XLE trim with all options is my preference. Looking to buy soon. I have 2009 Corolla with 303k miles now. Still runs great, but guess I am going to go for this. I buy only every 15+ years and always Toyota. At 64 yrs of age this will be my last car. Gonna splurge this time, I deserve it!
@@2004cyrus do you have it with the pano roof? How is road noise? I hear some reviewers complaining of that but I think that’s on the XSE with its bigger louder tires. Also any rattles? Thx!!
I have the 2025 Camry LE. The ride is a lot more tied down than my wife's 2013 Camry LE. It corners well with very little body lean. The transition from ICE to battery are seamless in my experience and there is more than enough pickup.
Nice look at the *all new Camry. I picked up a loaded SE. Even got 10% off. No BS games from the dealership. They were under new ownership. Maybe for a reason. IDK. I've had it just over three months and just over 2000 miles on it. So far I think its one of the better offerings overall. The Accord may have a slightly better cabin and smoother ride. But they want too much for it and really didn't act like they wanted to sell one.
Bought mine a month ago. Midnight black. I'm not used to a car saying sit up or look ahead when taking your eyes off the road for even a second or 2. Overall, it has been a real comfortable turnpike cruiser. I do love the Adaptive Cruise set up. I've generally kept it in ECO mode (mostly for economy) but I think I'll try the sport mode for our foliage trip tomorrow (10/6) & see how it does & how it affects the gas milage overall.
I don’t understand how people who review cars can be so wrong about simple mechanical components. The “CVT“ in any hybrid Camry is not a traditional CVT that auto reviewers have always loved to bitch about. It is not even a real transmission in the understood sense of the word. There is absolutely no possibility for a rubber band effect because it is not a transmission. Furthermore, some traditional CVT’s are excellent. The CVT is made by Honda are sporty and smooth and reliable.
I like my new Camry with the eCVT. The first clue was that this guy doesn’t bother to put on some decent looking and fitting clothes: zero effort made. I believe in dressing nice for presentations to the world.
@BostonAutoBlog depends on the car you came from. If you came from a yaris ia the honda civic's cvt is very smooth, not sure about sporty... still way faster than the 106hp yaris ia lol. if you compare it against a 2007 mercedes twin turbo s65 amg the civic doesn't even seem to move (600 HP)
There are no good guys there are no bad guys we're just a bunch of guys. Wife has a 2022 Civic sport touring. We love that car and it's cone and belt CVT. Perfect for her. I have a 2025 Camry SE FWD ECVT. No belts no pulleys. A set of planetary gears. Driven by you guessed it an electric motor. Because it's gears, there is no rubber band effect. However! The initial pull from the electric motors fades and can mimic that slingshot effect. I have a 2003 f150 & 2019 Tacoma. All work as they should. I think most trusted brands modern transmissions used in the proper application should be a non issue.
Hey it’s my car. I just bought one. It’s good overall with some small complaints like to stupid panoramic sunroof that sounds like it’s going to break and the annoying heads up display that I leave turned off
@@leoarredondo8723 there pretty good compared to similar cars. There definitely more sporty and a little bit firmer than previous generations of the Camry but overall I like them and I love the cooled seats button
@@rembo183 ya I wanted the leather seats. I missed it. I wish they got rid of the heads-up display and swapped it out for parking sensors. But they make u move up to the premium plus package for that and im not paying an additional 5k for it
U should have the dealer look at the roof while it’s under warranty. My 2020’s roof crapped out right after the warranty…good luck, hope u aren’t as unluckily
Incrementally it might be quieter, but think some of that is due to the tires. Not many manufacturers put decent tires on new cars from my experience. I think a nice set of Michelin or Pirelli would make a difference. I believe the Accord uses sound cancellation where as the Camry uses sound deadening front and front side glass to reduce noise. Overall I am satisfied with the noise levels. As far as the regen systems Toyota’s is different from Honda’s in that in the Toyota the engine runs first with the battery backing it as needed. The Honda works exactly the opposite. The transition between the gas and battery in the Toyota is pretty much seamless. Plus the Toyota just feels so much faster than the Honda even though the numbers are almost identical.
It seems to be a great daily driver with great value. Now, are Toyota dealers still tacking on a "market adjustment fee" that drives up the cost over the sticker price? Great review.
Nope I just bought and the local dealers are all advertising $2000 off. I still drive by and look at the quantity and they seem to all average about 6-8 Camrys on all lots.
Currently cross shopping the 2025 Legacy Premium with option package 13 and the 2025 Camry LE with convenience and cold weather pack. Legacy is 2k below invoice and Camry is at invoice. Which one would you rather have? I know you just did a review on a 2025 Legacy premium so I just want to know what your thoughts are. Thanks!
@adriand817 the dealer might be willing to swap that expensive XLE wheels and tires to the cheaper LE wheels and tires. I'm sure you will have an arrangement with your dealer for that matter. Or swap it with interested LE owners.
Yea they aren’t a value anymore but people love technology and safety equipment, and there is Biden who caused the world to fall apart and inflation to hit us in the face, plus factory workers want $35/hour and amazing benefits.
Topgun grannymobile # 1 Old folks love this old school sedan 👍 Note: Pano roof sucks! People hate them! Heat generating greenhouse and major water leakage issues. 😡
There are ZERO water leakage issues lmao. There are no bulletins for that. I own one and sell them. No grannies are buying them. We are selling to people under 40- the older generations think $35k-$40k for a Camry is crazy.
@@2004cyrus There are HUGE issues with the pano roof. The issue is a dirty reservoir that collects and pools water from the back of the roof. By design any water that slips passed the sunroof seal will trickle down and collect in the channel. Best advice is to stick with the basic sunroof and you won’t have any issues. I hope this helps. The Camry target market is seniors. The 60+ group. These boomers have tons of disposable income and love old sedans like the Camry. Drive by any seniors residence or lawn bowling event and the parking lot is filled with Camrys. And for good reason it’s the best old school sedan money can buy. That’s why they are known as topgun Grannymobiles. For most the last car they will drive before their kids take the keys away.
@@billyrock8305 none of this is true. My family owns 2 Toyota stores. I read the manufacturer service bulletins which there are hundreds and thousands of. Water is not collecting in channels. Manufactures, even the crappy domestic brands are fine. I think you are an older man reverting back to the the 70’s when cars where crap. Toyota doesn’t target seniors, if they did these cars wouldn’t have sport trims and sporty wheel accessories and the cars would not have stiffed suspensions offered and paddle shifters. The cars would not have facial detection cameras. This is not 1992 and even then young families purchased Camrys. I think you are sitting around making lots of things up. That’s fine. Have fun. You like copy and pasting the same tired and inaccurate comments that are more fitting of the Toyota Avalon: it’s clear that you are confused. We don’t have any seniors lining up for newer Camrys. Seniors don’t want hybrids, but Toyota took away the V6 that old people love. Nothing you come up with lines up with what seniors like, my grandma rides with me in my Camry demo and she hates it, she can’t understand the tech and the seats are hard to her, she has no idea what Apple CarPlay is, much less wireless Apple car play and Apple Music, she doesn’t have a smartphone to charge. Seniors aren’t strong enough to close the trunk on a Camry. I could give you countless reasons why seniors are not the target audience. Camry would not sell enough cars if they were targeted to seniors. You’d be better off to say Camrys will be rental cars.
@@2004cyrus Everything stated is 💯 true. Hey, you’re second guessing your purchase dude. I get it. It’s still a great car. It’s just for older folks like yourself. And that’s okay. Seniors buy sedans, it’s what they are used to. Toyotas marketing team understands this extremely well. Boomers like you love to think they are younger and sporty. Precisely why terms like that are directed at the senior buyers. Enjoy the best grannymobile money can buy. It’s rated #1 for a reason. 👍
Not hard at all John; I have one of these. If one isn’t lazy you can carry micro fiber clothes in the trunk like I do and I wipe the screens and plastics gently and a gentle brush will clean any dust off of the cloth inserts and it can be cleaned with carpet cleaner if it really gets dirty, the foam in the can. I don’t mind maintaining the details of my cars, if you don’t like any maintenance then I guess any car you own will be dirty. If I was older and lazy I’d pay a nephew to clean the car occasionally for me. Good luck.
@@2004cyrusagree. All it takes some quick dusting with micrifiber. Also on the outside between washes, because I have PPF and ceramic, whick makes washes needed less often, andxU just dust it with the microfiber. BTW is going to be handwashed only
See I drove the civic a few times and there were loose parts and rattles and the exterior trim around the windows was all out of alignment. And the panel gaps aren’t good these days.
@@mrnarason Toyota also has much less road noise, it has a full time spare tire. It has a better available stereo and ventilated seats as well as panoramic roof if you want all of the luxuries. I looked at both as well, and the Camry XLE drives really softly, and I’m getting 50+ mpg’s.
The wife has a 2022 sport touring. It is an amazing compact. I can imagine how much better the hybrid must be. I had to get a size up. Extra lumbar is a must and I prefer a larger sedan. I just got a Camry. I did drive the Honda and gave the Hyundai a courtesy look. The Honda may be slightly better & more expensive too. Also the looks of the Accord are a bit off. IMO.
@@John1908-vo1iv I don't understand why you're lying. I picked up my car from the dealer yesterday, and the steering is quite heavy, not light at all. I regret buying it
@hb692 you are an idiot frankly. Stop calling people liars based on your experience only. I have a 2025 new Camry XLE. Best steering I ever had in a car, either truck, SUV or sedan. If you don't like it, get something else from that dealer.
@@hb692steering is very nice, had it for 1 month. Not sure why did you not return the car or chose another one or asked for dealer to look it? I think you are making this up.
Could you ask the TOYOTA management why they decided to only allow 0W8 engine oil? They don't think that will damage the engine?? Toyotas used to be good for at least 200,000 miles, but now, I seriously doubt it will go much over 60,000 miles, just past warranty. Is this TOYOTA's new plan? I know they did it with the new Tundra and Tacoma trucks, not being reliable any longer. I guess this is what the new TOYOTA upper management has decide. I will probably go with a new MAZDA instead. NO LONGER A TOYOTA FAN, since they gave up reliability. Hey, is that terrie-cloth used on the dashboard and doors? OMG! Toyota is really cheeping out! Toyota uses beach-towels for their interiors.
Ridiculous and ignorant comment. Are you an engineer? Obviously not. I am, 0W8 is just fine. Change oil every 5K or 6 months and this car will last way past 200k.
@truthserum5310 I agree. With regular maintenance and quick attention to any issues will take great care of any car. I am not worried about the engine at all, and I will have warranty if somethings happens. Meanwhile I enjoy my 65 mpg in the city and 50 mpg on highway.
@@truthserum5310 No, I am not an engineer, but running "H.O. Scale" model trains around your bedroom floor doesn't qualify you as an engineer buddy-boy. I am a now retired ASE Master-Mechanic. I have been an ASE Master-Mechanic for over 35 years little-man. Although I do agree with your statement of changing oil "and oil-filter" every 5,000 miles or 6 months. I don't agree with your statement of the "this car will last 200k". Besides that, 124,000 miles is hardly anything to brag about for engine longevity. One of my old parts trucks ran well for over 600,000 miles, not 600,000 kilometers. It didn't ever use 0W8 engine oil either! Now go tell your Mom that you've been using her computer. Go to bed!
XLE trim with all options is my preference. Looking to buy soon. I have 2009 Corolla with 303k miles now. Still runs great, but guess I am going to go for this. I buy only every 15+ years and always Toyota. At 64 yrs of age this will be my last car. Gonna splurge this time, I deserve it!
Get a pre owned lexus es300h and really splurge you deserve it!
You deserve it for sure!
Splurge
I love my new XLE
@@2004cyrus do you have it with the pano roof? How is road noise? I hear some reviewers complaining of that but I think that’s on the XSE with its bigger louder tires. Also any rattles? Thx!!
I have the 2025 Camry LE. The ride is a lot more tied down than my wife's 2013 Camry LE. It corners well with very little body lean. The transition from ICE to battery are seamless in my experience and there is more than enough pickup.
Nice look at the *all new Camry. I picked up a loaded SE. Even got 10% off. No BS games from the dealership. They were under new ownership. Maybe for a reason. IDK. I've had it just over three months and just over 2000 miles on it. So far I think its one of the better offerings overall. The Accord may have a slightly better cabin and smoother ride. But they want too much for it and really didn't act like they wanted to sell one.
@@In-obscurity-n7j that’s a steal. Did u have a trade? 10% is close to dealer invoice I think
I did have a substantial trade.
it is amazing car, all the reviews say it has a great drive and money saver next to corolla
Bought mine a month ago. Midnight black. I'm not used to a car saying sit up or look ahead when taking your eyes off the road for even a second or 2. Overall, it has been a real comfortable turnpike cruiser. I do love the Adaptive Cruise set up. I've generally kept it in ECO mode (mostly for economy) but I think I'll try the sport mode for our foliage trip tomorrow (10/6) & see how it does & how it affects the gas milage overall.
I don’t understand how people who review cars can be so wrong about simple mechanical components. The “CVT“ in any hybrid Camry is not a traditional CVT that auto reviewers have always loved to bitch about. It is not even a real transmission in the understood sense of the word. There is absolutely no possibility for a rubber band effect because it is not a transmission.
Furthermore, some traditional CVT’s are excellent. The CVT is made by Honda are sporty and smooth and reliable.
I like my new Camry with the eCVT. The first clue was that this guy doesn’t bother to put on some decent looking and fitting clothes: zero effort made. I believe in dressing nice for presentations to the world.
You lost all credibility by defending Honda’s CVT. It’s far from being smooth and sporty especially under heavy accelerations.
@BostonAutoBlog depends on the car you came from. If you came from a yaris ia the honda civic's cvt is very smooth, not sure about sporty... still way faster than the 106hp yaris ia lol. if you compare it against a 2007 mercedes twin turbo s65 amg the civic doesn't even seem to move (600 HP)
@@BostonAutoBlog I drove a 15 Civic with a CVT for 9 years. It was smooth like butter and handled great. You're peddling nonsense
There are no good guys there are no bad guys we're just a bunch of guys. Wife has a 2022 Civic sport touring. We love that car and it's cone and belt CVT. Perfect for her. I have a 2025 Camry SE FWD ECVT. No belts no pulleys. A set of planetary gears. Driven by you guessed it an electric motor. Because it's gears, there is no rubber band effect. However! The initial pull from the electric motors fades and can mimic that slingshot effect. I have a 2003 f150 & 2019 Tacoma. All work as they should. I think most trusted brands modern transmissions used in the proper application should be a non issue.
Great review & this could be my first daily car.
Those wheels are gorgeous
$1500 option
@@2004cyrus Fook that, base XLE wheels are just fine.
Hey it’s my car. I just bought one. It’s good overall with some small complaints like to stupid panoramic sunroof that sounds like it’s going to break and the annoying heads up display that I leave turned off
How are the seats by the way? I heard they get sweaty and are not that comfortable
That’s why I got the SE hybrid instead. Still luxury feel and all you need for less money - $35k not $41k
@@leoarredondo8723 there pretty good compared to similar cars. There definitely more sporty and a little bit firmer than previous generations of the Camry but overall I like them and I love the cooled seats button
@@rembo183 ya I wanted the leather seats. I missed it. I wish they got rid of the heads-up display and swapped it out for parking sensors. But they make u move up to the premium plus package for that and im not paying an additional 5k for it
U should have the dealer look at the roof while it’s under warranty. My 2020’s roof crapped out right after the warranty…good luck, hope u aren’t as unluckily
I love those wheels
Incrementally it might be quieter, but think some of that is due to the tires. Not many manufacturers put decent tires on new cars from my experience. I think a nice set of Michelin or Pirelli would make a difference. I believe the Accord uses sound cancellation where as the Camry uses sound deadening front and front side glass to reduce noise. Overall I am satisfied with the noise levels. As far as the regen systems Toyota’s is different from Honda’s in that in the Toyota the engine runs first with the battery backing it as needed. The Honda works exactly the opposite. The transition between the gas and battery in the Toyota is pretty much seamless. Plus the Toyota just feels so much faster than the Honda even though the numbers are almost identical.
Great review and I'm am really like this sedan.
Hate the partial cloth seats - did they save $20 per camry doing that?
It seems to be a great daily driver with great value. Now, are Toyota dealers still tacking on a "market adjustment fee" that drives up the cost over the sticker price? Great review.
No. In fact people are getting them for 5-10% below MSRP on the regular. At least for the Camry.
Nope I just bought and the local dealers are all advertising $2000 off. I still drive by and look at the quantity and they seem to all average about 6-8 Camrys on all lots.
@@gpeaesyes I got $2000 off
4:28 19 inch wheels
$1,500 extra , and usually comes with the premium + package $4,760
so over 44k
Will you review the 2025 Sienna?
Currently cross shopping the 2025 Legacy Premium with option package 13 and the 2025 Camry LE with convenience and cold weather pack. Legacy is 2k below invoice and Camry is at invoice. Which one would you rather have? I know you just did a review on a 2025 Legacy premium so I just want to know what your thoughts are. Thanks!
If spending that much, mind as well go SE
I love my new AWD Camry XLE
@@Freep-m2l i prefer the ride quality of the LE. Plus i live in a state with tons of potholes so the smaller wheels definitely help
Do you know if Toyota addressed the rattle noises coming from the rear panel that houses the sub wolfer?
No such thing as a sub wolfer. 🐺
I would use the 16" tires and wheels from the LE to this XLE for best road imperfection adaptability and improved overall NVH too.
Metoo, but would you have special order it that way? Or have to buy the wheels separately?
@adriand817 the dealer might be willing to swap that expensive XLE wheels and tires to the cheaper LE wheels and tires. I'm sure you will have an arrangement with your dealer for that matter. Or swap it with interested LE owners.
Yes i want the one like this one and w out the accessories wheels, want QP pkg, dont known when it come out
Seem to be the same as any other car. Screens n wheels n engine.
It costs twice as much as my brand new 2016...screw that!
Yea they aren’t a value anymore but people love technology and safety equipment, and there is Biden who caused the world to fall apart and inflation to hit us in the face, plus factory workers want $35/hour and amazing benefits.
@@2004cyrus
DJIA at record highs. Gas lowest since 2019. Economy booming.
MAGA clown 🤡 🤪
@@it1988a you heard of inflation? Even homes doubled in the last 4 years.
@John1908-vo1iv It's called Bidenflation. 25% price increase in less than four years.
Are you getting 65 mpg in the city? I bet not😊
Nice Video. Last chance to get a Subaru Legacy.
Thanks for the video, nice.
Not sure if it's the color but, looking less like a sedan and more CUVish.
The color is called Underground
Topgun grannymobile # 1
Old folks love this old school sedan 👍
Note: Pano roof sucks! People hate them! Heat generating greenhouse and major water leakage issues. 😡
There are ZERO water leakage issues lmao. There are no bulletins for that. I own one and sell them. No grannies are buying them. We are selling to people under 40- the older generations think $35k-$40k for a Camry is crazy.
@@2004cyrus
There are HUGE issues with the pano roof. The issue is a dirty reservoir that collects and pools water from the back of the roof. By design any water that slips passed the sunroof seal will trickle down and collect in the channel. Best advice is to stick with the basic sunroof and you won’t have any issues. I hope this helps.
The Camry target market is seniors. The 60+ group. These boomers have tons of disposable income and love old sedans like the Camry. Drive by any seniors residence or lawn bowling event and the parking lot is filled with Camrys. And for good reason it’s the best old school sedan money can buy. That’s why they are known as topgun Grannymobiles. For most the last car they will drive before their kids take the keys away.
@@billyrock8305 none of this is true. My family owns 2 Toyota stores. I read the manufacturer service bulletins which there are hundreds and thousands of. Water is not collecting in channels. Manufactures, even the crappy domestic brands are fine. I think you are an older man reverting back to the the 70’s when cars where crap. Toyota doesn’t target seniors, if they did these cars wouldn’t have sport trims and sporty wheel accessories and the cars would not have stiffed suspensions offered and paddle shifters. The cars would not have facial detection cameras. This is not 1992 and even then young families purchased Camrys. I think you are sitting around making lots of things up. That’s fine. Have fun. You like copy and pasting the same tired and inaccurate comments that are more fitting of the Toyota Avalon: it’s clear that you are confused. We don’t have any seniors lining up for newer Camrys. Seniors don’t want hybrids, but Toyota took away the V6 that old people love. Nothing you come up with lines up with what seniors like, my grandma rides with me in my Camry demo and she hates it, she can’t understand the tech and the seats are hard to her, she has no idea what Apple CarPlay is, much less wireless Apple car play and Apple Music, she doesn’t have a smartphone to charge. Seniors aren’t strong enough to close the trunk on a Camry. I could give you countless reasons why seniors are not the target audience. Camry would not sell enough cars if they were targeted to seniors. You’d be better off to say Camrys will be rental cars.
@@2004cyrus
Everything stated is 💯 true. Hey, you’re second guessing your purchase dude. I get it. It’s still a great car. It’s just for older folks like yourself. And that’s okay. Seniors buy sedans, it’s what they are used to. Toyotas marketing team understands this extremely well. Boomers like you love to think they are younger and sporty. Precisely why terms like that are directed at the senior buyers. Enjoy the best grannymobile money can buy. It’s rated #1 for a reason. 👍
Tired old broken record tropes…
Camry is now better than Accord.
Get over it.
I don't like the gloss black or light color microfiber fabric. Hard to keep clean if you drive with windows open a lot.
Not hard at all John; I have one of these. If one isn’t lazy you can carry micro fiber clothes in the trunk like I do and I wipe the screens and plastics gently and a gentle brush will clean any dust off of the cloth inserts and it can be cleaned with carpet cleaner if it really gets dirty, the foam in the can. I don’t mind maintaining the details of my cars, if you don’t like any maintenance then I guess any car you own will be dirty. If I was older and lazy I’d pay a nephew to clean the car occasionally for me. Good luck.
@@2004cyrusagree. All it takes some quick dusting with micrifiber. Also on the outside between washes, because I have PPF and ceramic, whick makes washes needed less often, andxU just dust it with the microfiber. BTW is going to be handwashed only
Hey that’s my car!
Gloss black could mean more fingerprints
on the touchscreen as well but oh well just wipe it clean every so often
Scratch and dust magnet
Ohhhh dear!
What is that white, grid-like material that is on the dashboard and front doors? Ive never seen that before
It’s Dynamica cloth, like a felt like feel. I own one. It’s just fabric instead of plastic or leather in that area.
@@2004cyrus thanks
It's so when you spill coffee on the dash, you've totaled the car.
@@kevinangley1308 a little bit of foam cleaner will fix it.
@kevinangley1308 no, there is a cheap spray foam cleaner for $2 that does the cleaning if you need it
Looks like a cross between the Sonata and Elantra now
Civic hybrid touring is a better car. Just drive them both last weekend. Hondas build quality and driving experience is way better than toyotas
See I drove the civic a few times and there were loose parts and rattles and the exterior trim around the windows was all out of alignment. And the panel gaps aren’t good these days.
I'm looking to test drive both the 2025 honda civic hybrid and 2025 camry le soon. What did you like and dislike about both?
@@mrnarason They drive completely different. Honda is fun and engaging. Toyota is for getting groceries
@@mrnarason Toyota also has much less road noise, it has a full time spare tire. It has a better available stereo and ventilated seats as well as panoramic roof if you want all of the luxuries. I looked at both as well, and the Camry XLE drives really softly, and I’m getting 50+ mpg’s.
The wife has a 2022 sport touring. It is an amazing compact. I can imagine how much better the hybrid must be. I had to get a size up. Extra lumbar is a must and I prefer a larger sedan. I just got a Camry. I did drive the Honda and gave the Hyundai a courtesy look. The Honda may be slightly better & more expensive too. Also the looks of the Accord are a bit off. IMO.
"Better yet, it is in gloss black," said absolutely no one ever, when referring to the center console or any touch point.
I wonder how the steering is. Is it lighter, or is it heavy like the old version of the Camry?
Very light, a pleasure to drive it.
@@John1908-vo1iv I don't understand why you're lying. I picked up my car from the dealer yesterday, and the steering is quite heavy, not light at all. I regret buying it
@hb692 you are an idiot frankly. Stop calling people liars based on your experience only. I have a 2025 new Camry XLE. Best steering I ever had in a car, either truck, SUV or sedan. If you don't like it, get something else from that dealer.
@@hb692 person is not lying take that car back to the dealer ASAP
@@hb692steering is very nice, had it for 1 month. Not sure why did you not return the car or chose another one or asked for dealer to look it? I think you are making this up.
I disagree on the microfiber material, pretty close to a deal breaker. It looks & feels cheap.
Also the part of the side passaanger looks so claustrophobic
Beatty Road
Williamson Spurs
43k is a no go.
Roselyn Trace
I buy it in second hand🙂
Brant Wall
Harris Stravenue
Bednar Forges
Sigmund Forks
Effertz Harbor
Carmelo Viaduct
The interior of this Camry looks plain ugly. I own a 2003 Camry V6 LE.
lol it’s far from ugly
Yours is ugly.
What's up with the Stupid barcode😂 on the entertainment system 😮.😡🤬😠
First
That shirt looks ridiculous Buy stuff for your hight
Learn how to spell. And what's with all the fashion cops anyway? You guys smell like used P-Diddy oil on your momma's front butt.
Could you ask the TOYOTA management why they decided to only allow 0W8 engine oil? They don't think that will damage the engine?? Toyotas used to be good for at least 200,000 miles, but now, I seriously doubt it will go much over 60,000 miles, just past warranty. Is this TOYOTA's new plan? I know they did it with the new Tundra and Tacoma trucks, not being reliable any longer. I guess this is what the new TOYOTA upper management has decide. I will probably go with a new MAZDA instead. NO LONGER A TOYOTA FAN, since they gave up reliability. Hey, is that terrie-cloth used on the dashboard and doors? OMG! Toyota is really cheeping out! Toyota uses beach-towels for their interiors.
Cloth is only on small thin sections. Seats have leather. I agree with the oil.
Ridiculous and ignorant comment. Are you an engineer? Obviously not. I am, 0W8 is just fine. Change oil every 5K or 6 months and this car will last way past 200k.
@truthserum5310 I agree. With regular maintenance and quick attention to any issues will take great care of any car. I am not worried about the engine at all, and I will have warranty if somethings happens. Meanwhile I enjoy my 65 mpg in the city and 50 mpg on highway.
@@truthserum5310 No, I am not an engineer, but running "H.O. Scale" model trains around your bedroom floor doesn't qualify you as an engineer buddy-boy. I am a now retired ASE Master-Mechanic. I have been an ASE Master-Mechanic for over 35 years little-man. Although I do agree with your statement of changing oil "and oil-filter" every 5,000 miles or 6 months. I don't agree with your statement of the "this car will last 200k". Besides that, 124,000 miles is hardly anything to brag about for engine longevity. One of my old parts trucks ran well for over 600,000 miles, not 600,000 kilometers. It didn't ever use 0W8 engine oil either! Now go tell your Mom that you've been using her computer. Go to bed!
Change the oil every 5k miles