The 2017 Nissan Rogue Sport. |
Nissan's solution is another, smaller Rogue, the Rogue Sport.
2017 Nissan Rogue Sport. |
Where you can tell the difference is in cargo space---the Rogue Sport provides nine cubic feet less than the Rogue---and in price. A base Rogue starts at $24,800. The Rogue Sport's entry point is $21,640.
The car we drove was the mid-level SV, with a base price of $23,020. Standard equipment includes 17-inch aluminum wheels, all-season tires with a temporary spare, hill start assist, four-wheel disc brakes with ABS, vehicle dynamic control, electronic brake force distribution, brake assist, a vehicle security system, tire pressure monitoring, a six-way power driver's seat with power lumbar support, a 60/40 fold-down rear seat, dual-zone automatic temperature control, second-row air conditioning vents, cruise control, tilt/telescoping steering column, power door locks with auto-locking feature, power windows, a rear view monitor, a six-speaker AM/FM/CD audio system with Bluetooth, USB, SiriusXM Satellite Radio and Siri Eyes Free, the Divide-N-Hide cargo system, a cargo cover, Nissan Intelligent Key with pushbutton ignition, LED daytime running lights, auto-off halogen headlamps with LED signature, outside mirrors with LED turn signals and roof rails.
That is a lot of content for $23,020 and makes a strong value argument for the Rogue Sport SV. The $3,050 jump to the top-of-the-line SL adds 19-inch wheels, navigation, an around-view monitor and NissanConnect services.
2017 Nissan Rogue Sport interior. |
With $960 destination charges, the as-tested price came to $26,535. That is still a strong value. The Rogue Sport seems like a winner, giving Nissan a strong competitor against Toyota's C-HR and Honda's HR-V .