Tag Archives: Land Cruiser

Toyota Restomods the Land Cruiser Prado

The Land Cruiser badge still means something inside Toyota, even now that the U.S. has moved on to the new 250 Series. But Toyota isn’t ready to let the old iron fade quietly into the classifieds. Instead, it’s giving the previous-generation 150 Series—sold stateside for years as the Lexus GX—a factory-backed glow-up that feels part restoration, part restomod, and part philosophical exercise.

Dubbed Newscape, the update targets the long-running Land Cruiser Prado built between 2009 and 2023. Though production has ended, Toyota is offering a comprehensive facelift that touches both the exterior and interior, effectively giving the old SUV a second act. In some configurations, it even looks tougher than it ever did when new.

The idea debuted as a concept at the 2025 Japan Mobility Show, but enthusiasm apparently convinced Toyota to put it into production. The Prado Newscape is set to make a return appearance at the 2026 Tokyo Auto Salon—this time with a price tag and an order sheet.

The project was developed by Toyota’s Conic Pro division in collaboration with an unlikely group of partners: The North Face, biotech firm Spiber, and Toyota’s own Corde by brand, which specializes in customizing used vehicles. The broader goal is sustainability—extending the life of older vehicles through factory-approved updates rather than pushing customers straight into new ones.

Buyers get two visual flavors. The Graphite Gray version leans into the overlanding aesthetic, with matte-black bumpers, bolt-on fender extensions, and Mango Orange accents highlighting the fog lights and rear tow hook. The Meld Grey alternative dials things back with body-colored bumpers, black trim, and Saffron Yellow detailing. Both versions come standard with a roof rack, rear ladder, mud flaps, and a fuel door stamped with The North Face logo—because collaborations demand visibility.

Seventeen-inch matte-black alloys and 265/65R17 all-terrain tires are standard across the board, giving the Prado a properly rugged stance. It’s not a mechanical overhaul, but it doesn’t pretend to be one.

Inside, the updates are subtler but more interesting. The seats are reupholstered in Brewed Protein fiber, an eco-focused material developed by Spiber, and wear The North Face branding. New Toyota floor mats round out the cabin changes, reinforcing the idea that this is a refresh, not a reinvention.

The Newscape kit goes on sale in Japan on March 7, 2026, but compatibility is limited. It’s only offered for TX-grade Prado 150 models built between September 2017 and April 2024, and only if they left the factory with black fabric seats. Gasoline and diesel engines are both supported.

Pricing starts at ¥3.96 million (about $25,300) for Graphite Gray and ¥3.85 million ($24,600) for Meld Grey, plus another ¥150,000 ($960) in miscellaneous costs. Add the roughly ¥4 million ($25,600) required to buy a used Prado in the first place, and you’re staring at a total near ¥8 million ($51,200).

That’s a tough sell when a brand-new Land Cruiser 250 starts at ¥5.2 million ($33,300) in Japan—and even the larger, more advanced Land Cruiser 300 undercuts the Newscape build on price.

Which raises an awkward question. If sustainability is the mission, does it make sense to spend more money refurbishing an older SUV than buying a new one outright? Toyota seems to think the answer is yes—at least for buyers who value preservation over progress, or who simply want to keep a familiar, well-proven Land Cruiser alive a little longer.

In that light, the Prado Newscape isn’t about logic. It’s about loyalty—and Toyota is betting that still counts for something.

Source: Toyota Conic Pro

Toyota’s Land Cruiser Family Tree Is Getting New Branches — and They Don’t All Follow the Old Rules

Toyota isn’t exactly shy about expanding the Land Cruiser lineup these days. First came the return of the classic 250-series to America. Then, overseas markets got the bite-sized, retro-cute Land Cruiser FJ—essentially a rugged backpack with wheels. Now, new reports out of Japan suggest that Toyota is preparing to stretch the Land Cruiser name even further, and in a direction few would have expected.

According to Best Car, unnamed insiders say Toyota is developing an all-new SUV and pickup duo that could mark a genuine turning point for the iconic off-roader. And not because they’re bigger, tougher, or even more capable off pavement. Quite the opposite.

A Softer Side of Land Cruiser

Since 1951, every Land Cruiser—from the spartan 40-series to today’s luxe 300-series—has been built on a ladder-frame chassis. It’s the kind of hardware that wins Dakar rallies, hauls aid workers into war zones, and generally refuses to die.

But the upcoming duo? Those same insiders describe them as “the beginning of a new chapter,” and that chapter appears to be unibody.

Yes, unibody Land Cruisers.

Built more like a RAV4 or Highlander than the overbuilt LC300, these new models would prioritize on-road refinement, fuel efficiency, and daily comfort over the bruiser durability the nameplate is famous for. Purists may reach for their pitchforks now.

Two Concepts Provide the Roadmap

If this sounds familiar, that’s because Toyota already teased this direction at the 2023 Japan Mobility Show. Two concepts stood out:

  • EPU Pickup Concept — a 199.6-inch unibody, all-electric pickup with an extendable bed
  • Land Cruiser Se Concept — a sleek, three-row SUV aimed squarely at modern family duty

According to Best Car, the production pickup will borrow heavily from the EPU’s styling, setting itself apart from the body-on-frame Hilux, Tacoma, Tundra, and the indefatigable 70 Series.

Imagine a Land Cruiser with a ride smoother than a Camry’s but a brand badge that still whispers “expedition-ready.”

Electric Roots, Hybrid Future

Both concepts were fully electric, riding on Toyota’s e-TNGA underpinnings with dual-motor AWD and big battery packs. But Toyota’s current product philosophy—“multi-pathway,” or, more bluntly, everything all at once—means the production versions may not stick to EV-only.

A modified unibody platform could accommodate:

  • Full EV powertrains
  • Hybrid systems
  • Possibly even range-extended variants, depending on market needs

Think of it not as Toyota hedging its bets, but Toyota being Toyota.

ETA: 2026 for the SUV, 2027 for the Pickup

If the reporting holds, the Land Cruiser Se–based SUV could arrive as early as 2026, perfectly timed for the 75th anniversary of the nameplate.

The pickup may follow roughly a year later, in 2027, which puts Toyota squarely in the middle of the upcoming midsize-EV–pickup showdown.

Will These New Land Cruisers Come to the U.S.?

Signs point to yes.

Current reporting suggests the electric Land Cruiser variant is slated for U.S. production, which helps Toyota dodge hefty tariffs while aligning with its recently announced $10 billion investment in North American manufacturing.

Toyota executives have also openly discussed the need for a more affordable pickup in the U.S. lineup. Slotting below Tacoma, a unibody Land Cruiser pickup could square off against:

  • Ford’s upcoming electric Ranger-sized truck
  • A next-gen Maverick successor
  • Chevy’s eventual compact EV pickup entry

In other words, Toyota sees an opportunity—and the Land Cruiser name has enough cachet to make the move without alienating buyers.

A Broader — and Braver — Future for Land Cruiser

The mere idea of a unibody Land Cruiser may shock the diehards, but Toyota seems to be reading the room: not every buyer needs to ford rivers or survive the Sahara. Many just want something tough-looking, capable enough, and comfortable every day.

If the reports prove accurate, Toyota won’t be “softening” the Land Cruiser legacy so much as expanding it.

The body-on-frame legends will continue.
The new unibody models will bring fresh buyers into the fold.
And the Land Cruiser name—once synonymous with unbreakable utility—may soon represent something broader.

We’ll be watching closely as this story develops, but one thing’s clear:
The next chapter of Land Cruiser is going to look very different.

Source: Best Car

Toyota FJ: The Baby Land Cruiser That’s Big on Attitude

It’s back. After years of whispers, teasers, and blurry spy shots taken through the foliage of rural Japan, Toyota has finally done it — the FJ name is reborn. Only this time, it’s not the chunky retro bruiser you remember. No, this is the baby Land Cruiser — think Defender 90-sized, but with that unmistakable Toyota sense of indestructibility baked into its DNA.

Meet the New Kid in the Cruiser Clan

The new Toyota FJ — short for Freedom and Joy, which sounds like a wellness retreat but actually describes a small 4×4 that could probably drive through one — is Toyota’s latest addition to its sprawling Land Cruiser family. Sitting below the 250 Series (the one currently sold in the UK), the FJ shrinks the formula but keeps the rugged spirit intact.

At 4,575mm long, 1,855mm wide, and 1,960mm tall, it’s within a whisker of the Land Rover Defender 90 — which is exactly the point. Toyota wants to lure a “new generation” of buyers into the Land Cruiser fold: people who want mountain-goat ability and retro charm, but in a package that fits into multi-storey car parks and modern lifestyles.

Mini Cruiser, Major Capability

Underneath, it shares its bones with the bigger 250, but with 270mm lopped out of the wheelbase. That makes it tiny by Land Cruiser standards — yet Toyota swears it’s just as capable off-road. Ground clearance and approach angles are nearly identical to the 250’s 215mm and 31 degrees, and a 5.5-metre turning circle should make light work of tight trails (or supermarket car parks).

Power comes from a humble 2.7-litre naturally aspirated four-pot pushing out 161bhp and 181lb ft — numbers that won’t make your pulse race but will, crucially, still run after the apocalypse. Drive goes to all four corners via a six-speed auto, and you can bet it’ll clamber over almost anything you point it at.

Chief branding officer Simon Humphries calls it “a minimal footprint with a new dimension in driving performance and manoeuvrability.” Translation: it’s small, scrappy, and built to go anywhere.

Designed to Get Dirty (and Look Good Doing It)

Visually, the FJ looks like someone threw a Land Cruiser and a Tonka truck into a blender — flared arches, squared-off bumpers, and a stance that screams ready for action. The modular bumpers can be removed and swapped out for custom ones, or just replaced when they inevitably meet a rock. There’s a smorgasbord of customisation options too: round headlights for retro lovers, cargo panels, even a snorkel if you plan to use it as Noah’s Ark.

Inside, it’s a refreshingly honest cabin. There’s a 12.5-inch touchscreen flanked by actual buttons — remember those? — and a tough, utilitarian layout that looks ready for muddy boots and rough roads.

Global Reach, Local Absence

The FJ will be built in Thailand and launched first in Japan mid-next year, before heading to Africa, Asia, South America, and the Middle East — the markets where Toyota’s off-roaders are practically family members.

Bad news for us in the UK: according to chief engineer Masaya Uchiyama, there are “no plans for America or Europe”. But given how quickly Toyota’s product plans evolve — and how much we love a compact off-roader with proper heritage — don’t count it out just yet.

If it does make the trip here, it’ll likely need a hybrid powertrain to keep the emissions people happy. Toyota already sells the 250 with a mild-hybrid diesel, so a small petrol-hybrid FJ wouldn’t be much of a stretch.

The Future of the Family

Toyota insists the Land Cruiser “will continue to evolve to meet societal demands while supporting the lives of customers around the world.” That’s corporate-speak for there’s more coming, and we’re here for it.

Because if this little FJ delivers on its promise — go-anywhere ability, indestructible engineering, and a whiff of old-school charm — it could be the most fun Land Cruiser in years.

Small in size, big in spirit, and named after Freedom and Joy. Sounds like the perfect antidote to a world obsessed with crossover clones.

Source: Toyota