2025 Toyota Crown Signia: Hybrid Wagon SUV Priced From $44,985

Despite its arrival two years after the Toyota Crown and its spin-off name, the 2025 Crown Signia seems like the vehicle the Crown was intended to be from the beginning. Its proportions still straddle the line between a hatchback or wagon and an SUV, but they are far more familiar than those of the root Crown, which looks sort of like a sedan, sort of like a hatchback and sort of like an SUV coupe.
Regardless of how you classify it, the 2025 Toyota Crown Signia carries a base price of $44,985 (all prices include $1,395 destination). That’s a premium of $2,450 over a comparable Crown, for a vehicle with more cargo space and a much simpler answer to, “What is it?”
Related: 2025 Toyota Crown Signia Review: Another Niche Offering
- ${price_badge()}
- ${ami_badge()}
- ${battery_badge()}${ev_report_link()}
- ${hot_car_badge()}
- ${award_badge()}
- ${cpo_badge()}
${price_badge_description}
${ami_badge_description}
The EV Battery Rating is based on this vehicle's current expected range relative to the vehicles expected range when new. ${battery_badge_text}
Certified cars are manufacturer warrantied and typically go through a rigorous multi-point inspection.
This car is likely to sell soon based on the price, features, and condition.
${award_blurb}
${award_two_blurb}
Shop the 2025 Toyota Crown Signia near you


Powertrain Specs and MPG
For starters, the Crown Signia is an all-wheel-drive hybrid. It pairs a 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine with a trio of electric motors for a combined system output of 240 horsepower. One electric motor charges the battery, another helps the internal-combustion engine drive the front wheels through a continuously variable automatic transmission and the third provides efficient power at the rear wheels when needed.
While the Crown Signia is capable of electric-only propulsion under light loads at low speeds, it’s not meant for long-range electric driving. Toyota claims the Crown Signia gets 39/37/38 mpg city/highway/combined (official EPA figures are not yet available) and can accelerate from 0-60 mph in 7.1 seconds.
Availability and Pricing
The 2025 Toyota Crown Signia will arrive at dealers this summer. The XLE trim starts at $44,985 and the Limited at $49,385.
More From Cars.com:
- 2025 Toyota Crown Signia Up Close: Toyota Made a Sweet Hybrid Station Wagon
- 2025 Toyota Crown Signia: A Less Crownfusing SUV
- 2025 Toyota Crown: New Nightshade, More Standard Luxury
- Research the Toyota Crown Signia
- Find Your Next Car
Trim Levels and Safety Features
Toyota Safety Sense 3.0 is standard on the 2025 Crown Signia. It includes forward collision warning with pedestrian detection and automatic emergency braking, lane-centering steering, lane-departure steering assist, adaptive cruise control, traffic sign recognition and automatic high beams. Blind spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert and safe exit alert are also standard.
The Crown Signia XLE rides on 19-inch wheels and features LED exterior lighting front and rear, a hands-free power liftgate, and keyless entry and starting. Inside, it’s fitted with leather upholstery, heated and ventilated front seats, heated outboard rear seats, a heated power-adjustable steering wheel, dual-zone climate control, a 12.3-inch digital gauge cluster, a 12.3-inch infotainment touchscreen, six speakers and a wireless phone charger.
The Limited trim rides on dark-gray 21-inch wheels and upgrades to auto-leveling LED headlights. It also features a fixed panoramic moonroof, ambient lighting, rain-sensing windshield wipers, an 11-speaker JBL audio system and Digital Key, which allows the owner to use a smartphone as the vehicle’s key.
Limited buyers can add the Advanced Technology Package, which includes lane-change assist, front cross-traffic alert, a 360-degree parking camera, and front and rear parking sensors with automatic braking. The package also includes traffic-jam assist, which can control the vehicle’s speed and steering below 25 mph, with a driver-facing camera ensuring the driver is paying attention. The feature requires a subscription to Toyota’s Drive Connect services.
Related Video:
Cars.com’s Editorial department is your source for automotive news and reviews. In line with Cars.com’s long-standing ethics policy, editors and reviewers don’t accept gifts or free trips from automakers. The Editorial department is independent of Cars.com’s advertising, sales and sponsored content departments.
Featured stories

2026 Cadillac Vistiq Review: Luxuriously Normal


