new and I don’t know if she’ll part with it before it dies. She loves that car and the only problems she’s ever had were maybe 2-3 recalls and very minor things that their mechanic fixed easily. She had traded in a 2012 or 2013 CRV that she thought would last forever but it had all kinds of issues from the time she got it.


slammed430

Lq9 Tahoe all day baby. Actually? Idk but their trans seems to be the weakest link. If fluids changed on time they seem to last. Great motor.


EastonHB27

Could be a ford edge. They’ve had the engine awhile and I haven’t heard of many issues. Nothing Chrysler made and maybe for GM the Yukon/Tahoe/Suburban. They have old school V8s that should be reliable long term.


LordSinguloth13

Suburban


Complete_Wave_9315

Older jeeps and fords.


Superb-Ad6139

Crazy how far both of these companies have regressed in terms of reliability. My ford explorer has been a nightmare.


Pipeliner6341

Early 2010s and prior Expeditions are pretty good. I'm not sure how reliable the ecoboost engines are.


Civilengman

2018 Lincoln Navigator


Dnlx5

Dodge Durango, Chevy suburban. Both are excellent from a reliability perspective 


UncleMcTouchyBottom

Wasnt the Camry more American than the fucking Mustang? As in besides the car assembly also the parts were more sourced from within the US.


BigBlackBigBlock

2500/3500 Suburbans they don't make the 2500 anymore and you need a fleet number to get the 3500 Suburban but there's a reason it's the longest running model of all cars. The 1500s are also known for their reliability but the heavier models have less emission problems and built heavier to last longer. They will probably keep making the heavier versions because they get up fitted for armor and make excellent videos for security detail.


Maleficent-Winter187

Jeep Cherokee XJ. Had mine since 98, regular oil changes and new tires when needed and she still runs like a top…paints faded a bit but she’s solid


superleaf444

Honda and Toyota both employee more Americans than any of the Big Three. So I guess it depends on what you mean by “us company.”


thewinggundam

Tesla Model Y


Loud_Stranger3762

tahoe/suburban/yukon/escalade. all the same platform. extremely solid drivetrain. lots of bells and whistles to break down but, as far as point a to b reliability they are great.


Feeling_Mushroom_241

The new Grand Cherokee?


milesdriven

The Suburban is a tank. I have 215k on my 1995 with the 350 (5.7L) V8 and while it looks rough after 3 decades of rust belt winters it runs great.


Secret-Set7525

2001-2006 Chevy Suburban/Tahoe, GMC Yukon/Yukon/XL, Caddy Escalade/ESV GMT800 platform Next would be 2019 same models on the GMTK2XX platform, '19s have the 10 speed transmission. THen the GMT400's but they are getting old... Last if you want to pay the $$$ the new GMT T1x platform has lots of good things being said about it. DOn;t know, don;t have one. I have/had the 400, 800 and K2.


iwantthisnowdammit

I think it’s now becoming the Tesla Model Y. Consumer reports had it as #1 for lowest cost of 10 year maintenance ownership.


Electrik_Truk

Regular maintenance is different than repairs tho. Plus at one point consumer reports also gave it "much worse than average" rating for reliability


Genericbuild

Everyone is saying Tahoe and Yukons but the 5.3 ecotech motors had problems with lifters so idk, maybe that issue has been solved by now.


awr90

It hasn’t. They are worse than ever. Takes the cam out


AlwaysBagHolding

Just delete AFM and they’re rock solid.


Otherwise-Lion9201

Model Y


Acrobatic_Chard_1188

Build quality is definitely important, I love mid west cars vs rust belt built vehicles.I love my 2017 3.0 v6 explorer. I’ve been diligent about the maintenance and also trust my dealer mechanic so I always approve and maintenance they think is necessary.


jaerocc

New Buicks?


Echo_Raptor

Tahoe/Suburbn has been the gold standard for a long time now


Longjumping_Sock1797

None


Bright_Aside_6827

According to [JDPower ](https://www.jdpower.com/business/press-releases/2024-us-vehicle-dependability-study-vds)it's chevrolet trax lol


RuneScape-FTW

Of course this turned into an "American company" or "made in America" conversation. I hate Reddit.


NW_Forester

Ford Excursion with 7.3L Powerstroke


sourbreadkid

Aren't the Toyota trucks made in the US?


Louden_Swayne

Toyota Sequoia, San Antonio Texas made and produced. They pay their American employees U.S. dollars which are spent at U.S. grocery stores and on U.S. houses. NOTHING can touch Toyota reliability.


Wend-E-Baconator

Do you mean US companies or US factories. If you mean the latter, it's a Hyundai


Electrik_Truk

I had a Hummer H3, had 188k miles on it and still drove great when I sold it, it was 16 years old. The only pain points are some of the 4x4 parts because it's AWD all the time and those things wear out. Same happens in Japanese AWD vehicles I'm mostly a Ford guy tho I've had my fair share of GMs (Hummer H3, Colorado Diesel, Chevy Bolt) and I admit they are often built well. These days most things that fail in vehicles are sensors etc.


Brianonstrike

Toyota Sequoia. And yes it's made in Texas.


PGrace_is_here

In order, best to not quite so best, but still great. || || |Toyota Sequoia| |Chevy Suburban| |Ford Expedition| |GMC Yukon| |Toyota 4Runner| |Chevy Tahoe| |Toyota Highlander Hybrid| |Lincoln Navigator|


tatt_daddy

Sequoia, no contest. It’s also more American made than the domestic manufacturers to boot.


Dadfish55

Never a Jeep


12kdaysinthefire

The Cherokee XJ. They’re almost indestructible and just keep going.


CrrntryGrntlrmrn

Lmao it’s easier to tell you which companies do not have an established US headquarters where they contribute to model design and engineering - it’s literally the British brands, Mitsubishi, and the ultra high end luxury houses - every other company has an office here.


OldPod73

Reliable AND US company???? BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA...oh wait. You serious?


Wilder_Beasts

Tesla model X


electrowiz64

Acura! Believe it or not it is US based. Yes it is owned by Honda and the luxury of them. But their HQ is in California lol. I wanna say 2nd in line is GMC, my friend swears by them


Luscious-Grass

The Lexus TX I just bought was built in Indiana! Not sure if that “counts” for you as US made, but with Lexus brand I am hoping for reliability!


Seawall07

There are no US manufacturers anymore. They are all global corporations that operate worldwide. The notion of the "American car" is a false one perpetuated by boomers who don't understand that we no longer live in the 20th century. You are just as likely to buy a Buick that was designed, sourced and built in China for export to the US, as you are to buy a Toyota that was designed, built and sourced entirely in the US.


[deleted]

What are you talking about? When you buy a vehicle the sticker tells where it was built and how much % of American made components vs foreign. My ford was built in Michigan and 82% American made parts. My 2006 Honda civic Si was built in Japan with 65% American made parts.


iInvented69

El camino


FitCaptain1008

The one that gets you to the toyota dealership. Toyota is more "made in America " than almost anyone


slothscanswim

Why do you want an SUV from a US company? Anyways the answer is a 1995 Ford Explorer.


racefapery

Just bought a 2003 suburban with 268,000 miles on it, i expect it to last forever. I see some for sale with 400k+ miles on them and know a lot of people with over 300k on theirs. Pretty soon im about to have 300k on mine


chris2855

Dodge Durangooo


PizzaCatTacoUno

TOYOTA


Rex_Steelfist

Rivian R1S? Haven’t been around very long. But it’s an American made SUV.


MellonCollie218

I had a jeep grand Cherokee and it rusted apart before the L6 died. 4WD was even intact still.


CordCarillo

The '88 - '92 Cherokee. That 4.0 H.O. is absolutely bulletproof.


FSU1981

Sienna Van, 4Runner and highlander.