The 2.0l in this car is so much better than the 1.8l. I have a 2022 Corolla SE manual with the non-Atkinson variant of this engine and it honestly feels significantly more refined and feels more like a diesel engine than a gas one. I also have a 2017 Prius (which I love), and if it had the same engine as my Corolla, that would be a great combo with the hybrid eCVT because it has a ton of low-end torque. I know there are lot of diehards for the 1.8l engines but the 2.0l is just **chef's kiss**
@@aluisious I use that comparison fairly loosely. I had a 1.8l Corolla before and before that a 1.9 TDI VW Beetle so to me the faster combustion in the 2.0l kinda made it feel like a combo of those two engines, the low end torque of the 1.9l diesel and the revving of the 1.8l gas but with more horsepower. Maybe that is just a benefit of the dual injection systems as well that I am feeling. The faster combustion of the 2.0l is noticable to me which to me gives it what I could describe as "gasoline combustion with diesel combustion characteristics". It's not a diesel at all but the longer stroke and burn speeds kind of reminded me of my old 1.9l but with a 3000rpm wider powerband. Great engine
45mpg would be what I expect for extended highway use. The EPA highway test cycle only tests for about 12 minutes and never exceeds 60mph while the high speed test only has about a 5 minute section of uninterrupted high speed, and there are numerous breaks to recover energy. For a multi-hour drive, the Prius (and any other normal hybrid) will basically rely only on the gas engine.
Even still, it seems like the MPG is lower than my old 2013 Prius which gets around 44mpg average at 80mph, and about 50MPG average at less than 65 mph if I really focus on maximizing mpg. I suspect the 19” wheels are one of the key reasons vs my old car with 15” aero hub capped wheels. Regardless, you get way more power with the new Prius with similar MPG so that’s pretty good.
Also tbf the numbers in this video are probably lower because of using winter blend gasoline. If it's getting 45mpg on winter blend, it probably is in the high 50s with summer blend gas
I have a 2008 Toyota Prius, with 247,000 miles. And I drive it quite conservatively. In the city, going as slow as possible to not annoy people. I am talking 0-40 MPH of 20 seconds or so in the slow lane. And when stopping I try to coast, and not have to stop for the light if possible. But in the city I get 54 MPG on average, with the AC off. And about 50 MPG on average with the AC on. I should add, the the city driving, I average about 11 MPH, as there is a lot of stop lights. It takes about 1 1/2 hours to go 16 miles. And on the freeway, I go 60 MPH with cruise control, and I get about 58 MPG with the AC off, and about 52 MPG with the AC on. I just use cruise control, so the speed is constant. And that is the average I get from gaining 1,800 feet in elevation going to work, and losing 1,800 feet in elevation coming back. That is a 60 mile trip each way. It really depends who drives it though. When my mom drives it, she gets 32 MPG in the city, and 38 MPG on the freeway. She has a lead foot. She is either hard acceleration, or hard braking. Not a consistent speed at all. I am talking flooring it from most stop lights type of driving. And following close behind cars so braking is quite often. I should add, the 0-60 in the Prius is about 11 seconds, which I actually find fast. I normally drive a old 2003 Pontiac Montana, with about 160,000 miles. It used to have a 10 second 0-60, but the engine is worn out, and it makes a lot of lifter noise, anymore it is about 17 seconds to 60. But any car, even a Mitsubishi Mirage is plenty for me.
@@checkoutmyyoutubepage Well, not always. Let's say your going up and down small hills, cruise control will rev the engine up a lot to stay as close as possible to the speed you set. But if you are driving, let's say 60 MPH, and you reach the hill, and leave your foot where it was, it will slow down to lets say 55 MPH, and not change gears. Then you regain the speed down the hill. Like, there is a really steep hill on the freeway by my house, and going up the hill at 65 MPH with cruise control, it will shift the van from 4th, to 3rd, still lose speed, then downshift to 2nd, and at that point the engine is at 5,500 RPM. But if I manually adjust the throttle, it will only downshift to 3rd, but I will also be going under 55 MPH by the end of the hill. I should add, the engine in our van isn't too powerful. Like, getting on the freeway on a steeper onramp, the van will only be at 40 MPH at the end of the onramp, while the whole time it's floored. There is a faster road by the house, not a freeway. But it's 60 MPH with stop lights. And if 1 person is in front of me at a stop light, I can have the van floored, and the person in front still accelerates super fast. Maybe I am a slow driver, as I don't see why they need to go so fast from a stop. Not good on gas. They get up to speed in about 15 seconds. And when I drive with no one around, it takes a bit over a minute to do the same thing. Lol.
Absolutely! However, the problem is you can get any Tesla at a set price. Toyotas are nowhere to be found and if they are, the dealer charges an arm and both feet over msrp.
Just because you can, doesn't mean you should. I have a Hybrid and get amazing MPG by simply driving at the speed limit. I am never in a rush while 90% of people drive ABOVE the speed limit.
Hello there, such a great review. Appreciate your effort. One question: How did you like the sound isolation in the car during the test? Like road noise, tire noise etc.? How would you rate it from 1 to 10? Thanks again and keep up the good work! :)
In the city it's very, very quiet. On the highway, it's noisier than a Camry, but definitely quieter than the last gen Prius. I think it's mostly tire noise, but it's not objectionable. It's somewhere in the middle of 0-10 if 10 is the loudest. Maybe a 4 on the freeway? If you're on full throttle, it's pretty loud due the engine revving to high heaven.
@@revmatchtv I wish they'd fix the high revving already. I've been driving Toyota hybrids since 2007. It's the one thing that annoys me the most about them.
@@CB27 there’s nothing to fix. If you stomp the gas it revs the small engine to peak power and holds it there. That’s how you get acceleration and good mpg in the same engine.
This thing would win a 0-60 to a gt-86. Never thought to say that to a Prius. I honestly love this approach off being an economical quirky looking CAR, I mean its use is just being a car which is safe and reliable.
Toyota has a masterpiece on the japanese market. The Toyota Crown Athlete 3.5 RS. It is a hybrid, but with the 3.5 V6 under the hood. Does 0-62 under 5 seconds.
I bought my 2023 Prius XLE AWD in August and I've been getting 60 mi per gallon in morning going to work in light traffic. On way home in heavy traffic I average around 50mpg. If I'm aggressive with driving I usually get around 44mpg. So when and how you drive really matters with mpg in this car. Love the car though. Sips the fuel and can get pretty fun to drive when you get on that gas pedal. 19 inch rims really help with handling and haven't broke grip yet in tight curves going fast.
Do you know what those stock rim/tire package weigh?? I’m wondering if the weight or size is what makes the le model better mpg? Been searching the whole internet for this info
I bought a new 2021 Rav4 hybrid. When I first got it I drove casually in eco mode, not really hypermiling, and I got 52 MPG. I use it primarily for Uber and drive aggressively when I don't have passengers, and I often have a full car of passengers. I average 39.9 MPG. So I would imagine the Prius gets way better gas mileage than you're experiencing in this video. I've heard people getting 72 MPG on the older models.
lots of factors have to be considered, temperature/aero (windy or not) are the most important factors IMO. its getting warmer here in Canada (15 degrees celsius). I was able to get 2.9 L/100KM (81MPG) going 15km (from one place to DT). But over the course of ownership Jan to March. I average probably 5.2 L/100KM which is 45MPG, pretty good considered all the circumstances (-20 to just above zero degrees). Upgraded from 15 to 16" diameter rims, and swapped to All-weather tires instead of low rolling-resistance tires. In warmer days. I can achieve 50 MPG pretty consistently.
If you were going to make a whole elaborate video about this, why not wait a day/choose a different road (no mountain) to give a realistic figure. It's kind of a waste of your time.@@revmatchtv
@@luisr4027 I drove hundreds of freeway miles, and a few in wine county. People live in mountainous regions and rural areas. Not everyone lives in the Midwest. Real world, means a mix of conditions including rain.
I was hoping for more mpg from the Prius. My 2013 VW TDI gets 50 mpg at 75 mph. At 100 mph it’s at 30 mpg and 125 is 17-19 mpg. Drove some lonely roads to get those figures haha
I just had my 2024 xle awd on first long trip Denver to Omaha at 75 speed limit. I used cruise control the whole time both way. Average 35 mpg. I worst than I expected. 0% EV ratios. EV mode only works well under 70 mph. I basically used gas engine without EV for this trip. It seems to work well in the city. I got highest mileage at ~60 mpg from my place to my work.
run mobil o 16 oil and make sure those tires are max psi to get those mpgs up. my awd is doing 48 mpg at 75mph on the freeway. i have the 19s on atm but getting a smaller rim this next week with some high psi cheap tires
I really like what they did with the new Prius, but I am still deciding whether to purchase it, considering how well the 2025 Camry compares and even exceeds with space and power. What are your recommendations? Prius XLE or Camry XLE? I want the style, function, comfort, and fuel efficiency.
the 2016 Prius was also great on MPG I use to get 68.8 mpg I think the body is a bit more aerodynamic I compared there average on the site and it still seems better than the 2023s
My question is: Is it fun? I had a 2012 Prius C and honestly, that little car was fun to drive, of course it had some issues, but I enjoyed it. Life went on and now I'm in a Model S. The problem is that I drive a LOT for work and Range Anxiety is a real thing. I'm holding out for the new Prime best of both worlds EV & Hybrid. I enjoy Tesla's autopilot, does sense 3.0 compare? And is it fun? I don't expect it to launch off the line, but with the right music... Did you connect with the car?
You should also check out the 2023 Prius Prime that comes out in Spring, it's what I'm holding out for it. It has about 40 miles of electric range and will then go into hybrid mode after its charge is gone
@@michaelhanson741 I was with you on this, that was my plan. I got to sit in the a regular Prius at the dealership this past weekend... The steering wheel... I thought I'd be able to not be effected by it, but it may be the deal breaker. The top of the wheel is directly in the line of sight for the instrument cluster. MAYBE if we got the yoke or an aftermarket without the top section.
I am averaging 43mpg combined on my 2023 Prius limited with 5k miles on it(mostly highway miles). I was averaging 56mpg on my 2021 prius xle with 50k miles.
I have a manual shift 2017 1.4l turbo Volkswagen Jetta that regularly gets between 40 and 45 MPG on the highway with mindful, but by no means "grandma" accelerator handling while typically going 80 mph. And when I need to accelerate hard from a stop or pass on the highway the car has plenty of power to feel confident especially compared to pretty much any other economy vehicle. I can't get excited for 45 mpg for 3x the price and significant complexity for maintenance.
So $49.29 divided by 461 miles is10.69 cents per mile. Also 461 miles divided by 121.233 kwh ( 9.79 * 12.38333 ) equals 3.8 miles per kilowatt hour, that's as good as most battery electrics.
Have one on order and I have two in the driveway at the moment. Efficient driving in a Prius means not using cruise control. You want to pump and glide as much as you can. That doesn’t mean speed up and coast but mild on and off the throttle. Don’t be a tool and hold people up.
I'm not sure why the XLE gets less mpg than the LE but according to another source it's 52 mpg VS 57 mpg combined for XLE VS LE. Probably larger wheels and tires account for this but 45 mpg is pretty dismal for new Prius isn't it (even considering hilly terrain)? I have the 2017 plug-in prime and I average an amazing 61 mpg on gas and 5.0 miles/kwh in EV mode without extremely easy driving, just a bit of moderation most of the time. I think I was in my 20's or 30's the last time I challenged another driver to a stoplight race and if I wanted a quick 0-60 time I guess I would own a Corvette, BMW or Tesla. But since I'm never really doing any drag racing with my car and it's quick enough to get from one red light to another or easily merge into freeway traffic (even in ECO mode) my 2017 Prime will not be traded in for a 2023 soon. The inability to actually see the display is a huge deal breaker as well and my 2017 doesn't have that annoying simulated ICE sound at slow speed. So count me a bit disappointed with some of these changes and the design direction Toyota has taken with the Prius. The new look and the improved handling are both big pluses however, as well as the increased EV range. But this could have easily have been an 70-80mpg vehicle instead of a car designed to keep up with a Tesla or BMW, which it still won't in a stoplight race. Isn't economy really why most people purchase a Prus or am I wrong? Why buy a Prius if you want to be king of the 0-60 crowd? I guess I don't get it the overall appeal this car might have to an existing Prius owner but I know some want economy and more performance. And while the potential for economy with the new Prius is still really good, I think Toyota chose to give up a lot of potential economy for flashy 0-60 times and probably lost some or a lot of sales from existing Prius owners like me.
@@revmatchtv Yes I think the main difference has to be tire and wheel sizes. That was also my experience with my my 2004 Prius when I briefly tried larger tires and wheels in an effort to improve the horrible handling and wandering on freeways. It helped stability but depressed gas mileage by about 5 mpg.
Interesting. My 2021 Yaris Cross Hybrid AWD does the exact same mpg, and i drive in the very hill covered regions of switzerland, with lots of ups and down. I do 5.2L/100Km (45mpg) on that road, but it does drop down considerably if i stay in the city only (64ish mpg) and at around 52mpg on the flat regions or our autobahn (if i dont have to brake a lot). Hills trully are the enemy of hybrids. Note: i can get my avg. work way mpg down a bit if i drive more considerate, with soft acceleration and so on, but most of the times i just drive without a care for mpg.
I wonder if Toyota is kinda missing the mark here with the Prius? It’s always been know for it’s super mpg and that seems to be going down. For sure some updates needed to happen, but how with a plug in is it getting less mpg than a regular Prius? Great Review btw!!!
This was a preproduction vehicle and only had about 1,200 miles on it. Overall I got about 49mpg over 460 mostly highway miles. That's about 2 shy of the EPA estimate. These appearing in customer hands now, so we'll have a better sense of real-world conditions soon.
@@revmatchtv you did some beautiful driving! Interesting to see the higher end models with larger wheels get lower mpg. Buyers will have to forgo amenities for mpg because of tires 🙄
If there is an elevation gain during your drive, whatever your mileage is below the epa estimate, on your way back, it will be that number above the epa estimate on the reverse trip that includes an elevation drop. Also with those toyota engine platforms and all the rest involved in the enineering, if the temp. outside is below 50, you will see lower electric motor output, and a little more so below about 30 F. That is pretty shocking, seeing as how I had a 2016 Prius II Eco and drove it 45,000 miles averaging 62.5 mpg and I floored it everywhere I went because it could handle it and in a Prius, when you're trying to floor it, it's about as fast as half-assing it in a truck.
I'd had two prius models 2009 and 2014 - Now a 2021Hybrid Honda Accord....I do hwy and then I have to climb from 5ooo to 7200 ft in Colorado mountains - 42MGP was the best on the Prius - They Honda gets 41 to 43. The Honda is a normal car and is as big as my 2018 Avalon - This new Prius with AWD might be the ticket...
Been driving this for a month now and i only averaging 44.2 . Mostly highway around 70 - 75 mph so is kinda disappointing. Was hoping atleast around 50mpg . And that's on normal or eco mode.
Meh, I've had rear seat vent's in most of my car and 99% of the time, I close the vents as it's highly inefficient to run them. I will open them up if it's really hot, but once the car is cooled, my passengers are ok w/ the front vents providing air conditioning.
I’ve had 3 Prius’ and I don’t think there’s really a break in period. I mean basically you’re driving a computer 😂 What kind of roads your on makes sooo much difference. I drove my last Prius mostly at the coast in North Carolina; flat as a pancake and slow speeds. I got amazing gas mileage (I’ve been tracking my mileage since 2011 using an app). I bought a new Prius in 2021 and moved inland, where it’s not so flat an also where there’s insane highway driving (think autobahn…I’m often well over 80 mph going with morning traffic). My mileage went from consistently low 50 mpg to now mid to low 40 mpg in a car that’s supposed to get better mpg according to the sticker (it’s not a Prime, pure Hybrid). No matter how hard I try to hyper-mile, it’s just impossible with the roads I now drive on. When I’m back at the coast for a visit, the mpg is fantastic! Go figure Great review
Prii are computers on wheels, and because of that there is a learning period during break in. If you disconnect the 12V battery for long enough, that will reset the whole car and restart the learning process. Had the hybrid pack in my 2002 replaced a few months ago, I had to drive for a few days until it was back to normal after the reset.
@RevMatchTV THANK YOU for Answer! That`s the Problem! 60% more Horsepower ... for what? For me (European Guy with hilly Landscape) the Prius NHW20 has enough Power. In this case i have very low (!) Taxes and Insurance! With 150HP @Prius 2023 costs going up factor 2,5!! (Not in the US?) And consumption is the same 20 Years ago ...... NO Sir! Your`s and Toyotas argument (they were not pushing for the best possible mpg) is not acceptable! My, and sure a lot of other drivers, expectation in 2023 is, 99HP, 2,9L/100km. THANK YOU Toyota for building this FAMOUS Prius Gen2! I try driving to 300.000km (now 235.000) It seems Toyota going away the Path from 1997! I am sad ........
I am debating between this and an Ev. I got a new job that will add ~30k to my yearly income with ease. I am debating should I keep my 2008 honda accord coupe which will cost me ~5-6k in gas. The gas prices now is what is making consider getting a new car. It's between a chevy bolt or a ioniq 5. If I was to get an hybrid it would the prius prime. The new job is 50 minute drive away: 90kilometers each way. Any thoughts anyone.
Run the math for your commute. Figure on some inflation for both gas and electricity. See how much you will save or spend depending on what you drive. Factor in your purchase price with interest or lease cost. Most likely you'll find it's cheaper to keep the Accord, but it won't take long to put together a spreadsheet with your costs.
@@revmatchtv I have considered the points that you have brought forth. My baby is 15 years old and I do NEED reliable transportation. The 50 thousand km a year is just for work. I am not taking into consideration the driving around town taking the kids to their respective activities. With the price olgas today the app estimated ~ 7 644 dollars for driving strictly for work. That is why I considered the Chevy Bolt EUV. With 11k incentives and my down-payment I am looking at 531 a month for 6 years. So what I would be spending on gas I am paying for the car. The hospital in question offers free charging to employees. Your thoughts would be appreciated. Getting feedback hepls me see potential blind spots.
Do you know if the hybrid system works over 50 mph? I have a gen 4 Prius and at speeds over 50/55 mph, the car runs mostly on gas, while the hybrid system will only provide power during heavy acceleration and intermittently to the wheels. I hope the gen 5 Prius will at least provide more electrical power to the wheel at higher speeds.
Hybrid does power during heavy power (as you mentioned) and fully EV below 10 MPH, the prime however can be fully electric during any speed, and drive about 40 miles on electirc
Hello good sir, I drive a 2017 nissan sentra I have 65k on it right now I'm saving up to upgrade and feel like Toyota prius would a be a good upgrade . What drawn me to it was, the large MPG I drive alot for my profession so saving gas or fueling my tank less would he'll me alot. My question is once the gas tank is full how often throughout the month do you have to refuel?
The Prime will be revealed a bit later this spring. It's a plug-in. Both recharge while you drive, but the Prime has a bigger battery and you can drive it in pure-ev mode for 35+ miles or so.
I'm in the same boat, but I wanted to see what it could do with painfully slow driving! I'd be quite happy with 40mpg on highway and able to drive with the flow of traffic.
@@revmatchtv I am 5'9 too hahaha but I drive a 2012 f150 and I am used to seeing the dash through the middle of the wheel. Thinking of prius or corolla hybrid.
@@alanrubio6708 Everyone is used to seeing the dash through the wheel and I thought it would be an issue, but I adapted immediately. For me it became a non issue pretty quickly, partly because the display itself is very high quality.
Did you notice any blind spots from left to right with the A pillars? I have a Honda fit with the forward A pillars and there is blind spots that I hate. Thanks
We only get press cars for a few days and that vehicle went back to Toyota well before the video was published. I don't live in a snowy area either. Sorry.
@@whatthef24 got a Subaru over Prius cause it has real awd than the 2020 6hp awd that was a joke in previous model. Good to hear. Let me know when you do the test in the snow. Following.
I got a chance to drive base model and it gets 57mpg despite aggressive driving. Only car I've seen getting advertised fuel figure without driving like a granny.
When I spoke with the engineers, they said premium would help ensure the maximum power output was achieved. The numbers Toyota quotes are EPA numbers, not Toyota numbers, so that was achieved with their standard testing methods.
You definitely dont need to be driving slow to get great mpg. My 2016 prius, definitely not being the slowest car on the road... lifetime avearge is 73.6mpg... (Florida)
Can you tell us how high the mpg is in the city? I drive right now a Corolla 1.8 Hybrid hatchback and in the german summer my best result was 67 mpg for the complete range of tank.
It gives a percentage per trip. I don't recall a screen showing total miles. The percentage is obviously a lot higher in the city. On my road trip, the percentage got lower the longer the drive. On my 199 mile leg, the EV driving ratio was 34%. You can see that somewhere in the video I think for maybe 1 second.
Summer on longer than 20 mi trips I’m getting up to 66 mpg. That is real numbers. Dashboard say 72. Winter 28-45 F, short 10 mi trips, straggling to get 50. Longer trips 55 mpg. Hilly terrain killing mpg too
It is a shame hondas hybrids are not even any better mpg wise... i love the exterior of the new prius but i really dont like the interior. Essentially i want a civic hatch with a prius powertrain.
Dude don’t know how to drive a Prius my 2022 is rated 50 highway 54 city and I get over 62 average and can see 200mpg on certain trips and mine is a gasser no plug-in whatsoever. I have driven fast cars too!
You undoubtedly missed the part at the beginning where I mentioned it was a pre-production vehicle and also that I wasn't going to hypermile it. I was extremely transparent with my driving style, the terrain, and how I calculated the MPG.
official factory mpg is NEVER !!! NEVER !!! is correct. real world consumption depends on huge amount of factors. on average consumption is duble of official mpg numbers. sometimes even more than double or little bit less than double. even the on-board car computer mpg data is wrong too. for any car on the planet official mpg or computer data mpg, both are wrong.
My experience is I don't get half the stated MPG in any car unless I have my foot buried all the time. It's possible to get 52mpg, but you need a very light foot and probably more city driving.
I have gotten 60 MPG on my Rav4 Hybrid (in the summer)..and the Rav4 is much heavier. In the winter, I average 45mpg and the Factory advertised MPG is supposed to just be 40. Either I must be an expert at driving hybrids OR mines is extremely good? I have put 17k miles on it and 99% of the time, I get better than the advertised MPG.....Highway miles too!
@@revmatchtv i c what u mean, and it is very important ofcourse to have a light foot but it will not give u official numbers of mpg. so many factors are in mpg that book can be written about only mpg subject. real life numbers never match official mpg. i have huge experience with that. also extemely important to have 15-days experiment. exoeriment done in 1-day time period and in 15-days time period will have a totally different results and it is only 10% of factors. there other huge amount of factors as well. its not simple at all as majority of men think it is. even atmoshperic presure and oxigen levels in the air is a factor and even level of pressure in the tires and number of passengers and speeds and numbers of start/stops and seasons and time gaps of start/stops and weather conditions and other factors. so as i said it is complex thing. even country to country factors are important too. condiotions are different in different countries and quaility of fuel is different which gives us a lot of differenece technical condition and age of car also a big factor and many other thing. so my dear friends believe me i know what i am saying.
@@revmatchtv problem was you kept comparing it to a sports car. But I get what you were saying. Probably giving Prius owners hope they can be cool in their car ;)
My 2016 BMW 320d gets better MPG than that car. I get 21.4 km/l 50.336MPG on the highway doing tHe speed limit (110km/hr) Its a beautiful looking car BUT,,, i was hoping for better mpg. Great video man
Is this in the USA? With this kind of mpg. Because the USA and Europe have different gas mileage ratings. Basically, 1 USA gallon is equal to 1.2 Euro gallon. 2016 BMW 320i gas version is 28 mpg combined.
Pretty underwhelming on the mpg front.. Guess i'm keeping my '17 Hyundai Ioniq that gets an easy 55~ on the highway and city for another year.. boring car, but it's so cheap to drive.
Lots of factors go into MPG including elevation, temp etc. After 460 miles I got 49mpg overall on 90% freeway. It's always cheaper to keep an existing car that works well
The 2.0l in this car is so much better than the 1.8l. I have a 2022 Corolla SE manual with the non-Atkinson variant of this engine and it honestly feels significantly more refined and feels more like a diesel engine than a gas one. I also have a 2017 Prius (which I love), and if it had the same engine as my Corolla, that would be a great combo with the hybrid eCVT because it has a ton of low-end torque. I know there are lot of diehards for the 1.8l engines but the 2.0l is just **chef's kiss**
The 2.0 is a very nice, overbuilt engine. It should last forever and has way more torque than the 1.8. It's a huge upgrade.
Weird, I drove the 2.0l Corolla and it didn’t feel like a diesel at all to me, I liked how it would rev out and keep building power.
@@aluisious I use that comparison fairly loosely. I had a 1.8l Corolla before and before that a 1.9 TDI VW Beetle so to me the faster combustion in the 2.0l kinda made it feel like a combo of those two engines, the low end torque of the 1.9l diesel and the revving of the 1.8l gas but with more horsepower. Maybe that is just a benefit of the dual injection systems as well that I am feeling. The faster combustion of the 2.0l is noticable to me which to me gives it what I could describe as "gasoline combustion with diesel combustion characteristics". It's not a diesel at all but the longer stroke and burn speeds kind of reminded me of my old 1.9l but with a 3000rpm wider powerband. Great engine
45mpg would be what I expect for extended highway use. The EPA highway test cycle only tests for about 12 minutes and never exceeds 60mph while the high speed test only has about a 5 minute section of uninterrupted high speed, and there are numerous breaks to recover energy.
For a multi-hour drive, the Prius (and any other normal hybrid) will basically rely only on the gas engine.
@Nobody Those Camrys are way underrated. My wife drives a 19 XLE non hybrid and averages around 40 mpg.
Even still, it seems like the MPG is lower than my old 2013 Prius which gets around 44mpg average at 80mph, and about 50MPG average at less than 65 mph if I really focus on maximizing mpg. I suspect the 19” wheels are one of the key reasons vs my old car with 15” aero hub capped wheels. Regardless, you get way more power with the new Prius with similar MPG so that’s pretty good.
Also tbf the numbers in this video are probably lower because of using winter blend gasoline. If it's getting 45mpg on winter blend, it probably is in the high 50s with summer blend gas
Not true. If you enable cruise control (or drive steady) the electric motor maintains the speed. It’s a system that works in tandem.
Even if you hit the gas, it would most likely charge the battery for when you eventually drive steadily again.
This '23 looks so good!! Would love to drive one! Thanks for your review!
I have a 2008 Toyota Prius, with 247,000 miles. And I drive it quite conservatively. In the city, going as slow as possible to not annoy people. I am talking 0-40 MPH of 20 seconds or so in the slow lane. And when stopping I try to coast, and not have to stop for the light if possible. But in the city I get 54 MPG on average, with the AC off. And about 50 MPG on average with the AC on. I should add, the the city driving, I average about 11 MPH, as there is a lot of stop lights. It takes about 1 1/2 hours to go 16 miles.
And on the freeway, I go 60 MPH with cruise control, and I get about 58 MPG with the AC off, and about 52 MPG with the AC on. I just use cruise control, so the speed is constant. And that is the average I get from gaining 1,800 feet in elevation going to work, and losing 1,800 feet in elevation coming back. That is a 60 mile trip each way.
It really depends who drives it though. When my mom drives it, she gets 32 MPG in the city, and 38 MPG on the freeway. She has a lead foot. She is either hard acceleration, or hard braking. Not a consistent speed at all. I am talking flooring it from most stop lights type of driving. And following close behind cars so braking is quite often.
I should add, the 0-60 in the Prius is about 11 seconds, which I actually find fast. I normally drive a old 2003 Pontiac Montana, with about 160,000 miles. It used to have a 10 second 0-60, but the engine is worn out, and it makes a lot of lifter noise, anymore it is about 17 seconds to 60. But any car, even a Mitsubishi Mirage is plenty for me.
Using cruise control always saves gas. People should learn this.
@@checkoutmyyoutubepage Well, not always. Let's say your going up and down small hills, cruise control will rev the engine up a lot to stay as close as possible to the speed you set. But if you are driving, let's say 60 MPH, and you reach the hill, and leave your foot where it was, it will slow down to lets say 55 MPH, and not change gears. Then you regain the speed down the hill.
Like, there is a really steep hill on the freeway by my house, and going up the hill at 65 MPH with cruise control, it will shift the van from 4th, to 3rd, still lose speed, then downshift to 2nd, and at that point the engine is at 5,500 RPM. But if I manually adjust the throttle, it will only downshift to 3rd, but I will also be going under 55 MPH by the end of the hill.
I should add, the engine in our van isn't too powerful. Like, getting on the freeway on a steeper onramp, the van will only be at 40 MPH at the end of the onramp, while the whole time it's floored.
There is a faster road by the house, not a freeway. But it's 60 MPH with stop lights. And if 1 person is in front of me at a stop light, I can have the van floored, and the person in front still accelerates super fast.
Maybe I am a slow driver, as I don't see why they need to go so fast from a stop. Not good on gas. They get up to speed in about 15 seconds. And when I drive with no one around, it takes a bit over a minute to do the same thing. Lol.
Toyota equals quality. Tesla has issues with fit and finish. Consumer reports magazine.
Nice. I haven't seen one Prius on a dealer's lot yet though.
That's all correct, but this car fails in its usability for tall drivers and passengers
Don’t be a sheep bro lol. Categorical statements don’t stand up over time. Reality is more fluid.
Absolutely! However, the problem is you can get any Tesla at a set price. Toyotas are nowhere to be found and if they are, the dealer charges an arm and both feet over msrp.
@@TCPUDPATM 🤡
Makes me almost wanna cry knowing a Prius can now keep up w pretty much every car on the road
y u been praying on priuses downfall i got a 2011 prius and i love it and if i catch u in my new 2023 prius im gonna smoke u
😂😂😂
Just because you can, doesn't mean you should. I have a Hybrid and get amazing MPG by simply driving at the speed limit. I am never in a rush while 90% of people drive ABOVE the speed limit.
It makes me cry that nobody can properly form a sentence.
Hello there, such a great review. Appreciate your effort.
One question: How did you like the sound isolation in the car during the test? Like road noise, tire noise etc.? How would you rate it from 1 to 10?
Thanks again and keep up the good work! :)
In the city it's very, very quiet. On the highway, it's noisier than a Camry, but definitely quieter than the last gen Prius. I think it's mostly tire noise, but it's not objectionable. It's somewhere in the middle of 0-10 if 10 is the loudest. Maybe a 4 on the freeway? If you're on full throttle, it's pretty loud due the engine revving to high heaven.
@@revmatchtv Great explanations, thanks very much! You have a new subscriber :)
Thank you again and take care. Greetings from Germany.
@@revmatchtv I wish they'd fix the high revving already.
I've been driving Toyota hybrids since 2007. It's the one thing that annoys me the most about them.
@@CB27 there’s nothing to fix. If you stomp the gas it revs the small engine to peak power and holds it there. That’s how you get acceleration and good mpg in the same engine.
@@aluisious Yes and how the Atkinson cycle engine works best.
This thing would win a 0-60 to a gt-86. Never thought to say that to a Prius. I honestly love this approach off being an economical quirky looking CAR, I mean its use is just being a car which is safe and reliable.
Toyota has a masterpiece on the japanese market. The Toyota Crown Athlete 3.5 RS. It is a hybrid, but with the 3.5 V6 under the hood. Does 0-62 under 5 seconds.
I bought my 2023 Prius XLE AWD in August and I've been getting 60 mi per gallon in morning going to work in light traffic. On way home in heavy traffic I average around 50mpg. If I'm aggressive with driving I usually get around 44mpg. So when and how you drive really matters with mpg in this car. Love the car though. Sips the fuel and can get pretty fun to drive when you get on that gas pedal. 19 inch rims really help with handling and haven't broke grip yet in tight curves going fast.
Do you know what those stock rim/tire package weigh?? I’m wondering if the weight or size is what makes the le model better mpg? Been searching the whole internet for this info
I bought a new 2021 Rav4 hybrid. When I first got it I drove casually in eco mode, not really hypermiling, and I got 52 MPG. I use it primarily for Uber and drive aggressively when I don't have passengers, and I often have a full car of passengers. I average 39.9 MPG. So I would imagine the Prius gets way better gas mileage than you're experiencing in this video. I've heard people getting 72 MPG on the older models.
I had a pre-production car, and as you saw, inclement weather and a tall pass.
lots of factors have to be considered, temperature/aero (windy or not) are the most important factors IMO. its getting warmer here in Canada (15 degrees celsius). I was able to get 2.9 L/100KM (81MPG) going 15km (from one place to DT). But over the course of ownership Jan to March. I average probably 5.2 L/100KM which is 45MPG, pretty good considered all the circumstances (-20 to just above zero degrees). Upgraded from 15 to 16" diameter rims, and swapped to All-weather tires instead of low rolling-resistance tires. In warmer days. I can achieve 50 MPG pretty consistently.
If you were going to make a whole elaborate video about this, why not wait a day/choose a different road (no mountain) to give a realistic figure. It's kind of a waste of your time.@@revmatchtv
@@luisr4027 I drove hundreds of freeway miles, and a few in wine county. People live in mountainous regions and rural areas. Not everyone lives in the Midwest. Real world, means a mix of conditions including rain.
This is the review that I’m looking for, good job man😊
This is a great sensible car. Toyota has a classic winner with this one.
There's a lot of interest in this car
Yep, if you can find one.
I was hoping for more mpg from the Prius. My 2013 VW TDI gets 50 mpg at 75 mph. At 100 mph it’s at 30 mpg and 125 is 17-19 mpg. Drove some lonely roads to get those figures haha
I just had my 2024 xle awd on first long trip Denver to Omaha at 75 speed limit. I used cruise control the whole time both way. Average 35 mpg. I worst than I expected. 0% EV ratios. EV mode only works well under 70 mph. I basically used gas engine without EV for this trip.
It seems to work well in the city. I got highest mileage at ~60 mpg from my place to my work.
run mobil o 16 oil and make sure those tires are max psi to get those mpgs up. my awd is doing 48 mpg at 75mph on the freeway. i have the 19s on atm but getting a smaller rim this next week with some high psi cheap tires
I really like what they did with the new Prius, but I am still deciding whether to purchase it, considering how well the 2025 Camry compares and even exceeds with space and power. What are your recommendations? Prius XLE or Camry XLE? I want the style, function, comfort, and fuel efficiency.
Love the new Prius. Thanks for the review! Also I’m not the only one with 25 shark vacuums! Gotta love the duo-clean versions!
I own quite a few vacs at this point!
the 2016 Prius was also great on MPG I use to get 68.8 mpg I think the body is a bit more aerodynamic I compared there average on the site and it still seems better than the 2023s
My question is: Is it fun?
I had a 2012 Prius C and honestly, that little car was fun to drive, of course it had some issues, but I enjoyed it. Life went on and now I'm in a Model S. The problem is that I drive a LOT for work and Range Anxiety is a real thing. I'm holding out for the new Prime best of both worlds EV & Hybrid.
I enjoy Tesla's autopilot, does sense 3.0 compare? And is it fun? I don't expect it to launch off the line, but with the right music... Did you connect with the car?
I think I explained in great detail how I enjoyed driving. It’s several minutes of the video. TSS 3.0 is nowhere near as advanced as Autopilot.
You should also check out the 2023 Prius Prime that comes out in Spring, it's what I'm holding out for it. It has about 40 miles of electric range and will then go into hybrid mode after its charge is gone
@@michaelhanson741 I will be at the launch. Look for videos a bit later in the spring.
@@michaelhanson741 I was with you on this, that was my plan. I got to sit in the a regular Prius at the dealership this past weekend... The steering wheel... I thought I'd be able to not be effected by it, but it may be the deal breaker. The top of the wheel is directly in the line of sight for the instrument cluster. MAYBE if we got the yoke or an aftermarket without the top section.
I am averaging 43mpg combined on my 2023 Prius limited with 5k miles on it(mostly highway miles). I was averaging 56mpg on my 2021 prius xle with 50k miles.
its the 19 inch wheels causing mpg issues and low tire psi
Never thought I would ever say this about a Prius, but that is a gorgeous car.
I agree. Funny saying that about a Prius!
I have a manual shift 2017 1.4l turbo Volkswagen Jetta that regularly gets between 40 and 45 MPG on the highway with mindful, but by no means "grandma" accelerator handling while typically going 80 mph. And when I need to accelerate hard from a stop or pass on the highway the car has plenty of power to feel confident especially compared to pretty much any other economy vehicle. I can't get excited for 45 mpg for 3x the price and significant complexity for maintenance.
So $49.29 divided by 461 miles is10.69 cents per mile. Also 461 miles divided by 121.233 kwh ( 9.79 * 12.38333 ) equals 3.8 miles per kilowatt hour, that's as good as most battery electrics.
It will be pretty cheap to run
Have one on order and I have two in the driveway at the moment. Efficient driving in a Prius means not using cruise control. You want to pump and glide as much as you can. That doesn’t mean speed up and coast but mild on and off the throttle. Don’t be a tool and hold people up.
Thank you very much for your great explanation which you experienced.
Can you envision this car being a good cross country cruiser? Were the seats comfortable for a long trip?
Yes, I drove over 500 miles in a week. The seats are supportive and I was comfortable.
@@revmatchtv Thanks for test drive report and quick feedback, high on our list for a next car.
@@revmatchtv Awesome! My old 3rd gen Prius is an excellent cross country car and I plan to replace it whit this new Prius.
Great review! Appreciate the effort
I’m currently averaging 59.9mpg in my 2022 corolla hybrid and that’s driving in power(sport) mode too
Driving 300 miles around LA in a 2023 XLE AWD getting 61mpg without trying to save
@@whatthef24Prius ?????
You should try Comma3, I have Comma2 and it has driven 53k miles for me in my Prius Prime. Chill driving. Thanks for the video.
I'm not sure why the XLE gets less mpg than the LE but according to another source it's 52 mpg VS 57 mpg combined for XLE VS LE. Probably larger wheels and tires account for this but 45 mpg is pretty dismal for new Prius isn't it (even considering hilly terrain)? I have the 2017 plug-in prime and I average an amazing 61 mpg on gas and 5.0 miles/kwh in EV mode without extremely easy driving, just a bit of moderation most of the time. I think I was in my 20's or 30's the last time I challenged another driver to a stoplight race and if I wanted a quick 0-60 time I guess I would own a Corvette, BMW or Tesla. But since I'm never really doing any drag racing with my car and it's quick enough to get from one red light to another or easily merge into freeway traffic (even in ECO mode) my 2017 Prime will not be traded in for a 2023 soon. The inability to actually see the display is a huge deal breaker as well and my 2017 doesn't have that annoying simulated ICE sound at slow speed. So count me a bit disappointed with some of these changes and the design direction Toyota has taken with the Prius. The new look and the improved handling are both big pluses however, as well as the increased EV range. But this could have easily have been an 70-80mpg vehicle instead of a car designed to keep up with a Tesla or BMW, which it still won't in a stoplight race. Isn't economy really why most people purchase a Prus or am I wrong? Why buy a Prius if you want to be king of the 0-60 crowd? I guess I don't get it the overall appeal this car might have to an existing Prius owner but I know some want economy and more performance. And while the potential for economy with the new Prius is still really good, I think Toyota chose to give up a lot of potential economy for flashy 0-60 times and probably lost some or a lot of sales from existing Prius owners like me.
Per Toyota, the estimated fuel economy is City/Hwy/ Combined:
57/56/57 (LE FWD)
52/52/52 (XLE/Limited FWD)
53/54/54 (LE AWD)
49/50/49 (XLE/Limited AWD)
@@revmatchtv Yes I think the main difference has to be tire and wheel sizes. That was also my experience with my my 2004 Prius when I briefly tried larger tires and wheels in an effort to improve the horrible handling and wandering on freeways. It helped stability but depressed gas mileage by about 5 mpg.
The dealer markups where I live will hamper anything good coming out of this redesign.
Exactly. The prius is awesome, but impossible to find.
such a good review, keep up the good work.
Thank you!
Interesting. My 2021 Yaris Cross Hybrid AWD does the exact same mpg, and i drive in the very hill covered regions of switzerland, with lots of ups and down. I do 5.2L/100Km (45mpg) on that road, but it does drop down considerably if i stay in the city only (64ish mpg) and at around 52mpg on the flat regions or our autobahn (if i dont have to brake a lot). Hills trully are the enemy of hybrids.
Note: i can get my avg. work way mpg down a bit if i drive more considerate, with soft acceleration and so on, but most of the times i just drive without a care for mpg.
I wonder if Toyota is kinda missing the mark here with the Prius?
It’s always been know for it’s super mpg and that seems to be going down.
For sure some updates needed to happen, but how with a plug in is it getting less mpg than a regular Prius?
Great Review btw!!!
This was a preproduction vehicle and only had about 1,200 miles on it. Overall I got about 49mpg over 460 mostly highway miles. That's about 2 shy of the EPA estimate. These appearing in customer hands now, so we'll have a better sense of real-world conditions soon.
@@revmatchtv you did some beautiful driving!
Interesting to see the higher end models with larger wheels get lower mpg.
Buyers will have to forgo amenities for mpg because of tires 🙄
@@dr.stacey7283 Indeed.
If there is an elevation gain during your drive, whatever your mileage is below the epa estimate, on your way back, it will be that number above the epa estimate on the reverse trip that includes an elevation drop. Also with those toyota engine platforms and all the rest involved in the enineering, if the temp. outside is below 50, you will see lower electric motor output, and a little more so below about 30 F. That is pretty shocking, seeing as how I had a 2016 Prius II Eco and drove it 45,000 miles averaging 62.5 mpg and I floored it everywhere I went because it could handle it and in a Prius, when you're trying to floor it, it's about as fast as half-assing it in a truck.
I'd had two prius models 2009 and 2014 - Now a 2021Hybrid Honda Accord....I do hwy and then I have to climb from 5ooo to 7200 ft in Colorado mountains - 42MGP was the best on the Prius - They Honda gets 41 to 43. The Honda is a normal car and is as big as my 2018 Avalon - This new Prius with AWD might be the ticket...
Been driving this for a month now and i only averaging 44.2 . Mostly highway around 70 - 75 mph so is kinda disappointing. Was hoping atleast around 50mpg . And that's on normal or eco mode.
Rear seat ac vents on this car will be good for comfort in my opinion.
I agree
Meh, I've had rear seat vent's in most of my car and 99% of the time, I close the vents as it's highly inefficient to run them. I will open them up if it's really hot, but once the car is cooled, my passengers are ok w/ the front vents providing air conditioning.
Great review! 👌🏽
Thank you!
I’ve had 3 Prius’ and I don’t think there’s really a break in period. I mean basically you’re driving a computer 😂
What kind of roads your on makes sooo much difference. I drove my last Prius mostly at the coast in North Carolina; flat as a pancake and slow speeds. I got amazing gas mileage (I’ve been tracking my mileage since 2011 using an app).
I bought a new Prius in 2021 and moved inland, where it’s not so flat an also where there’s insane highway driving (think autobahn…I’m often well over 80 mph going with morning traffic).
My mileage went from consistently low 50 mpg to now mid to low 40 mpg in a car that’s supposed to get better mpg according to the sticker (it’s not a Prime, pure Hybrid).
No matter how hard I try to hyper-mile, it’s just impossible with the roads I now drive on.
When I’m back at the coast for a visit, the mpg is fantastic!
Go figure
Great review
Prii are computers on wheels, and because of that there is a learning period during break in. If you disconnect the 12V battery for long enough, that will reset the whole car and restart the learning process. Had the hybrid pack in my 2002 replaced a few months ago, I had to drive for a few days until it was back to normal after the reset.
@@aspecreviews first off, I love that you use Prii (Latin, yes).
Secondly I’m totally gonna look into this. Incredibly intriguing!
@RevMatchTV THANK YOU for Answer! That`s the Problem! 60% more Horsepower ... for what? For me (European Guy with hilly Landscape) the Prius NHW20 has enough Power. In this case i have very low (!) Taxes and Insurance! With 150HP @Prius 2023 costs going up factor 2,5!! (Not in the US?) And consumption is the same 20 Years ago ...... NO Sir! Your`s and Toyotas argument (they were not pushing for the best possible mpg) is not acceptable! My, and sure a lot of other drivers, expectation in 2023 is, 99HP, 2,9L/100km. THANK YOU Toyota for building this FAMOUS Prius Gen2! I try driving to 300.000km (now 235.000) It seems Toyota going away the Path from 1997! I am sad ........
I am debating between this and an Ev. I got a new job that will add ~30k to my yearly income with ease. I am debating should I keep my 2008 honda accord coupe which will cost me ~5-6k in gas. The gas prices now is what is making consider getting a new car. It's between a chevy bolt or a ioniq 5. If I was to get an hybrid it would the prius prime. The new job is 50 minute drive away: 90kilometers each way. Any thoughts anyone.
Run the math for your commute. Figure on some inflation for both gas and electricity. See how much you will save or spend depending on what you drive. Factor in your purchase price with interest or lease cost. Most likely you'll find it's cheaper to keep the Accord, but it won't take long to put together a spreadsheet with your costs.
@@revmatchtv I have considered the points that you have brought forth. My baby is 15 years old and I do NEED reliable transportation. The 50 thousand km a year is just for work. I am not taking into consideration the driving around town taking the kids to their respective activities. With the price olgas today the app estimated ~ 7 644 dollars for driving strictly for work.
That is why I considered the Chevy Bolt EUV. With 11k incentives and my down-payment I am looking at 531 a month for 6 years. So what I would be spending on gas I am paying for the car. The hospital in question offers free charging to employees. Your thoughts would be appreciated. Getting feedback hepls me see potential blind spots.
Damn that’s a good looking car!
Do you know if the hybrid system works over 50 mph? I have a gen 4 Prius and at speeds over 50/55 mph, the car runs mostly on gas, while the hybrid system will only provide power during heavy acceleration and intermittently to the wheels. I hope the gen 5 Prius will at least provide more electrical power to the wheel at higher speeds.
I’m not sure if there’s a cut off speed or what it is.
Hybrid does power during heavy power (as you mentioned) and fully EV below 10 MPH, the prime however can be fully electric during any speed, and drive about 40 miles on electirc
@@afcgeo882 I made it quite clear that I mentioned the prime AFTER i answered his question.
Hello good sir, I drive a 2017 nissan sentra I have 65k on it right now I'm saving up to upgrade and feel like Toyota prius would a be a good upgrade .
What drawn me to it was, the large MPG I drive alot for my profession so saving gas or fueling my tank less would he'll me alot.
My question is once the gas tank is full how often throughout the month do you have to refuel?
You should be able to get anywhere from 450-600 miles per tank.
Are all versions of Prius now Plug-In or is there a regular hybrid option that charges while you drive?
Prius prime is plug-in and hybrid. There are regular hybrid Prius models for now
@@omonteso Is one better than the other?
The Prime will be revealed a bit later this spring. It's a plug-in. Both recharge while you drive, but the Prime has a bigger battery and you can drive it in pure-ev mode for 35+ miles or so.
Tax Credits? Any idea how long it will be before we know if the Prius will qualify for the $7,500 credit?
You'll have to check the IRS website . They update it fairly frequently. In fact, they have a new list of rules that came out on April 18.
I'd rather sacrifice 10 MPG to get a better driving experience. I think Toyota has nailed it this time.
I'm in the same boat, but I wanted to see what it could do with painfully slow driving! I'd be quite happy with 40mpg on highway and able to drive with the flow of traffic.
I would rather sacrifice the driving experience to gain 10 more mpg
@@phileasler5401 they sell 1.8 liter in japan. and handling mods for more momentum preservation around turns.
The sonata hybrid regular gas get 42mpg hwy but put non ethanol gas it gets 52 mpg hwy in town 52 to 65 on that non ethanol
What where can I get that gas at
I love that color
How was the steering wheel and the dash? Could you be able to see the dash or was it a problem and have to adjust the steering wheel
Ok for me. Some people might not like it. I’m 5’9” and I like the wheel low normally.
@@revmatchtv I am 5'9 too hahaha but I drive a 2012 f150 and I am used to seeing the dash through the middle of the wheel. Thinking of prius or corolla hybrid.
@@alanrubio6708 Everyone is used to seeing the dash through the wheel and I thought it would be an issue, but I adapted immediately. For me it became a non issue pretty quickly, partly because the display itself is very high quality.
Did you notice any blind spots from left to right with the A pillars? I have a Honda fit with the forward A pillars and there is blind spots that I hate. Thanks
Nothing that bothered me. There is a bit of glass ahead of the mirrors.
Even the squirrels want to get squished by the Prius🎉
NOT THE SQUIRRELS!
So what is the best car for the best highway mpg ???
According to Google Toyota used premium 91 octane fuel for the mpg tests
Just FYI, the EPA is the agency that publishes the official MPG numbers, not the manufacturer.
@@revmatchtv is there anything that says Toyota can't do independent testing
yikes 46 on the highway going slow. my ioniq hybrid gets 65-70 mpg in those conditions...
How your gas was reading on this trip ? You forget to talk about it .... I wanna know
There is literally no video on RUclips testing the AWD capability of the new Prius in the snow. Can you please test this?
We only get press cars for a few days and that vehicle went back to Toyota well before the video was published. I don't live in a snowy area either. Sorry.
2023 XLE AWD In the rain it was fine. Will test big bear this weekend. But feels as confident inspiring as the Subaru so far
@@whatthef24 got a Subaru over Prius cause it has real awd than the 2020 6hp awd that was a joke in previous model. Good to hear. Let me know when you do the test in the snow. Following.
I got a chance to drive base model and it gets 57mpg despite aggressive driving. Only car I've seen getting advertised fuel figure without driving like a granny.
Was the car in Normal mode. I assume there’d be a difference in Eco mode. I drive my Honda in Eco 90+% of the time and I get window sticker mpg.
I drove the whole trip in Eco
The Prius you're driving is rated at 50 mpg. It's the LE with 17 inch tires that rated at 57 mpg
52 My friend. XLE is in the title of the video.
I read that Toyota achieved the high numbers using premium gas. It has a 14:1 compression ratio.
When I spoke with the engineers, they said premium would help ensure the maximum power output was achieved. The numbers Toyota quotes are EPA numbers, not Toyota numbers, so that was achieved with their standard testing methods.
I read on the Le only half the back seat will fold down flat.
pre-production for how long now? fgs
I had a pre-production car for a week. They’re arriving at dealers now
You definitely dont need to be driving slow to get great mpg. My 2016 prius, definitely not being the slowest car on the road... lifetime avearge is 73.6mpg... (Florida)
Will get one
If you can wait.
Well, expect $omewhat ridiculous markup$$
If you can find one and willing to spend 15K over sticker.
With a Prius, you get better MPG in the city. NOT the highway. I would expect 45mpg on the highway.
Which grade of fuel been used in the test?
87. Toyota engineers told me the Prius will return EPA rated fuel economy on 87. Higher octane does not increase economy.
@@revmatchtv that great news, because older versions of prius required higher octane grade which is costs more
So Danial Craig stopped staring in Jame Bonds series to become a car reviewer? lol
😂😂😂 last I heard it was Jeremy Renner and then Sting.
@@revmatchtv yes, without glasses you look like Jeremy more lol
very good looking car
That is a good looking red.
I agree
Red is extra cost.
I get 55mpg on my 23 Prius XLE without the sunroof.
If you wanna hit that 56mpg’s, you’ll have to drive around 45mph on the highway.🤣
Not sure if everyone need all that power from Prius, honestly, mpg is disappointment. Smaller trunk space it’s end of Prius for me.
My Altima 2014 going 80mph gets 37 mpg 👌
"I was driving below the speed limit to maximize efficiency" - Prius driver. SMH
Can you tell us how high the mpg is in the city? I drive right now a Corolla 1.8 Hybrid hatchback and in the german summer my best result was 67 mpg for the complete range of tank.
@@afcgeo882 US mpg.
I didn’t have enough time to sit in city traffic and test it.
@@revmatchtv K... Thanks anyway.
I have a 2022 I average better than 60 mpg daily drive and 50 plus highway.
Pretty darn good
i drive a 2002 car that goes really slow im used to only going 65 in it because it feels like im going really fast in that car...
When does the Prime variant come out?
There will be reviews in early April and I expect the car will be at dealers some time later this year
The prime will sell north of 60K probably.
Should just get a Camry hybrid it likely would have made the same mileage with more hp/torque and comfort.
my 2007 prius gets 48mpg on highway
very important information is missing: How many miles just in E mode?
It gives a percentage per trip. I don't recall a screen showing total miles. The percentage is obviously a lot higher in the city. On my road trip, the percentage got lower the longer the drive. On my 199 mile leg, the EV driving ratio was 34%. You can see that somewhere in the video I think for maybe 1 second.
Why does the LE get 57 mpg and the XLE get 5 less at 52 mpg?
@kuramarosetta8193 Well, they're not any wider there just 2 inches longer. Is got to be more than that, I mean is a 5 mile per gallon loss.
@kuramarosetta8193 Yeah, that sounds about right cuz I know four-wheel or all-wheel-drive adds like a couple hundred pounds.
It's FWD, and is lighter and has 17 vs 19" wheels. The AWD option takes away some MPG as well too.
Look like same 46 mpg with same speed and rainy conditions I’m getting for previous gen Prius
I have gotten 61 so far around LA with a 2023 XLE AWD. Only short time though, about 300 miles.
Summer on longer than 20 mi trips I’m getting up to 66 mpg. That is real numbers. Dashboard say 72. Winter 28-45 F, short 10 mi trips, straggling to get 50. Longer trips 55 mpg. Hilly terrain killing mpg too
Ofcourse its a hybrid the street mpg will be much better then highway
you go 71MPH TURNS 42MPG, EXACTLY LIKE CIVIC BUT CIVIC IS 5K CHEAPER
Wow CA never looked so beautiful! The drought might be over
Not the homeless population though…
Save $50 when you try Carmigo! www.carmigo.io/revmatch
So crazy Elon, like everyone else who disagrees with you....
It is a shame hondas hybrids are not even any better mpg wise... i love the exterior of the new prius but i really dont like the interior. Essentially i want a civic hatch with a prius powertrain.
The new Civic has a fantastic interior
52 is not acceptable, I'm doing 55+ in my 2019 lol.... Best I ever had was right over 70.
Dude don’t know how to drive a Prius my 2022 is rated 50 highway 54 city and I get over 62 average and can see 200mpg on certain trips and mine is a gasser no plug-in whatsoever. I have driven fast cars too!
You undoubtedly missed the part at the beginning where I mentioned it was a pre-production vehicle and also that I wasn't going to hypermile it. I was extremely transparent with my driving style, the terrain, and how I calculated the MPG.
official factory mpg is NEVER !!! NEVER !!! is correct. real world consumption depends on huge amount of factors. on average consumption is duble of official mpg numbers. sometimes even more than double or little bit less than double. even the on-board car computer mpg data is wrong too. for any car on the planet official mpg or computer data mpg, both are wrong.
My experience is I don't get half the stated MPG in any car unless I have my foot buried all the time. It's possible to get 52mpg, but you need a very light foot and probably more city driving.
I have gotten 60 MPG on my Rav4 Hybrid (in the summer)..and the Rav4 is much heavier. In the winter, I average 45mpg and the Factory advertised MPG is supposed to just be 40. Either I must be an expert at driving hybrids OR mines is extremely good? I have put 17k miles on it and 99% of the time, I get better than the advertised MPG.....Highway miles too!
@@revmatchtv i c what u mean, and it is very important ofcourse to have a light foot but it will not give u official numbers of mpg. so many factors are in mpg that book can be written about only mpg subject. real life numbers never match official mpg. i have huge experience with that. also extemely important to have 15-days experiment. exoeriment done in 1-day time period and in 15-days time period will have a totally different results and it is only 10% of factors. there other huge amount of factors as well. its not simple at all as majority of men think it is. even atmoshperic presure and oxigen levels in the air is a factor and even level of pressure in the tires and number of passengers and speeds and numbers of start/stops and seasons and time gaps of start/stops and weather conditions and other factors. so as i said it is complex thing. even country to country factors are important too. condiotions are different in different countries and quaility of fuel is different which gives us a lot of differenece technical condition and age of car also a big factor and many other thing. so my dear friends believe me i know what i am saying.
I am done with Toyota after 14 years of Prius ownership. The dealerships are gouging customers. I bought a Volkswagom ID.4 and love it!
Isnt this a plug in hybrid?
No, the Prius Prime is the plug-in. Expect to see an announcement a bit later this Spring.
Even saying the word sports car in this review is killing my soul. “190hp is fine” said no one ever.
Pretty sure I said “this is not a sports car” at the beginning of my drive. 😄 btw your channel is great!
@@revmatchtv problem was you kept comparing it to a sports car. But I get what you were saying. Probably giving Prius owners hope they can be cool in their car ;)
Did he just call
Elon crazy? Wow
On April 11th he said he’s sleeping on the couch at Twitter.
My 2016 BMW 320d gets better MPG than that car. I get 21.4 km/l 50.336MPG on the highway doing tHe speed limit (110km/hr)
Its a beautiful looking car BUT,,, i was hoping for better mpg.
Great video man
@@afcgeo882 i get 27 mpg city. Also i Get 33.75 mpg combined…
It’s hard to match a diesel efficiency at highway speeds. In town the Prius should be better though.
@@revmatchtv absolutely. Im buying that car…. The LE option 2wd
Is this in the USA? With this kind of mpg. Because the USA and Europe have different gas mileage ratings. Basically, 1 USA gallon is equal to 1.2 Euro gallon.
2016 BMW 320i gas version is 28 mpg combined.
@@jeffreyfurtado3681 my 320d gets 21.4 km/L.
My avg is 39.2 with 1125mi
What's your hwy/city percentage?
My 2019 Prime consistently gets over 50 mpg.
Pretty underwhelming on the mpg front.. Guess i'm keeping my '17 Hyundai Ioniq that gets an easy 55~ on the highway and city for another year.. boring car, but it's so cheap to drive.
Lots of factors go into MPG including elevation, temp etc. After 460 miles I got 49mpg overall on 90% freeway. It's always cheaper to keep an existing car that works well
Mazda cx60 3.3L diesel is more fuel eficient then prius
Too bad my local dealer is charging 8k markups for every new Prius.
In So. Cal its more like 10K-12K
@@calokraine5901 Wow.
Yeah. 9800 markup here in SoCal. Really frustrating I think I’ll stick to my 2016 Prius!
🤨🤨🤨
@M D why are they doing this and is it legal