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Toyota Avalon

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The Toyota Avalon is a fullsize car produced by Toyota in the United States and Australia, originally based on the platform of the then-current Toyota Camry. It is produced as a front wheel drive four-door sedan. For its first two generations, it competed with the Chrysler Concorde, Buick LeSabre, Mercury Grand Marquis, Nissan Maxima, & Mazda Millenia.

The Avalon filled the gap left since the cancellation of the Toyota Cressida in the American market in 1992. The new Avalon was a fullsize car, becoming Toyota's first fullsize car, whereas the Cressida was a midsize, was rear wheel drive, and had the 7M-GE I6 engine. The Avalon, however, was front wheel drive and had Toyota's 1MZ-FE V6 engine.

The first Toyota Avalon rolled off the assembly line in Georgetown, Kentucky on February 21, 1994 as a 1995 model. A second-generation model was released in the United States and Japan in 1999.

See Wikicars' comprehensive Toyota Avalon Review.

Recent Changes

Styles and Major Options

There are currently four trims for the Toyota Avalon:


Pricing

Today's actual prices for the MAKE MODEL can be found at CarsDirect.

Avalon Trims

XL

Touring

XLS

Limited

MSRP

$26,775

$29,025

$31,225

$33,965

Invoice

$23,921

$25,932

$27,477

$29,888

Gas Mileage

As seen on the FuelEconomy.gov website, the City/Highway MPG averages are as follows:

Automatic

Trim

Trim1

Trim2

Trim3

Trim4

MPG

c/h

c/h

c/h

c/h

Reliability

Safety

Photos

Colors

Main Competitors

Hybrid Models

Unique Attributes

Resale Values

Criticisms

Generations

Third Generation (2005–present)

The 2005 Avalon is a complete redesign from the previous generations. It is Toyota's largest, most luxurious, and most expensive sedan model sold under its own nameplate. The Avalon features a 3.5L 280-hp V6 engine and a myriad of advanced technological features (2GR-FE). The engine is as in previous generation shared with Lexus ES350. The Avalon is now about the same size as its large-sedan competitors (e.g. the Buick Lucerne and Ford Crown Victoria), but continues to compete with the Nissan Maxima. The new Avalon, introduced to the public at the 2005 North American International Auto Show, offers more distinctive styling than previous generations, which were known for their conservative styling. This redesign also dropped the availabilty of a front bench seat. The current Avalon is available in XL, Touring, XLS, and Limited trim levels.

Due to new SAE specifications power has dropped to 268-hp and torque has dropped to 248 ft·lbs. for the 2006 model year. Stability control is also expanded to the XL and Touring models, and a keyless remote start is standard for Limited models.

Previous Generations

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Seventh generation (YYYY–YYYY)

Sixth generation (YYYY–YYYY)

Fifth generation (YYYY–YYYY)

Fourth generation (YYYY–YYYY)

Third generation (YYYY–YYYY)

Second generation (YYYY–YYYY)

First Generation/Origins

Worldwide

Design quirks and oddities

Awards

See also

External Links