Looking to buy a Toyota Camry or any vehicle? Go to carconfections.com/new-car-quotes to learn about invoice pricing and get the BEST PRICE on vehicles in your local area!
It's a small thing, but I appreciate that you guys know about the fuel cap holder on the door! Most vehicles have those! I always see people just take the cap off and let it dangle on the side of the body... I just wanna run over and tell them! lol
My 2025 AWD XSE (which should get less mpg than yours) got 46mpg for the first 2000 miles from the computer and 46.125 from calculations at the pump. On the next 1650 miles it has gotten 47.8 mpg based on just the computer (since in my case it was so close). This is combined city+highway MPG. This is probably 90% highway miles. On the highway I almost always exceed the EPA rating. However, in the city it does not match the EPA; it gets much worse (it is in 30-38 range while rated for 44).
I have the FWD SE and a lead foot. I have not seen anything less than 42 in the city traffic. I guess that makes sense. Still for a car this size I'm good.
@@In-obscurity-n7jfwd =better mpg. SE = better mpg. I'm making a point of not using a heavy foot. But on a return trip from the store with a max speed of 39 and an average of under 30 I only got 32mpg. Which is extremely disappointing given that Im babying it and frankly that is about all it can do. AC was off. Acceleration was super slow. Good to very good mpg on the freeway but just bad in the city. My turbo Golf R did about the same on those types of drives and had over 300hp and was not a hybrid.
Thanks for the video guys. I'm a little confused though. When you filled up, the gauge showed a range of about 500 miles. Based on a full 13 gallon tank, that equates to only about 38.5 mpg??
Highway figures are basically irrelevant for the majority of the population. The wallet pays for average MPG over the lifetime of the vehicle, ie: sitting at lights, in traffic or parking lots and cruising along at 30 to 50 MPH in and around the city. I never understood why we luster over such an irrelevant number. Maybe it derived from a successful marketing campaign back in the 80s.
It depends where you reside and how many hills you have, but in SoCal I can get close to 52 average during the warmer months in a 2022. I am likely switching back to Prius as only it and Corolla can get off the charts numbers.
We had a brand new rental Camry while visiting South Dakota. We could not believe how excellent the car drove and how efficient it was. Upon arriving home, we bought a 24 Lexus ES 300h. Among the best cars I have ever driven. We average 46 mpg, most of which are one hour commutes each way in very heavy South Florida traffic each way. Superior automobile period. 47.4 is spectacular, great review.
When y’all gonna do a donk test tho???? Us phat yammed ebony queens need to know if our cakes are gonna be safe and comfortable in these cars! C’mon now boo boo our cakes can’t wait!!!!!
Toyota has tossed out good reliable long lasting v6 and v8 engines that took years to perfect and is now shoving a 4 cylinder hybrid in everything they make, I hope they go bankrupt.
Excellent short video with the facts we all looking for. But compared with my 2019 Camry Hybrid that’s exactly the same EPA I obtain and in Europe we drive faster than 75… I think Toyota hasn’t done enough on that regard and other brands including Chinese brands that are catching up… I want a Camry Hybrid with the Same power train as the Prius plug 🔌 in and soon when I change that’s what I will be looking for! Great review straight to the point keep on going !
2023 Venza - Last highway tank was 47.8 mpg. Car is rated at 40 city, 37 highway. Normal driving mode, My overall averages are always above the EPA ratings. Fantastic car.
Come on guys, 75 mph is a more realistic freeway speed for most drivers to keep up with the traffic. For such a big sedan(HP wise), there is no need to go slower @70 for higher mpg.
The Accord is amazing. They are neck to neck. The Accord beats the Camry in hybrid efficiency in the city. I own both cars. 2024 Accord EX-L and 2025 Camry XSE.
I’m thinking about getting an EX-L because they are rated pretty much the same mpgs as the Camry but the Toyota dealers anywhere near me are applying crazy markups to their vehicles so the accord would actually end up being thousands of dollars cheaper
You know now thinking about it. I kind of want a 2025 Toyota Camry xse with of course all the packages which everything should be standard on the car like Honda does but typical Toyota Lexus. Yeah I would buy it
25 camry se averaging over 800 km for the tank . Leaving 5litres of fuel still in tank . Also every tank of fuel we were getting better mileage . Loving it
The Camry is a beautiful beautiful car. For those who cannot afford a Camry but want a fantastic hybrid that gets fantastic fuel mileage y'all should look at the Hyundai Ionic hybrid year 2017 through 2022. That car gets 55 to 58 mi to the gallon no sweat. I own one in it's fantastic and comfortable as all heck.
just fyi, Ioniq hybrid transfer same hybrid powertrain to Elantra hybrid. So far there isn't any issue with Ioniq hybrid powertrain(engine and transmission), so I am gonna assume Elantra hybrid gonna have same reliable result.
I did a 500 mile hwy trip on m k5, an ice car, and got 44mpg, so I don't think 47mpg for a hybrid is much of an advantage especially since it's more expensive to buy one. I would love to see the city driving test though! 48 for city is impressive.
Ice cars do great on long highway trips. But you have to go by what they "average" in daily driving. My Camry Hybrid "averages" 48 mpg. My friends ICE Camry, while it can get 42-44 on the highway, "averages" 34 mpg overall. Over 300,000 miles of ownership, (the average length I keep my Toyota's) at $3.50 a gallon, that difference of 14 mpg is a $9,000 savings.
The XSE AWD is rated at 44/44/43 (combined, city, highway). I wish they'd just stayed with 18" wheels (on SE, XLE I think) and use the few extra bucks into taking some weight out of them. The LE with 16" wheels gets much better mpg, but that might be too much of a trade-off for tire performance. Interesting that the car's computer is actually fairly close to what you calculated via the actual gallons added. I've always wondered how consistent the auto shutoff is on the gas pump. (How precise is "full" when the pump senses the liquid level and shuts off?). A longer trip (and more gallons added) would reduce significance of any variability there. Still, in the big scheme of things (and over time), amazing economy in a car this large. Back in the early 80's, a diesel Rabbit might get similar mileage, but it was totally gutless and loud. For those of you who aren't familiar, the AWD Camry has 232 HP (a bit less in FWD) and does 0-60 in about 6.8 seconds (per Car and Driver testing). Pretty impressive while returning this economy. I have an AWD XSE on order. I live in a rainy climate and wanted that extra traction in the wet. Thanks for the test, and looking forward to the city. I'll be doing my own testing soon! Unfortunately was not able to get that red interior.
My Toyota Sienna Hybrid 650 miles range and it’s a two tons vehicle with seating capacity up to 8. The new Sienna Hybrid is cooler than SUVs. 100k miles still runs flawlessly without any issue.
It's depends on the gas station also. If you go for the cheap gas you will get less mileage. If you go for the good gas you will get more mileage. Recommend tests on different gas stations. ❤❤❤
500 miles out of 13 gal is 38 mpg which is NOT really impressive (maybe for gasoline but not for hybrid). But assuming 2 gallons remain at zero range, that makes 45 mpg which is pretty good (for speed 70 mph*!)
i think RAV 4 is more practical instead of small sedan, sedans are good for short road trips but if you have family specially even one child sedan is Not a good choice at all. buy RAV 4 or bigger Grand highlander Limited
@@Mr-Faraz92 Not the same fuel economy, Camry is also less expensive and has better tech than the current RAV 4, which is due for a refresh next year. Current RAV 4 is showing it's age badly. Camry has the 5th Gen Hybrid, and Toyota Sense 3.0. I'm hopeful the new RAV 4 will get the same updates.
@@Mr-Faraz92wrong , my wife had a 2019 Camry 2.5L then switch to a Rav4. Avg for Camry was 5.2L per 100, for the rav4 currently getting 7.4L per 100. Highway.
@@sammydavis991 Yet I'm constantly getting around 50 MPG, real world mileage, not artificial government rating. Better than the Camry that only gets its EPA during online reviews.
🟦 I got one about a month before y'all. Just passed 1,500 miles. Went ahead and got the oil changed. What are your thoughts on a quick change and then every 5,000 after that?
@@CarConfections Bad idea if you keep your cars long term! Always change oil at 500 miles on a new car, and every 5k miles after that. Toyota tech speaking. The manufacture is not out for your best interest, they want to sell cars.
Looking to buy a Toyota Camry or any vehicle? Go to carconfections.com/new-car-quotes to learn about invoice pricing and get the BEST PRICE on vehicles in your local area!
You guys need to do the real fuel economy test more often, especially the ones that claim to have great fuel economy
Def agree. Please do more fuel economy tests.
I'm in do the real EPA fuel economy more often
it really depends on area. My cousin drives 2025 camry and he keeps getting around 40 mpg
Soo agree!!
I just got 2025 LE and really does get 46 to 51 depending on quality of the gas and how I step on the gas. Only LE will let you see the 50,51mpg
Imagine if they made a TRD Hybrid Camry with a V6
would be insane
Give them 2 yrs, bet you will see it.
They at the border of physics laws if they can make a V6 Atkinson cycle engine then may be ..
V6 hybrids are not very fuel efficient..
Camry Max
@@charlesjackson1700 Right now.
It's a small thing, but I appreciate that you guys know about the fuel cap holder on the door! Most vehicles have those! I always see people just take the cap off and let it dangle on the side of the body... I just wanna run over and tell them! lol
I’m not surprised by the numbers. My 2019 Lexus ES300h gets the same. Enjoy the Camry! You are going to love it!
47 MPG on the highway going 70 mph is incredible!!! City driving should get you at least 50 mpg but most likely much higher!!
Red interior 🔥
Thanks for all of the Camry videos and info. I am picking up my White pearl XES today 8/20/24!
Great choice!
Amazing fuel economy!!
My 2025 AWD XSE (which should get less mpg than yours) got 46mpg for the first 2000 miles from the computer and 46.125 from calculations at the pump. On the next 1650 miles it has gotten 47.8 mpg based on just the computer (since in my case it was so close). This is combined city+highway MPG. This is probably 90% highway miles. On the highway I almost always exceed the EPA rating. However, in the city it does not match the EPA; it gets much worse (it is in 30-38 range while rated for 44).
I have the FWD SE and a lead foot. I have not seen anything less than 42 in the city traffic. I guess that makes sense. Still for a car this size I'm good.
Every time the awd kicks in it sucks more gas. Oh well that’s the price we pay to have nice things
@@In-obscurity-n7jfwd =better mpg. SE = better mpg. I'm making a point of not using a heavy foot. But on a return trip from the store with a max speed of 39 and an average of under 30 I only got 32mpg. Which is extremely disappointing given that Im babying it and frankly that is about all it can do. AC was off. Acceleration was super slow. Good to very good mpg on the freeway but just bad in the city. My turbo Golf R did about the same on those types of drives and had over 300hp and was not a hybrid.
@@bjornlovoll8972 I would be disappointed too.
47MPG🤯🤯🤯
Maybe it is due to the battery, but Toyota can make this car go 600+ miles if the expanded the fuel tank. 500 miles is still amazing for a car.
Nice work, guys. Thank you for sharing the real-world MPG with us!
Our pleasure!
Thanks for the video guys. I'm a little confused though. When you filled up, the gauge showed a range of about 500 miles. Based on a full 13 gallon tank, that equates to only about 38.5 mpg??
Highway figures are basically irrelevant for the majority of the population. The wallet pays for average MPG over the lifetime of the vehicle, ie: sitting at lights, in traffic or parking lots and cruising along at 30 to 50 MPH in and around the city.
I never understood why we luster over such an irrelevant number. Maybe it derived from a successful marketing campaign back in the 80s.
Could you please do the same for Prius, civic hybrid, Accord hybrid. Thanks in advance
Love your car video
Great video!😸
Greatly appreciate this real world test.
EV range drop 20-25% on Highway
I like your channel
Good job guys.
If you did a loop, why did you not go back to the same gas station?
It's just on the other side of the road
@@CarConfections ahh. Loop adjacent. Gotcha.
In the city is where the large vehicles will fail the fuel economy test.
It depends where you reside and how many hills you have, but in SoCal I can get close to 52 average during the warmer months in a 2022. I am likely switching back to Prius as only it and Corolla can get off the charts numbers.
We had a brand new rental Camry while visiting South Dakota. We could not believe how excellent the car drove and how efficient it was. Upon arriving home, we bought a 24 Lexus ES 300h. Among the best cars I have ever driven. We average 46 mpg, most of which are one hour commutes each way in very heavy South Florida traffic each way. Superior automobile period. 47.4 is spectacular, great review.
When y’all gonna do a donk test tho???? Us phat yammed ebony queens need to know if our cakes are gonna be safe and comfortable in these cars! C’mon now boo boo our cakes can’t wait!!!!!
What about the XSE AWD version ? Will it be similar?
The AWD version is rated for 44 MPG combined
This was great thanks! Mine is on order, another interesting review would be on sport mode fuel consumption comparison
Your car is fwd only?
Yes. We don't need AWD in this part of the country and wanted the higher MPGs instead
Toyota has tossed out good reliable long lasting v6 and v8 engines that took years to perfect and is now shoving a 4 cylinder hybrid in everything they make, I hope they go bankrupt.
I wish the inside could be a tan color. The deadpool red isnt for me and black sucks in New Meixco
at 70 mph on highway sure you will get that
Great video!! How long can you drive on battery alone?
wish you can can do traffic mpg like the nyc or cali traffic one
Did you get a DQ during your gas up Mason and Drew!?
Thought about it haha
To get a good fuel economy depends how fast you go
Where are you guys going down I-75?
What was the out of the door price for this car?
Where is the T-rex thumbnail pic?
How much did it cost you to fill it up?
What's under the hood? Not much 😂
Which octane fuel used for the test?
MEANWHILE IM GETTING 38 ;-;
Excellent short video with the facts we all looking for. But compared with my 2019 Camry Hybrid that’s exactly the same EPA I obtain and in Europe we drive faster than 75… I think Toyota hasn’t done enough on that regard and other brands including Chinese brands that are catching up… I want a Camry Hybrid with the Same power train as the Prius plug 🔌 in and soon when I change that’s what I will be looking for! Great review straight to the point keep on going !
Thanks!
2023 Venza - Last highway tank was 47.8 mpg. Car is rated at 40 city, 37 highway. Normal driving mode, My overall averages are always above the EPA ratings. Fantastic car.
Yup. My venza gets significantly more than it's rated when I drive highway miles. The only time it dips low is when I do a lot of short
@CarConfections This is great and all but please let us know what trim/version of 25 Camry this one is!
They did in the beginning… it’s a XSE fwd
Yeah more test on actual economy
I am impressed by Camry
My Future everyday car
Cool
44 mpg
Come on guys, 75 mph is a more realistic freeway speed for most drivers to keep up with the traffic. For such a big sedan(HP wise), there is no need to go slower @70 for higher mpg.
I wonder how this stacks up to the accord hybrid
Toyota does make the best, most reliable, hybrid system
The Accord is amazing. They are neck to neck. The Accord beats the Camry in hybrid efficiency in the city. I own both cars. 2024 Accord EX-L and 2025 Camry XSE.
@@myytchannel6632but lets see which one is still running years later
@@HighValueMan24 How many years later? Honda and Toyota are the same in reliability. They both will last over 200,000 miles with basic maintenance.
I’m thinking about getting an EX-L because they are rated pretty much the same mpgs as the Camry but the Toyota dealers anywhere near me are applying crazy markups to their vehicles so the accord would actually end up being thousands of dollars cheaper
Very curious to see the city mileage one..
Us too! Coming soon!
😊😊
You know now thinking about it. I kind of want a 2025 Toyota Camry xse with of course all the packages which everything should be standard on the car like Honda does but typical Toyota Lexus. Yeah I would buy it
25 camry se averaging over 800 km for the tank . Leaving 5litres of fuel still in tank . Also every tank of fuel we were getting better mileage . Loving it
The Camry is a beautiful beautiful car. For those who cannot afford a Camry but want a fantastic hybrid that gets fantastic fuel mileage y'all should look at the Hyundai Ionic hybrid year 2017 through 2022. That car gets 55 to 58 mi to the gallon no sweat. I own one in it's fantastic and comfortable as all heck.
just fyi, Ioniq hybrid transfer same hybrid powertrain to Elantra hybrid. So far there isn't any issue with Ioniq hybrid powertrain(engine and transmission), so I am gonna assume Elantra hybrid gonna have same reliable result.
I thought cant afford camry then civic😅
@@vannguyen-yw9ln civic is like almost same price with camry lol...scary Japanese brands.
I did a 500 mile hwy trip on m k5, an ice car, and got 44mpg, so I don't think 47mpg for a hybrid is much of an advantage especially since it's more expensive to buy one. I would love to see the city driving test though! 48 for city is impressive.
Ice cars do great on long highway trips. But you have to go by what they "average" in daily driving. My Camry Hybrid "averages" 48 mpg. My friends ICE Camry, while it can get 42-44 on the highway, "averages" 34 mpg overall. Over 300,000 miles of ownership, (the average length I keep my Toyota's) at $3.50 a gallon, that difference of 14 mpg is a $9,000 savings.
That's the correct way of measuring the real fuel economy, not the car's computer
The XSE AWD is rated at 44/44/43 (combined, city, highway). I wish they'd just stayed with 18" wheels (on SE, XLE I think) and use the few extra bucks into taking some weight out of them. The LE with 16" wheels gets much better mpg, but that might be too much of a trade-off for tire performance. Interesting that the car's computer is actually fairly close to what you calculated via the actual gallons added. I've always wondered how consistent the auto shutoff is on the gas pump. (How precise is "full" when the pump senses the liquid level and shuts off?). A longer trip (and more gallons added) would reduce significance of any variability there. Still, in the big scheme of things (and over time), amazing economy in a car this large. Back in the early 80's, a diesel Rabbit might get similar mileage, but it was totally gutless and loud. For those of you who aren't familiar, the AWD Camry has 232 HP (a bit less in FWD) and does 0-60 in about 6.8 seconds (per Car and Driver testing). Pretty impressive while returning this economy. I have an AWD XSE on order. I live in a rainy climate and wanted that extra traction in the wet. Thanks for the test, and looking forward to the city. I'll be doing my own testing soon! Unfortunately was not able to get that red interior.
My Toyota Sienna Hybrid 650 miles range and it’s a two tons vehicle with seating capacity up to 8. The new Sienna Hybrid is cooler than SUVs.
100k miles still runs flawlessly without any issue.
Nice
You guys need to get open pilot, Comma AI and put on that Toyota. You'll love it. You could make a bunch episodes on that alone.
did you guys drive on normal or eco ?
Normal, the default mode
It's depends on the gas station also. If you go for the cheap gas you will get less mileage. If you go for the good gas you will get more mileage. Recommend tests on different gas stations. ❤❤❤
500 miles out of 13 gal is 38 mpg which is NOT really impressive (maybe for gasoline but not for hybrid). But assuming 2 gallons remain at zero range, that makes 45 mpg which is pretty good (for speed 70 mph*!)
i think RAV 4 is more practical instead of small sedan, sedans are good for short road trips but if you have family specially even one child sedan is Not a good choice at all. buy RAV 4 or bigger Grand highlander Limited
My kids are all grown up, I don't need, or want any longer a big honking gas guzzling SUV. Been there, done that. Camry perfect for me.
@@truthserum5310 Rav 4 and Camry has same fuel ⛽️ economy with more ground clearance in Rav 4
@@Mr-Faraz92 Not the same fuel economy, Camry is also less expensive and has better tech than the current RAV 4, which is due for a refresh next year. Current RAV 4 is showing it's age badly. Camry has the 5th Gen Hybrid, and Toyota Sense 3.0. I'm hopeful the new RAV 4 will get the same updates.
@@Mr-Faraz92wrong , my wife had a 2019 Camry 2.5L then switch to a Rav4. Avg for Camry was 5.2L per 100, for the rav4 currently getting 7.4L per 100. Highway.
Test at 80 with the AC on.
Real World conditions.
It was closer to 90 degrees and the AC was definitely on
@@CarConfections
80 MPH
Texas Highway Speeds
85 if you're on Toll Road 130
It's okay but not amazing. My 2024 VW Jetta non-hybrid gets 51 MPG cruising at 65 and it's quite hilly here so expecting better on flat highways.
Jetta is not the same class.
@@Steve-pd8ip your Jetta is EPA rated at 41 highway.
@@sammydavis991 Never said it was! And the interior space is only a few percent smaller btw.
@@sammydavis991 Yet I'm constantly getting around 50 MPG, real world mileage, not artificial government rating. Better than the Camry that only gets its EPA during online reviews.
Why do hybrids have to look like complete concept garbage?
Gross car. I’m a Toyota guy but they just keep missing the mark
Not sure why you say that; the new Camry seems to be getting good reviews. It is very fuel efficient.
@@10tenman10 for sure. Just hate the styling.
I've heard, you get better gas mileage. With the windows up, and air conditioner running. Than you do with the windows down, and air conditioner off.
🟦 I got one about a month before y'all. Just passed 1,500 miles. Went ahead and got the oil changed. What are your thoughts on a quick change and then every 5,000 after that?
Personally, we always just stick to the schedule that the manufacturer recommends for servicing
@@CarConfections Bad idea if you keep your cars long term! Always change oil at 500 miles on a new car, and every 5k miles after that. Toyota tech speaking. The manufacture is not out for your best interest, they want to sell cars.