The Toyota FJ Cruiser Liveth! For a Little Longer, In Japan, In Beige

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

Has there ever been a better time for a Toyota Tacoma-based, offroad-oriented, style-conscious SUV? It’s 2017. Americans are fully invested in the idea of riding high. Jeep is selling 17,000 Wranglers per month. At the other end of the spectrum, Toyota just sold a record number of RAV4s: more than 43,000 in August. In between, Subaru is selling more than 38,000 crossovers monthly.

As total industry-wide auto sales fell 3 percent through the first two-thirds of 2017, SUV/crossover volume is up 6 percent.

Toyota itself is selling more than 16,000 Tacomas per month, the pickup on which a potential second-gen FJ Cruiser would likely be based. That fact alone is likely a factor that limits an FJ Cruiser rebirth. Indeed, Toyota hasn’t sold the FJ Cruiser in the United States since the 2014 model year, having reached its end just as the U.S. SUV/crossover trend really broke through. Americans now buy 14-percent more utility vehicles than cars.

But the Toyota FJ Cruiser lives on, at least for a little while longer, if only in the Japanese domestic market. This is — say it in a movie trailer voiceover pitch — the Toyota FJ Cruiser Final Edition.

All Final Edition FJs wear 20-inch wheels. All are equipped with the 4.0-liter V6. All V6s transmit their power through a five-speed automatic, not the six-speed manual that was once optional. More tellingly, all Final Edition FJ Cruisers are painted in a special shade of beige. And they’re all clad inside with beige upholstery. In other words, the least beige vehicle Toyota sold in America in the last 10 years exists this world — on the other side of the world — in spectacularly beige fashion.

Toyota reported 222,246 FJ Cruisers in the United States between 2006 and early 2018. Most of those were sold early on in the lengthy run. After selling over 140,000 between 2006 and 2008, Toyota averaged fewer than 14,000 annual U.S. sales between 2009 and 2014.

There’s persistent talk of an FJ Cruiser replacement, but with Toyota achieving such tremendous sales success with the Tacoma, 4Runner, RAV4, and Highlander, it’s certainly not a necessary void to fill.

Moreover, the latest concept to project historic FJ cues, the FT-4X from the New York International Auto Show earlier this year, was far less rugged than the offroad-ready FJ Cruiser.

[Images: Toyota]

Timothy Cain is a contributing analyst at The Truth About Cars and Autofocus.ca and the founder and former editor of GoodCarBadCar.net. Follow on Twitter @timcaincars and Instagram.

Timothy Cain
Timothy Cain

More by Timothy Cain

Comments
Join the conversation
3 of 8 comments
  • Gearhead77 Gearhead77 on Sep 14, 2017

    Ugh, what is it with "Band Aid Beige" as a paint color? Hideous, right up there with that "Creamy Canary Yellow" offered in the Malaise Era.

    • JohnTaurus JohnTaurus on Sep 14, 2017

      Dad called it "Baby §hit Yellow". Evidently, my parents briefly had a 197? Buick in this color.

  • Gtem Gtem on Sep 15, 2017

    I like what the FJ Cruiser (very capable offroad-oriented SUV based on rock solid Prado bones), but I hated the body for how form was emphasized over function. The rear seat is claustrophobic, rear visibility is horrendous, the interior is not particularly commodious considering the exterior dimensions, the high dash and gunslit crack-prone windshield is silly, the interior way too "tonka truck" for me. In other words, nothing like the utilitarian and functional FJ40 they were trying to mimic. My much "plainer" looking 3g 4Runner happens to have the same wheelbase and ground clearance, same approach angle with admittedly a worse departure angle. But it has a much more functional interior with real rear doors, excellent sightlines, and significantly better cargo capacity (credit that rear overhang). Toyota just needs to throw a stick shift at the current 4Runner and maybe release a more stripped out version to sell for slightly less. Or maybe a cool removable rear roof section to hearken back to gen 1 4Runner days?

  • JK Savoy Blue is a thing, but Sestriere White? Sestriere is a ski town near Turin, so I guess it meant to conjure up thoughts of snow. Pretty car. I hope Pininfarina has success. The industry in and around Turin has taken a big hit and is a shadow of its former self.
  • Ravenuer My 2023 CRV EX, 6 mo old, 4800 miles: $0.
  • TheEndlessEnigma My '16 FiST: Oil changes, tires, valve cover gasket (at 112k miles), coolant flush, brakes.....and that's itMy '19 Grand Caravan: Oil changes, coolant flush
  • John Clyne I own a 1997 GMC Suburban that I bought second hand. It was never smoked in but had lost the new car smell when I got it four years after it was sold new. I own a 2005 Chevrolet Avalanche & that still has the new car smell. I like the smell. I could never afford a new car until the Avalanche. It might be my last new car? Why do they build cars with fire retardant materials in them. Smoking rates are falling & if someone continues to smoke in this day & age is a fool especially with all the information out there.
  • Theflyersfan Non-performance models, probably the Civic based on the fact the interior feels and looks better in the Honda. Both of them are going to drive like adequate appliances with small engines and CVTs and get decent mileage, so this is based on where my butt will rest and things my hands and fingers will touch.Toyota doesn't have an answer to the Civic Si so the Honda wins by default.CTR vs GR Corolla. One dealer by me is still tacking on $10,000 markups for the CTR and good luck with the GR Corolla and the "allocation" system. There's that one dealer in Missouri that I pasted their ad a while back wanting $125,000 for a mid-level GR. Nope. But cars.com is still showing markups. Both of these cars will have little depreciation for a while, so the markups equal instant loss. It looks like Cincinnati-area dealers are done with CTR markups. So this is a tough choice. I don't like the Corolla interior. It looks and feels inexpensive. I'm glad Honda toned down the exterior but the excessive wing still looks immature for such an expensive car that 20-somethings likely cannot afford. FWD vs AWD. With price being an object, and long-term maintenance a thing, I'd go with the Honda with a side eye at the Golf R as a mature choice. All with stick shifts.
Next