You often hear that new cars, especially new crossovers, are so similar they (the car companies) might as well get together and just sell one. The complaint has some merit. It is hard to tell one crossover from another without looking at the badge. But there are still some differences, even if they’re not easy to see.
Price, for instance.
You can pick up a Mitsubishi Eclipse Cross for several thousand dollars less than rivals like the Toyota RAV4, Honda CR-V, and Hyundai Tucson.
Why is there a price difference when these compact crossovers are otherwise alike?
It’s the same reason you can buy generic aspirin for less than it costs to buy Bayer Aspirin.
You’re paying for the brand name, even though you’re getting pretty much the same thing.
What It Is
The Eclipse Cross is Mitsubishi’s compact-sized, five-door crossover. It’s dimensionally (and functionally) similar to other compact crossovers like the hot-selling Toyota RAV4 and Honda CR-V but sells for much less.
Prices start at $23,395 for the ES trim with front-wheel-drive and a turbocharged 1.5-liter four-cylinder engine. All-wheel-drive can be added as a stand-alone option, boosting the price to $24,995.
The same money won’t quite buy you a front-wheel-drive CR-V, which stickers for $25,750 ($27,250 with AWD), and you’ll need even more money to buy a front-wheel-drive RAV4, which starts at $26,525 for the FWD version ($27,925 with AWD).
Similarly, the otherwise-similar Hyundai Tucson’s prices start at $24,950 for the FWD version.
A top-of-the-line SEL Eclipse Cross with AWD stickers for $28,995. This one is also available with reclining rear seats, an unusual feature in the segment, and What3words navigation, another unique feature in the segment. This system is more accurate than street map-based GPS systems found in rival crossovers.
This Mitsubishi’s biggest worry is arguably the just-launched VW Taos (reviewed here), which stickers for just $22,995 to start.
The price is less than Mitsu is asking for the Cross for something pretty similar.
What’s New
The ’22 Eclipse is heavily updated, both cosmetically and functionally.
Though the wheelbase remains the same, the overall length has been increased by more than five inches, giving it a more visually impressive footprint and slightly increasing cargo volume. The size of the available LCD touchscreen has been increased to eight inches and relocated two inches close to the driver.
Perhaps the biggest news is Mitsu has managed all this without significantly increasing the price of the Cross, only about $400 more than the previous model, despite all these upgrades.
What’s Good
- More for less than you get from others offering essentially the same.
- The optional AWD system is more sophisticated than just front to back (and back). It can route power to individual wheels, enhancing traction and handling. There’s also a lock function for more traction in snow and other bad weather driving.
- For once, an easy-to-use touchscreen interface. And radio controls you can fine-tune, using a knob instead of a scan.
What’s Not So Good
- Rivals come standard with stronger engines that use less gas.
- Not as much cargo-carrying capacity as rivals like the RAV4 and CR-V.
- VW Taos offers more or less the same for less.
Under The Hood
Many crossovers have the same thing under their hoods regardless of trim, and the Cross is no exception.
All trims come standard with the same 1.5-liter, four-cylinder engine turbocharged, making 152 horsepower and 184 ft.-lbs.of torque at 2,000 RPM. This engine is paired with a continuously variable (CVT) automatic, a type of transmission that’s also becoming near-standard in new crossovers—with a few exceptions to that rule, including the Toyota RAV4 and the new Taos.
The VW also comes standard with the same size engine as the Cross, a 1.5-liter turbo-four that makes slightly more (158) horsepower. The VW’s engine is paired with a conventional (geared) eight-speed automatic.
Gas mileage is another point of difference and not for the better.
The FWD version of the Cross carries an EPA rating of 25 city, 28 highway (25 city, 26 with AWD). These figures are well below the 28 city/36 highway posted by the Taos, the 27 city, 35 highway posted by the RAV, and the 28 city, 34 highway posted by the CR-V.
It may have to do with the Mitsu’s being a couple of hundred pounds heavier than rivals like the Taos (3.362 lbs. vs. 3.175 lbs. for the VW).
The good news for Mitsu is that except for the VW, the Cross’s lower gas mileage numbers are made up for by the Cross’s much lower cost. If you pay $3,130 more for a RAV4, say, than you did for a Cross (that’s the difference in base MSRP between the two), then you have $3,130 more left in your pocket for gas.
Or you could buy AWD–it costs $1,600 extra with the Cross, and you would still have about that much left in your pocket for gas, vs. buying an FWD RAV4.
The bad news for Mitsu is that you could also buy a new Taos and save $400 on purchasing your new crossover and have a new crossover that goes 8 miles farther down the highway on a gallon of gas.
But there’s still some good news for Mitsu in that the Taos costs a little more than the Cross when ordered with its optionally available AWD system ($25,040). If ordered that way, the Taos comes with a seven-speed dual clutch automatic transmission, which is a type of transmission that has a spotty reputation for long-term durability.
The bad news is that the Mitsu comes standard with a CVT with a similar reputation.
Your Libertarian Car Guy mentioned to a Mitsu honcho that this little crossover would be both something different and something more appealing to many if it came standard with a manual transmission. It’d cost less, too, as automatics (modern automatics) are hugely complex combines of electro-hydraulics while manuals are still mechanical and simpler things that cost less to make and so cost less to buy.
But Mitsu and the whole car industry have been forced to give up on the manual because manuals can’t be programmed to deliver the highest-possible mileage scores on government fuel-economy tests, which are the basis for the city/highway numbers a car company can advertise. They are also the basis for the fines levied by the government for not meeting its MPG mandatory minimums (currently about 36 MPG).
Unfortunately, in actual real-world driving, a manual-equipped vehicle can be driven to beat the scores posted on the test by a programmed automatic. In real-world, actual driving, that programming is regularly countermanded by conditions that force a shift — and result in more realistic mileage. And a manual driven by a human can anticipate the need to shift before an automatic’s programming triggers one.
But that doesn’t matter in the world-of-one-size-fits-all.
On The Road
Speed isn’t just a question of money. It’s also relative.
The Cross isn’t speedy relative to a new Mustang GT. But it is about as fast as a Mustang GT was, back in the mid-1980s. Zero to 60 takes about 8.3 seconds. And relative to other new crossovers, it’s smack dab in the middle. Not as quick as the new Taos, which gets to 60 in about 7.4 seconds, but faster than the Honda CR-V, which takes more than 9 seconds to get there.
It has good low and mid-range pulling power. The Mitsu’s 1.5-liter engine makes as much torque as the RAV4’s much larger 2.5-liter engine (and much sooner, at just 2,000 vs. 5,000 RPM) and feels stronger than its horsepower numbers might suggest.
Some people dislike the operating characteristics of CVT automatics and will be glad to know that Mitsu has programmed this CVT to “shift” like a geared automatic even though there are no gears in a CVT. The upside here is no lag as the gears change and no coffee-spilling back-and-forth snap during gear changes. What happens is the engine revs and the CVT “shifts” to a lower range. You see the tach needle rise and fall but don’t feel any transition, as you would with a geared automatic. It’s a very well-sorted CVT, one of the best I’ve experienced.
Whether it’s a long-lived box remains to be determined.
The suspension adjustments made for 2022 were meant to tighten up what some reviewers said were too-soft suspension calibrations. The good news is that the new calibrations aren’t too firm, which would fail in a family-intended vehicle like the Cross. It’s about the same as you’d experience in other crossovers.
The main difference is the ease of using various necessary controls, making driving the Cross less stressful—especially the audio system and touchscreen controls. There are rotary knobs for volume and tuning, which allow fine-tuning, not possible (or just more of a pain) with scan-type and swipe controls. You can, for example, pick out a radio station that’s not quite in range that a scan-only selector would pass right over. You can also wheel the volume down or up faster and with more refined control than by swiping or using a tap-type controller.
I also like the physical/grab-handle gear selector. Even though it only selects ranges.
At The Curb
Mitsubishi tried to give the Cross some visual flair via a set of eight turn-signal/fog lights stacked two apiece below cat’s-eye slit LED headlights. The crossover’s mission, though, largely determines the silhouette. If altered too much by sloping the roofline too sharply, you sacrifice head or cargo room for the sake of a different look. That’s ok when practicality isn’t the primary consideration.
It is here.
And the Cross does a good job of that, although not quite as good a job as the new Taos, which has more cargo room behind its second row (27.9 cubic feet vs. 23.4 for the Mitsu) and total cargo-carrying capacity with its second row folded (65.9 cubic feet for the VW vs. 50.1 for the Cross). The same story plays out relative to the CR-V and the RAV4, both of which also have more room for cargo, behind their second rows and with them folded down.
But the second rows in those crossovers don’t recline backward, a feature available in the Cross. This makes sleeping in the back a lot more comfortable in the Cross, even if it can’t take quite as much cargo as its rivals.
All trims come standard with a tilt and telescoping wheel, a feature that’s still optional in several others in this class. The step-up LE trim ($24,745 to start) adds heated seats, rain-sensing wipers, leather trim, and the larger (eight-inch) upgraded LCD touchscreen.
The Touring package adds heated rear seats, a Heads-Up Display, and an eight-speaker/510-watt premium audio system.
Something else you get is more ground clearance. Eight inches is standard, which is enough to give the Cross an edge when it snows, even if not equipped with its optional AWD system. A crossover without enough ground clearance with AWD is more apt to get stuck than an FWD crossover with more clearance.
This is a stealth way to save more money on your next crossover. Instead of spending $1,600 or more on AWD, buy a set of good snow tires for $600 instead.
The Rest
Though the new VW Taos undercuts what had been this Mitsu’s strongest selling point– a much lower price than others in the class, for more or less the same kind of vehicle–the Mitsu still has a few other things to sell.
These include a better warranty (five years/60,000 miles on the whole thing and ten years/100,000 miles on the drivetrain) and a better likelihood that you’ll be able to buy the Cross for less than rivals, including the Taos.
This is likely a function of Mitsubishi wanting and needing your business more than the bigger players in the class, such as VW (and much more so than Honda and Toyota). There’s also likely more room to haggle down the price of a new Cross, which could mean spending less than on the VW. It certainly can’t hurt to try.
The Bottom Line
Crossovers are pretty similar, but there are still some important differences. They’re just harder to see.
Eric Peters lives in Virginia and enjoys driving cars and motorcycles. In the past, Eric worked as a car journalist for many prominent mainstream media outlets. Currently, he focuses his time writing auto history books, reviewing cars, and blogging about cars+ for his website EricPetersAutos.com.
Editor’s Note: The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author.