The Nissan Pathfinder is designed as a rugged, practical workhorse, and rivals the likes of the Toyota Fortuner, Land Rover Discovery 4, Toyota Land Cruiser and Mitsubishi Shogun. It’s based on the same underpinnings as the Nissan Navara pick-up, but instead of two or four seats and a load bed it features a huge seven-seater interior. The seating layout is flexible, with simple folding mechanisms and a flat floor allowing owners to quickly increase boot size if they need to. Up front, the Pathfinder doesn’t feel as luxurious as rivals like the Discovery, but it has plenty of kit as standard. Fire up the engine, though, and you soon realise this isn’t the most refined choice: the 2.5-litre dCi diesel is rather noisy. On the road, the suspension irons out rough surfaces, but the ride isn’t as smooth as in other, more premium 4x4s on the market. The car can’t disguise its enormous dimensions in corners, either, with plenty of body roll. But it comes into its own off-road, with the four-wheel-drive system and impressive 332Nm torque output helping the Pathfinder conquer challenging terrain.
Engines, performance and drive
Running costs
There’s no escaping the size of the Pathfinder on the road, and its large dimensions and hefty weight come at a price, with some steep running costs. Manual models promise better fuel consumption, at 33.2mpg to the automatic version’s 31.4mpg.
Interior, design and technology
Practicality, comfort and boot space
Reliability and Safety
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