Lexus LBX Review (2024-present)

4.0

Expert review

Pros

  • Plush-feeling interior gives a premium image

  • Low running costs

  • Quite agile and entertaining to drive

Cons

  • Rear seats are quite cramped

  • Ride can be fidgety

  • Looks rather expensive for its size

4/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
Lexus LBX Review (2024-present)

The CarGurus verdict

The Lexus LBX makes a lot of sense in today’s market. A compact, posh SUV-ish car that’s cheap to run, yet can also be specced up to have big-car luxuries, and even all-weather four-wheel drive if that’s useful to you.

We were a little disappointed that it wasn’t a bit roomier inside, but as a plush compact SUV that benefits from big-car luxuries and desirability, it’s easy to see why the LBX will be a hit.

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What is the Lexus LBX?

Small, premium cars are not a new idea; BMW has been doing it for many years with the MINI, Audi with the A1, and Fiat with the 500. Now (a decade or so late to the party, you might argue) Lexus has joined in with this, the new Lexus LBX.

Based on the Toyota Yaris Cross, but with its own distinctive styling and a body that’s a touch wider and longer, the LBX also shares the Toyota’s front-wheel-drive hybrid powertrain (although it can also be specced with four-wheel drive). That means that you get a 1.5-litre petrol engine that’s mated to an electric motor that will power the car on its own at low speeds and when the car is coasting, in order to keep emissions and economy as low as possible.

The Lexus LBX measures under 4.2-metres long, making it very similar in size to the Audi Q2 and Jeep Avenger, although bigger alternatives like the MINI Countryman, Mercedes GLA and BMW X1 are all well within the price range of the Lexus, which costs from £30,000 to over £40,000.

That’s not cheap, when you think that you’re not getting much more space inside than you do with the normal Toyota Yaris hatchback, but – as we’ve mentioned – we know that there’s a market for small but premium and pricey cars. Even so, with many and varied rivals to compete with, can the Lexus justify that kind of price?

  • The Lexus LBX uses a full hybrid powertrain, which is also commonly known as a self-charging hybrid. You can’t plug it in, as you do with plug-in hybrid (PHEV) rivals like the Renault Captur E-Tech, which will go much further on pure electric power. Instead, the Lexus’ 1kWh battery is charged up when you brake or coast, and that gives you enough electric power that Toyota reckons you can spend as much as 50% of your time trickling along with the petrol engine dormant.
  • You can get the LBX with a four-wheel drive powertrain, albeit only in the expensive, high-spec Takumi models. Even so, it’s great to have a car in this class with awd, as there are very few offering that all-weather peace of mind in a compact car with such low running costs.
  • Lexus offers an impressive 10-year, 100,000-mile warranty on the LBX, which is also transferrable to new owners if the cars is sold on second-hand. The warranty is only valid for that long if the car is serviced according to the schedule at official Toyota or Lexus dealers, but that seems a small price to pay for this industry-leading warranty.

  • If you want the best value new car: Stick with the Lexus LBX Urban, which gets a slightly smaller digital instrument display than the others but still has generous enough equipment to make life comfortable, including dual-zone climate control, front-and rear parking sensors and a reversing camera. Or if you want a bit of luxury kit but don’t want to spend a huge amount more, the Premium Plus is the sweet spot for balance of comfort, tech and cost.
  • If you want the most stylish option: Go for the Takumi Design trim, which gets cool contrast highlights around the door handles and various other areas of the car. Add one of the brighter pearlescent paint colours for full ‘look at me’ spec.
  • If you want the best family car: Our pick of the Lexus LBX range is the mid-range Lexus LBX Premium Plus, which is a happy medium in the range that gets 18-inch alloy wheels, keyless entry, leatherette upholstery, a power tailgate, a big digital driver’s readout and head-up display.
  • If you like your tunes: Splash out on the top-spec Lexus LBX Takumi cars, because these get the truly excellent 13-speaker Mark Levinson sound system.
Vicky Parrott
Published 13 Jun 2024 by Vicky Parrott
Vicky Parrott is a contributing editor at CarGurus. Vicky started her career at Autocar and spent a happy eight years there as a road tester and video presenter, before progressing to be deputy road test editor at What Car? magazine and Associate Editor for DrivingElectric. She's a specialist in EVs but she does also admit to enjoying a V8 and a flyweight.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Five-door crossover