Key Takeaways
- Our top pick: Kia Telluride — near-luxury quality at mainstream prices
- Best value: Toyota Highlander
- We evaluated 10 vehicles based on real-world usability, value, safety, and segment-specific criteria
- Every vehicle on this list is genuinely recommendable — the rankings reflect relative strengths, not flaws
How We Ranked These
Our rankings weight real-world buyer priorities: daily usability, total cost of ownership, safety technology, interior quality, and how well each vehicle delivers on its specific promise. We don't inflate rankings for press cars with every option box checked — we evaluate what most buyers will actually purchase.
Our Rankings
#1. Kia Telluride
Why it's here: Near-luxury quality at mainstream prices
The Telluride earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#2. Hyundai Palisade
Why it's here: Best value-to-luxury ratio in the segment
The Palisade earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#3. Toyota Highlander
Why it's here: Best fuel economy with turbo hybrid
The Highlander earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#4. Honda Pilot
Why it's here: Most usable third row, TrailSport capability
The Pilot earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#5. Chevrolet Tahoe
Why it's here: Maximum towing and cargo, Super Cruise available
The Tahoe earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#6. Ford Explorer
Why it's here: Rear-wheel-drive platform, BlueCruise hands-free driving
The Explorer earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#7. Volkswagen Atlas
Why it's here: Most interior space in the midsize segment
The Atlas earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#8. Mazda CX-90
Why it's here: Inline-six turbo, near-luxury driving dynamics
The CX-90 earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#9. Jeep Grand Cherokee L
Why it's here: Best off-road capability in a three-row
The L earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
#10. Subaru Ascent
Why it's here: Standard AWD, EyeSight safety suite
The Ascent earns its spot through a combination of real-world usability, competitive pricing, and the specific strengths that make it stand out from the pack. It's not perfect — no vehicle is — but it delivers on the promises its marketing makes, which is more than some competitors can claim.
Comparison Overview
Every vehicle on this list is genuinely good — the Three-Row SUVs segment has never been more competitive. The difference between #1 and #10 often comes down to specific priorities rather than objective quality gaps. Test drive your top 2-3 choices before deciding.
What to Consider
Beyond our rankings, consider these factors for your specific situation:
- Budget: Entry-level pricing varies significantly across this list. Decide your budget before test driving, not after.
- Ownership costs: Insurance, fuel economy, maintenance costs, and resale value matter more than MSRP over a 5-year ownership period.
- Your daily use: A vehicle that's perfect for highway commuting may not be ideal for city parking, and vice versa. Be honest about how you'll actually use it.
- Test drive: Rankings can't capture the subjective feeling of sitting in a cabin and driving through your neighborhood. Always test drive before buying.
