Toyota Camry
2 comparisons available
About Toyota Camry
The Toyota Camry is a mid-size sedan produced by Toyota, consistently the best-selling car in the United States for over 20 years. The Camry is available as a traditional gasoline-powered vehicle (2.5L 4-cylinder, 203 hp) and as a hybrid (Camry Hybrid, 220 hp combined). For the 2025 model year, Toyota made the Camry hybrid-only in the US — a landmark transition reflecting the shift toward electrification. The Camry is manufactured in Georgetown, Kentucky (the US Camry plant since 1988). Pricing starts at approximately $28,400 for the LE trim and goes to $38,000+ for the XSE V6 Sport. Key trims include L, LE, SE, TRD, XLE, and XSE. The Camry's key strengths are legendary reliability, strong resale value, comfortable ride, and low total cost of ownership. Toyota sold approximately 313,000 Camrys in the US in 2023, maintaining its #1 car position despite sedan segment decline.
Frequently Asked Questions
Toyota Camry vs Honda Accord: which is better?
Both are excellent choices. Camry wins on reliability reputation, lower starting price (historically), and a more conservative drive feel preferred by many buyers. Accord wins on interior roominess, more engaging driving dynamics, and a more modern design. The Accord Hybrid is slightly more efficient; the Camry Hybrid is now standard on US models from 2025. For pure reliability and value retention, most surveys favor Camry slightly.
Is the Toyota Camry still worth buying?
Yes — the Camry remains one of the best value propositions in the mid-size sedan segment. The transition to hybrid-only in 2025 improves fuel economy to approximately 46-51 mpg combined while keeping the proven Camry platform. For buyers who want a reliable, efficient, hassle-free sedan with excellent resale value, the Camry remains the benchmark.