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Toyota's classic 4WD wagon keeps on trucking

By Marcus Craft
Updated February 23 2026 - 8:38pm, first published February 6 2026 - 5:00pm

Likes

  • Very capable off-road
  • Retains old-school spirit
  • Heaps of proven potential as a touring vehicle

Dislikes

  • Multimedia screen is too small
  • Pricey for what you get
  • Squeezy second-row seating

Expert Rating: 7

  • Price and features: 7
  • Design: 7
  • Practicality: 7
  • Under the bonnet: 8
  • Driving: 7
  • Efficiency: 7
  • Safety: 6
  • Ownership: 7

Part of the undeniable charm of Toyota’s 70 Series LandCruisers is the fact they don’t change much, if at all. Sure, the much-loved V8 has been dropped from new 70s in recent years, and it now has LED headlights and a new multimedia system, but otherwise not a lot has been altered. And that’s good.

Because, in a world where everything is so slick, and everyone is so worried about offending someone, the 70 stands out as unapologetically being simply what it is: a boxy truck-like live-axle 4WD.

It's not pretty, it's not comfortable and it offers few, if any, real concessions to occupant safety. But it's very capable off-road and has a ton of potential as a handy touring vehicle.

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Toyota has a bad habit of doing the bare minimum with its new-release vehicles, yet the loyalists keep coming back for more and new Toyota fans keep turning up, as well.

It seems this kind of ‘do nothing’ approach works wonders in terms of maintaining the appeal of something like the HiLux or 70 Series line-up.

But does it really? We tested the 2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series in GXL trim to find out.

Read on.

Price and features – Does it represent good value for the price? What features does it come with? 7 / 10

The 2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series in GXL trim, with a 2.8-litre, four-cylinder, turbo-diesel engine, five-speed manual gearbox and diff locks as standard costs $77,800 (RRP).

As tested, this five-seat vehicle costs $79,293.10 (RRP) because it has an EBC brake kit (module) ($242.50, RRP, estimated fitted), wiring kit, brake controller (harness, $394.95 RRP, estimated fitted) and a towbar ($855.65 RRP, estimated fitted)

Standard features include a 6.7-inch multimedia touchscreen system (with Bluetooth as well as wired Apple CarPlay and Android Auto), AEB, cruise control (not adaptive), a reversing camera, lane departure alert, speed sign recognition, hill-start assist, power-operated wing mirrors and 16-inch alloy wheels.

2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series 2.8L manual
2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series 2.8L manual

Exterior paint choices include 'French Vanilla', 'Graphite', 'Merlot Red', 'Silver Pearl', 'Eclipse Black', 'Midnight Blue', and 'Sandy Taupe', which is on our test vehicle.

For reference, the 76’s closest rival, the Ineos Grenadier Trailmaster (with a 3.0-litre six-cylinder turbo-diesel engine), offers much more in terms of standard features onboard but has a starting price around the $120,000 mark, before on-road costs. A Ford Everest Tremor 4WD 3.0 V6 diesel auto costs around $76,590, BOC, and easily tops the 76 in terms of features and refinement and a Nissan Patrol Warrior (with a 5.6-litre petrol V8 engine) has a price-tag of $110,660, BOC, and also easily tops the 76 for features, refinement and all-round driveability.

Design – Is there anything interesting about its design? 7 / 10

The 76 Series is boxy and blocky at 4910mm long (with a 2730mm wheelbase), 1870mm wide and 1940mm high. It has a listed kerb weight of 2300kg.

This is a straight-up-and-down 4WD wagon whose hard edges have been somewhat softened through the most recent significant upgrade.

The cabin retains its spacious but spartan look and feel. Function wins out over form here.

The five seats sport a hard-wearing grey cloth trim which fits in nicely with the 76 Series’ spirit of utility.

Practicality – How practical is its space and tech inside? 7 / 10

The 76 cabin is practicality maximus, albeit with a basic interior that feels like it was delivered here from the 1970s by a disco-ball-equipped time machine.

It is unashamedly purpose-built for work and in GXL guise this five-seat wagon is well-suited to job-site duties and/or touring life.

The cabin layout has a nice familiarity about it and it’s an easy space in which to quickly become comfortable.

All controls are easy to locate and operate – dials or buttons as per most Toyota cabins – and the 76 Series has a new multimedia screen. But it’s nothing to get excited about. It’s too small, too dark and it’s difficult to operate. So, that’s a fail.

The cabin is roomy, however, even if storage spaces are few and far between and some of them are small or awkwardly shaped or both.

There are two outboard cupholders, a narrow centre console bin, a cupholder and narrow smartphone spot to the left of the gear stick and door pockets. There is also a shallow shelf for something below the front passenger's outboard air vent.

It's a spartan interior, but as plain as it all is, it fits in with the 70 Series ethos of being functional.

Cloth seat and door trim retain that rough-and-ready feel the model is renowned for and there are expanses of hard plastic surfaces everywhere to endure whatever work and life can throw at them.

The carpet floor in our test vehicle was topped with rubber mats.

Storage spaces up front include a glove box, centre console with lid, dual cupholders between the driver and front passenger, pop-out outboard cupholders and door pockets big enough for a water bottle.

Rear-seat passengers each get a seatback map pocket… and that’s about it.

Front seats are as comfortable as you’d expect in a 76 Series, offering adequate rather than exceptional levels of support and comfort, and the rear seats are squeezy for adults, so better left to children.

Payload is listed as 1210kg and the expansive squared-off rear cargo area could probably cop most of that weighty burden. That space can be expanded to fit even more work or camping equipment if you tumble-fold the 60/40 split second-row forward.

Access to the rear is via the 60/40-split barn-type tailgate.

As a reference, the Ineos Grenadier Trialmaster offers very comfortable Recaro seats at the front, as well as slightly more space and comfort in its second row and more amenities throughout its cabin (as well as quirky touches, such as aircraft-style switchgear and the like).

Under the bonnet – What are the key stats for its engine and transmission? 8 / 10

This 76 Series GXL has a 2.8-litre, four-cylinder, turbo-diesel engine producing 150kW from 3200–3400rpm and 450Nm from 2400–3000rpm and a five-speed manual gearbox.

It has part-time four-wheel drive and auto-locking hubs, and this GXL variant has locking front and rear diffs as standard.

Driving – What's it like to drive? 7 / 10

It’s a lot of fun, but be prepared to drop any expectations of comfort and safety and simply enjoy the all-in experience of driving a vehicle that steers around like an old school mini-bus and exhibits the ride and handling characteristics of a sugar-cane harvester.

From the massive throw of the big gear stick and old-armchair-like cloth seats to the low-key rumble of the turbo-diesel engine and commanding driving position, spending any drive time in the LC76 is a shedload of fun.

This is not an insubstantial wagon and it’s unwieldy on suburban back streets and parked-in city lanes, especially if you're used to driving zippy urban-friendly SUVs.

When you drive it, the 76 feels tall and narrow, but it still somehow feels well planted on the road, unless you're driving over-energetically, and you soon get used to its lumbering attitude.

Visibility is impressive all-around and that turbo-diesel offers ample responsiveness when you need it to, Unfortunately, it doesn’t have the deep rumble of the ol’ V8 but it’s pleasing, nonetheless.

Steering is truck-vague, there is body-roll when you pitch it into sharper corners and the brake-pedal action is spongy, rather than direct.

The five-speed manual gearbox is well matched to this four-cylinder engine and with the taller fifth gear sorted out a few years back the LC76 overtakes with ease and is an easy drive on open roads. Though Toyota has fine-tuned the gearbox to better suit this engine, I wouldn't mind another gear in this thing.

The 76 is noisy because it's a tall, boxy wagon that monsters its way through the air as opposed to slipping smoothly through it like a 4WD ninja. And there's wind-rush around this 76's big wing mirrors and its chunky snorkel (mounted on the driver-side A-pillar in our test vehicle).

It always feels like a window's open or a door's not shut properly in the 76 because this wagon is as draughty as an old house. But those quirks are part of this wagon’s charm and I don’t mind them, at all.

Anyway, to the off-road bit.

2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series 2.8L manual
2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series 2.8L manual

This is a purpose-built 4WD wagon and it remains as brutally effective off-road as it's ever been.

As standard, the 76 has part-time four-wheel drive and auto-locking hubs. And in GXL guise it has locking front and rear diffs as standard.

Off-road angles are 33 degrees approach and 23 degrees departure, as well as 290mm of listed ground clearance and a 700mm wading depth, which all check out.

Its suspension set-up – coil springs at the front, leaf springs at the rear – yields a comfortable ride over poorly maintained back roads and corrugated gravel tracks.

Low-range gearing is great and there's plenty of torque available at low revs and the 76’s 4WD set-up offers impressive flexibility when you're in low-range 4WD.

The 76 also has front and rear diff locks (dial-operated from the driver seat and standard on the GXL), as well as driver-assist tech, such as hill-start assist, to call upon.

The 76 has live axles front and rear and wheel travel is decent, so you're generally able to stretch a tyre to the dirt for more traction.

It’s worth noting the 76's wheel tracks are still set at different widths from front to rear – 1555mm wide at the front (because of the line-up's now discontinued V8 engine and large radiator) and 1460mm wide at the rear – but that’s of little consequence in general daily driving or even 4WDing.

This 4WD rides on bush-friendly 16-inch alloys, shod with light-truck construction Dunlop Grandtrek AT1 (265/70R16 115R). Good size rubber and there’s a full-size spare as back-up.

Unbraked towing capacity is listed as 750kg while braked trailer capacity is 3500kg. The 76 Series has a gross vehicle mass (GVM) of 3510kg and a gross combined mass (GCM) of 7010kg.

For reference, the Ineos Grenadier offers a GVM of 3550kg and a GCM of 7000kg, so it’s a close weight race with the 76.

Efficiency – What is its fuel consumption? What is its driving range? 7 / 10

Official combined cycle (urban/extra-urban) fuel consumption is listed as 9.6L/100km.

Fuel consumption on my test was 11.4L/100km and that was recorded after a variety of driving (suburbs, highway, back roads and bush tracks) with a full day of 4WDing thrown into the mix.

The 76 Series uses diesel and has a 130-litre fuel tank. Driving range is 1354km (based on the official fuel-use figure) and 1140km (based on my fuel-use figure on test).

2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series 2.8L manual
2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series 2.8L manual

Safety – What safety equipment is fitted? What is its safety rating? 6 / 10

In terms of ANCAP safety ratings, the 2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series 2.8L is unrated.

Standard safety gear onboard includes two airbags (one each for the driver and front-seat passenger), as well as driver-assist tech such as autonomous emergency braking (AEB, including pedestrian detection and daytime cyclist protection), cruise control (it’s not adaptive though), traffic sign recognition, lane-departure warning (overly sensitive and beeping annoying but minus intervention), automatic high-beam headlights (now LED), hill descent control and a reversing camera.

But it’s missing blind-spot alert, rear cross-traffic alert and driver attention warning.

In contrast, even though the Grenadier is not overloaded with safety gear and driver-assist tech it does have six airbags, reversing camera, rear parking sensors, a tyre pressure monitoring system and front parking sensors. But, again, the Grenadier costs more than the 76.

Ownership – What warranty is offered? What are its service intervals? What are its running costs? 7 / 10

The 2026 76 Series is covered by a five-year/unlimited km warranty.

Service intervals are scheduled for every six months/10,000km (whichever occurs soonest) and it has to be said that those intervals are short compared to other vehicles.

Cost per service for the LC70 is $545 for five years or 100,000km (up to the first 10 services) for a total cost of $5450.

For reference, Ineos offers a five-year/unlimited km warranty for the Grenadier, with servicing scheduled at 12-month/15,000km intervals at a total approximate cost of $4626.

Verdict

It looks like a house brick, it drives like a busted truck, it has less safety gear than a go-kart and fewer standard features than a shopping cart, yet there’s still so much to like about the 2026 Toyota LandCruiser 76 Series.

It’s fun to drive (if you know what to expect), it’s highly functional (for the job-site or camp-site) and one of the best 4WDs straight out of the showroom. And in GXL guise it makes a lot of sense as a work wagon or a touring vehicle.

Sure, Toyota pushes the boundaries of brand loyalty – consistently doing the bare minimum to keep buyers coming back for more – but in the case of the 76, I don’t mind that because this is one of the old-school 4WDs that should always be available.

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