2026 Toyota Sequoia Capstone Review: Terrible Use of $90,000
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2026 Toyota Sequoia Capstone Review: Terrible Use of $90,000
Impressive pulling power and fuel economy, but the Toyota Sequoia's unfriendly ergonomics and overall value are a dealbreaker.
By Andrew P. Collins
Published
Apr 24, 2026 12:21 PM EDT
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Andrew P. Collins
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The 2026 Toyota Sequoia Capstone has some good design elements and a reasonably high level of front-seat luxury. But after a week of roaming around in this family-hauling, trailer-towing luxo barge, what I found most was wasted space. The exterior proportions are caricature-huge, and inside, passengers seem to sit about a mile apart. Yet somehow, the cabin still feels cramped and doesn’t hold as much cargo as it theoretically should.
Frankly, I did not particularly like the first or second-generation Toyota Sequoia, either. They both had the same problem this truck does: acres of flat plastic punctuated by rectangular controls, enormous footprints, but impractical interior proportions. Nevertheless, I hopped into this $90,000 range-topper with an open mind. Those fenders are nice. And the i-Force hybrid system provides good power and great towing capacity while achieving passable fuel economy.
This vehicle makes a lot of sense for a family of four who do serious towing—maybe you have a boat, a horse, or a UTV. Its hybrid powertrain has great grunt, and the max tow capacity is nearly 9,000 pounds. That’s enough to pull two horses in a nice trailer; a job typically reserved for Super Duty-sized trucks.
Andrew P. Collins
Otherwise, the hybrid battery and solid rear axle are actually kind of a burden because of how much interior space they eat into. Objectively, it’s got good road dynamics for what it is, and the powertrain is impressive if you’re not put off by recent reliability issues. But the execution of the luxury trimmings leaves the Sequoia Capstone in a no-man’s-land between highline cars and frumpy family taxis, and did I mention it feels annoyingly large?
The Basics
The 2026 Toyota Sequoia is a big three-row SUV with traditional body-on-frame construction, a slightly more modern twin-turbo V6 hybrid powertrain, and an old-school solid rear axle. The truck (you can definitely call it a truck) starts at about $65,000. From the base SR5 model, you can go for a TRD Pro off-road variant (better suspension, some skid plates), a few in-between trims, and this max-luxe Capstone. My demo car rang up at $86,530.
Andrew P. Collins
Power claims are impressive: 437 horsepower and a stump-ripping 583 lb-ft of torque. It also runs on 87-octane (regular) fuel, which is nice; filling a 22-gallon tank with premium is brutal nowadays, even if you can afford a $90,000 vehicle. The transmission is a 10-speed automatic, which is plenty competent. The 4×4 variant most people will buy claims 19 mpg city, 22 mpg highway, and 20 mpg combined. You can also opt for a two-wheel drive version (perfectly reasonable, especially if you live anywhere between South Carolina and Texas) that claims 21 mpg city, 24 highway, and 22 combined. Not bad for a 6,185-pound monster. Yep—this beast weighs a full three tons before you even load passengers. Better read those bridge signs in small towns!
For all this imposing presence, the Capstone does not sit high off the ground. Well, the roofline towers at about 75 inches. But ground clearance is only 8.6 inches. Even the TRD Pro has just 9.1 inches of clearance—a Subaru Outback Wilderness has 9.5.
Driving the Toyota Sequoia Capstone
Before you can drive the Sequoia, you have to climb into it, which is bizarrely arduous for a family car. I’m six-foot tall and had to make a mild effort to step over the side-step and enter the truck. That said, I may be simply the wrong height—the power-deploying side steps were too low to help me, but the door sill was too high to easily mount. If you’re on the shorter side, I feel that would get old very quickly.
From the driver’s perspective, the cabin experience is dominated by a larger-than-laptop-sized screen on the dash (14 inches). There are some cool and rugged-looking design elements, like the staunch switch bank below the screen and the immense center console. Those are standard Sequoia features, though—the Capstone stuff is kind of a mixed bag. The wrapping on the grab handles looks cheesy. The massaging seats...