The 2017 Mazda CX-5 Grand Touring. |
It earned its place two years ago, when Mrs. TireKicker (known at the time as Navigator) and I took her two daughters to Southern California for a few days of fun and sun, museums and observatories, a legendary restaurant, a then-endangered coffee shop and an Iranian ice cream parlor...oh yeah, and 16 hours at Disneyland. And our ride for those four jam-packed days was the then-new 2016 Mazda CX-5.
2017 Mazda CX-5 Grand Touring. |
First and most obvious: The design language from the flagship CX-9, another vehicle that we're very fond of here at TireKicker, has been applied to the smaller sibling CX-5. Beyond that, the CX-5, which has always been, like all Mazdas, more fun and involving to drive than other vehicles in its class, has been treated to some significant chassis improvements and standard G-vectoring control vehicle dynamic enhancement. I didn't think there was room for improvement to the way the CX-5 drove before. I was wrong. The '17 is noticeably better. The 2.5-liter Skyactiv-G engine with 187 horsepower is unchanged. The EPA fuel economy estimate is 23 city/29 highway, which is less than the 26/33 of the '16 we drove on our Southern California trip, though that was a FWD model and this one was AWD.
2017 Mazda CX-5 interior. |
Our tester was the top-of-the-line Grand Touring, which has a base price of $30,695 and comes with a strong list of standard features, including 19-inch alloy wheels, rain-sensing wipers, heated power mirrors with turn lamps, automatic LED headlights, LED fog and daytime running lights, a rear roof spoiler, bright finish exhaust outlets, rear privacy glass, a power moonroof, power rear liftgate, adaptive front lighting and high-beam control, a tilt/telescoping steering column, power automatic door locks, power windows, leather-trimmed upholstery, an 8-way power driver's seat (8-way manual for the passenger), radar cruise control, electronic parking brake, keyless entry, pushbutton start, dual-zone climate control with rear vents, a 10-speaker Bose audio system with HDRadio, rear-view camera, dual illuminated vanity mirrors, carpeted floor mats, heated front seats, an auto-dim rearview mirror and navigation.
Again: $30,695. That would have been a Mercedes equipment list 10 years ago.
As for options on our tester, a cargo mat was $70, the Soul Red paint was an additional $595 (I'd say gimme a free color, but it looks stunning, especially in sunlight) a retractable cargo cover $250 (call it anti-theft insurance) and the Premium Package (driver's seat memory, a 6-way power passenger's seat, heated rear seats, heated steering wheel, active driving display and windshield de-icer) was $1,830. With $940 delivery processing and handling fee, the total came to $34,380. We've tested this class of SUV with less content for as much or more money.
The Mazda CX-5 was one of our favorites to begin with. The changes for 2017 are enough to seal the deal---earning it a spot on the TireKicker's Best Cars list on the right of this page.