
The Land Cruiser Returns Smaller, Smarter, and Hybrid-Powered
Toyota’s most legendary off-roader is back at a price point that actually makes sense for folks who want a real body-on-frame SUV with hybrid muscle. Two trim choices, one boxy silhouette, and enough engineering under the skin to climb a forest road in the morning and haul kids to soccer practice that afternoon. Indiana drivers finally have an option that handles both jobs.
- Land Cruiser 1958 starts at $57,200 MSRP, while the Land Cruiser trim comes in at $63,275.
- Both trims share the same 326-horsepower i-FORCE MAX hybrid powertrain with full-time four-wheel drive.
- Toyota built the 250 Series on the TNGA-F platform with 8.7 inches of ground clearance and 6,000 pounds of towing capacity.
Two Trims, One Hybrid Heart
Toyota kept the powertrain story simple. Both the 1958 and the Land Cruiser grade run the i-FORCE MAX turbocharged 2.4-liter four-cylinder hybrid, paired with an eight-speed automatic transmission. That combo cranks out 326 net horsepower and 465 lb-ft of torque, with full-time four-wheel drive standard. EPA estimates land at 22 mpg city, 25 mpg highway, and 23 mpg combined. For a body-on-frame SUV with a locking rear differential and a 6,000-pound tow rating, those numbers stack up well against anything else in the segment.
The 1958 vs. the Land Cruiser Grade
Out of the box, the 1958 sticks to the basics. Cloth seats, an 8-inch touchscreen, six speakers, manual seat adjustments, and round LED headlights borrowed from the original FJ25. It looks the part on the trail and saves around $6,000 over the higher trim. Step up to the Land Cruiser grade, and you get SofTex synthetic leather, heated and ventilated power front seats, a 12.3-inch touchscreen, a matching 12.3-inch digital gauge cluster, ten speakers, wireless charging, a power liftgate, and rectangular LED headlights inspired by the FJ62.
| Feature | Land Cruiser 1958 | Land Cruiser |
|---|---|---|
| Starting MSRP | $57,200 | $63,275 |
| Engine | 2.4L i-FORCE MAX Hybrid | 2.4L i-FORCE MAX Hybrid |
| Horsepower / Torque | 326 hp / 465 lb-ft | 326 hp / 465 lb-ft |
| EPA MPG (City/Hwy/Combined) | 22 / 25 / 23 | 22 / 25 / 23 |
| Towing Capacity | 6,000 lbs | 6,000 lbs |
| Headlights | Round LED | Rectangular LED |
| Seating Material | Fabric | SofTex Heated & Ventilated |
| Touchscreen | 8-inch | 12.3-inch |
| Audio System | 6 speakers | 10 speakers (14-speaker JBL available) |
| Power Liftgate | Not Available | Standard |
| Multi-Terrain Select & Monitor | Not Available | Standard |
| Stabilizer Disconnect Mechanism | Not Available | Available Option |
Built for Indiana Backroads and Indiana Traffic
You don’t have to live near Moab to appreciate what this SUV can do. A TNGA-F frame and full-time four-wheel-drive system handle gravel, mud, and snow without drama. Standard CRAWL Control acts like off-road cruise control at low speeds, automatically modulating throttle and brakes so you can focus on steering through tricky spots. Locking center and rear differentials come standard on both trims, which is rare at this price.
Multi-Terrain Select adds presets for mud, dirt, and sand on the higher trim. Around town, the hybrid system pulls smoothly from a stop, the steering feels lighter than you’d expect from a body-on-frame SUV, and the 8-speed automatic shifts cleanly through the gears. Ground clearance sits at 8.7 inches, with a 32-degree approach angle that swallows most off-camber pavement transitions without a scrape.

Tech That Earns Its Keep
Both trims include Toyota Safety Sense 3.0, which covers pre-collision warning, lane departure alert, full-speed radar cruise control, automatic high beams, and lane tracing assist. Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto come standard. A 2400-watt AC inverter in the cargo area can run a small fridge, power tools, or charging banks for a weekend at the campsite. Six USB-C ports keep phones topped off across both rows.
Higher-trim buyers can also tack on a Premium Package, which bundles a 14-speaker JBL audio system, head-up display, digital rearview mirror, illuminated entry, and a power moonroof. An available Stabilizer Disconnect Mechanism is the move for anyone who plans to take their SUV onto serious trails. Cargo space behind the second row measures 46.2 cubic feet, expanding to 82.1 cubic feet with the rear seats folded flat.
Picking the Trim That Fits Your Wallet
Buyers who want the hybrid powertrain and the off-road hardware without the extra cabin upgrades can stick with the 1958. It saves cash and still looks the part on any trailhead. Anyone who wants the bigger screens, SofTex seats, Multi-Terrain Select, and access to the Premium Package perks gets plenty for the extra $6,000 by stepping up. Either way, the 2026 Toyota Land Cruiser hits a sweet spot Toyota hasn’t offered in years, a serious off-roader that still works as a daily driver.
Test Drive a Land Cruiser at Toyota of Muncie
We’ve been getting questions about the new Land Cruiser since the first units rolled onto our lot. If you’re in Muncie, Anderson, New Castle, or anywhere around east central Indiana, swing by and see one in person. Our team can walk you through both trims, set up a test drive on a mix of highway and backroad pavement, and answer questions about hybrid maintenance, towing setups, or financing options. We have factory-trained Toyota technicians on staff to keep your Land Cruiser running for the long haul, and the team here knows these vehicles inside and out. Come find out why this SUV is generating so much buzz around here.


