Mitsubishi is offering
0.0% APR for 48 Months + No Payment for 90 Days on a
2024 Mitsubishi Outlander SUV for
Qualified Buyers when you
finance through Santander Consumer USA. Available inventory and pricing will vary by location with prices
starting from ~$28,395 for the
Base ES Model or
from ~$40,345 for the
Outlander PHEV Plug-In Hybrid variant.
Thanks to Community Member
EagerRaccoon822 for sharing this deal.
- Note: Available offer(s) and vehicle options may vary by location. Final Pricing may will vary depending on your selected colors, trim and and addons or extra features.
2024 Mitsubishi Outlander Base-Model Details:
- Black interior with Fabric seats
- 18-Inch Alloy Wheels
- 7 Passenger Seating
- 8.0" Smartphone-link Display Audio (SDA)
- MI-PILOT Assist Navigation
- 2.5L DOHC 4-Cylinder Direct-Injection engine with a combined rating of 27 MPG
- 8-Speed Continuously Variable Transmission
- 18-Inch Alloy Wheels
- Google Android Auto
- Drive Mode Selector
- Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS)
- Active Blind Spot Assist
- Rear Automatic Emergency Braking
- Forward Collision Mitigation with Pedestrian Detection
- Includes:
- 2-Year/30,000-Mile Limited Maintenance (3 Oil Changes, 3 Tire Rotations and 1 Cabin Filter)
- 10-Year/100,000-Mile Limited Powertrain Warranty
- 5-Year/Unlimited-Mile Roadside Assistance
- Select options such as Handle Trim, Bumper Protector and Mirror Covers may also be available at no additional charge.
Leave a Comment
Top Comments
443 Comments
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Here is my list in case you are wondering
1. Outlander PHEV
2. Rav4 prime
3. Mazda CX90 PHEV
4. Kia Sportage PHEV
5. Volvo XC60 PHEV
IMPOSSIBLE... Joe wooda told us!
Here is my list in case you are wondering
1. Outlander PHEV
2. Rav4 prime
3. Mazda CX90 PHEV
4. Kia Sportage PHEV
5. Volvo XC60 PHEV
Mazdas are no joke, I've got two in the driveway and have encouraged others to give them a try..they have likewise been sold.
I work in the automotive industry and own a Nissan myself and I absolutely hate the CVT transmission and I am looking to trade it in the day I find myself a shrunk and inflation-less price on a minivan. Their engines are good and run long but I am always worried about their transmission breaking down. It is fact that Nissans transmissions are the worst and I have had a few friends who actually I referred them to Nissan telling me that they've had to get their transmission replaced. Lucky for them they were under the 5 year transmission warranty otherwise it could have been a $6K damage.
Overall Nissans drive well and sure the CVT transmission does give a better gas mileage but there's always a worry of them breaking down.
ONE of the reasons I wouldn't go with a Mitsubishi now which at one point I used to own one too and that was a good car is this being an SUV gives a lower gas mileage than a Toyota Sienna minivan - so that's a downside. The range isn't that great either.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Precisely why stay away from Nissan?
Quick hint: they'll say to avoid the VW due to terrible reliability and owner satisfaction, and cross shop the superior other cars (Honda, Subaru, Toyota, Kia, Hyundai) before the Mitsu.
You could even just get an online subscription to Consumer Reports (it's cheap) and have immediate access to all of their car and reliability data. The website is really nice and has mountains of comparison data, so it makes it easy to review and understand what's better and why.
I strongly suggest you look at data in the aggregate rather than listening to one or two or three voices. Consumer Reports aggregates the real, live data.
Also I wouldn't consider this and the Atlas in the same market segment. Maybe this and the Tiguan?
I agree but i've had a VW Jetta for 12 years and it's been very little maintenance costs. Love it. And I was hesitant buying it because people made same comments back then. Sometimes you get lucky.
Please sit down, get on a PC, and read the entire thread. This has been posted countless times.
As long as you understand that you _are_ lucky (ie that the normal buyer has a high amount of expensive maintenance with the average VW purchase) then no worries.
I'll never buy another German car after my BMW experience. Yes, they are listed high on the CR reports, but the problem is that every trip to the shop costs double or triple what it costs at the Toyota, or even the Lexus, dealership, and the BMW dealerships keep selling me crap like vehicle alignments that a new car simply doesn't need.
You said they "ignore models" in their ranking. They include every model they've reviewed as part of their overall ranking.
I work in the automotive industry and own a Nissan myself and I absolutely hate the CVT transmission and I am looking to trade it in the day I find myself a shrunk and inflation-less price on a minivan. Their engines are good and run long but I am always worried about their transmission breaking down. It is fact that Nissans transmissions are the worst and I have had a few friends who actually I referred them to Nissan telling me that they've had to get their transmission replaced. Lucky for them they were under the 5 year transmission warranty otherwise it could have been a $6K damage.
Overall Nissans drive well and sure the CVT transmission does give a better gas mileage but there's always a worry of them breaking down.
ONE of the reasons I wouldn't go with a Mitsubishi now which at one point I used to own one too and that was a good car is this being an SUV gives a lower gas mileage than a Toyota Sienna minivan - so that's a downside. The range isn't that great either.
Have you checked out the PHEV? Mitsubishi engine, tranny and plug-in system.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
I bought the model of Kia rated considerably higher than anything else in that market segment. Other Kia's are not nearly as class leading.
Leave a Comment