The 2019 Toyota Avalon Touring. |
You may have noticed that Toyota is working very hard to shake off its bland image of late. And for 2019, the Avalon, a new fifth-generation model, has gotten essentially the same styling treatment the smaller Camry got last year.
2019 Toyota Avalon Touring. |
Our tester was the Touring model---which costs a bit more than the more luxury-oriented Limited ($42,200 to the Limited's $41,800). There are XSE and XLE ($38,000 and $35,500 respectively) below that.
The Touring comes loaded, with the emphasis more on sport or at least the pretense of it than the Limited. Standard equipment is comprehensive, including a 301-horsepower, 3.5-liter 24-valve DOHC engine with an eight-speed transmission (EPA estimate 22 city/31 highway), 19-inch black machine-finished alloy wheels, a sport-tuned adaptive variable front and rear suspension and engine sound enhancement with active noise control.
Also standard is Toyota Safety Sense, which includes pre-collision system with pedestrian detection, lane departure alert with steering assist, automatic high beams and dynamic radar cruise control. And there's the Star Safety System, which folds in vehicle stability control, traction control, anti-lock braking, electronic brake force distribution, brake assist and smart stop technology. There's also an anti-theft system with engine immobilizer.
But, wait! There's more. LED headlamps and daytime running lamps with automatic on/off, adaptive cornering, dynamic turn signals, heated outside mirrors with turn signals, piano black mirror caps and rear spoiler, dual exhaust with quad chrome tips and a power tilt/slide moonroof.
2019 Toyota Avalon Touring interior. |
It's so complete, our tester only had two options---the Advanced Safety Package---intelligent clearance sonar, birds' eye view camera with perimeter scan and rear cross-traffic alert with braking ($1,150) and Wind Chill Pearl (pearlescent white) paint ($395).
With $920 delivery, processing and handling fee, the bottom line was $44,665.
All good.
But.
In chasing away the "beige" the Toyota brand has long been accused of, the Avalon and the Camry seem to be occupying the same space in terms of emotion, attitude and feel. The Avalon has nicer soft-touch materials, but somehow the designers have managed to put them next to, not on, the surfaces you'll touch. So you see stitched leather, but your the places your hand touches are hard plastic. As a result, the new Avalon feels like a bigger Camry rather than its own machine.
A fatal error? No. The Germans have made "same sausage, different lengths" work very well for their cars (think Audi A4, A6, A8). But the Avalon has, until now, felt different---and given that it rides on the Lexus ES350 platform, it could make a convincing case for a niche between Camry and Lexus, a place we think it successfully occupied with the last generation.