2022 INFINITI QX55

Change year or car

Change year or car

$46,500

starting MSRP

2022 INFINITI QX55
2022 INFINITI QX55

Key specs

Base trim shown

SUV

Body style

25

Combined MPG

5

Seating capacity

186.3” x 63.8”

Dimensions

All-wheel drive

Drivetrain

Overview

3 trims

Starting msrp listed lowest to highest price

Wondering which trim is right for you?

Our 2022 INFINITI QX55 trim comparison will help you decide.

See also: Find the best SUVs for 2023

2022 INFINITI QX55 review: Our expert's take

By Aaron Bragman

The verdict: A stylish and surprisingly roomy coupe-style luxury SUV, the new Infiniti QX55 is for people who value style but can’t give up too much utility.

Versus the competition: The crossover coupe niche is a small one, but the QX55 might be the best of the lot. It’s roomier and more comfortable — and has better visibility and is a better value — than the BMW X4 and Mercedes-Benz GLC300 Coupe, though it doesn’t match up in terms of interior quality or multimedia sophistication. 

I’ve never quite understood the concept of the sporty crossover coupe. To me, calling a truncated, lowered-roof SUV a “coupe” is even more ridiculous than calling a four-door sedan a coupe. But a lot of luxury automakers — intent on expanding their lineups to fill every possible market niche — are coming up with them, and now Infiniti has joined the party with the new 2022 Infiniti QX55. 

The QX55 is based off the more traditional QX50 SUV but features more aggressive styling. It has a lower, swoopier roofline meant to give buyers a sportier, more stylish alternative to a traditional luxury SUV. Infiniti says it reached into its own history for inspiration, channeling the spirit of the original 2002 Infiniti FX — which some would call the original crossover coupe before there was such a thing. The result, says the company, is a stylish crossover aimed at stylish people that doesn’t come with the compromises of competitors like the BMW X4 and Mercedes-Benz GLC Coupe — issues like poor visibility, limited headroom and a curtailed cargo area. We took one for a brief test to see if Infiniti really has cooked up a more cromulent crossover coupe.

Related:  Not a Shocker: 2022 Infiniti QX55 Costs More Than Comparable 2021 QX50

2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman

A Little Off the Top

Park the QX55 next to its cousin, the QX50, and you’ll see the similarities right away. Infiniti made no changes to things like wheelbase or body panels below the beltline aside from slightly more aggressive front styling on the QX55. The QX55 has a larger grille that extends down to the chin spoiler, plus more prominent flanking air inlets. The rear bumper, meanwhile, is completely different, as are the standard LED taillights. Of course, the biggest difference comes in the greenhouse, which features a lowered roofline and a swoopier D-pillar treatment, which does away with Infiniti’s odd little kink design in favor of a continuous arc. Usually I think the “coupified” versions of traditional SUVs look oddly proportioned, but Infiniti got this one right; it has a sleek, muscular shape that’s more appealing than the SUV upon which it’s based. 

Still Air Up There

Despite this lowering of the roof, the interior of the QX55 feels roomy, with plenty of front and rear headroom. It’s definitely lost a couple of inches from the standard QX50, even ones with a moonroof, but it doesn’t feel cramped above your head like the X4 does. Super-tall people might feel their scalp touch the headliner in the backseat, but average-height folks won’t. 

Perhaps even more impressive is Infiniti’s ability to maintain decent rear visibility despite a shortened window, which is something neither BMW nor Mercedes-Benz has successfully addressed. You can actually see out behind the QX55 for some distance, allowing for near-normal outward visibility — another check in Infiniti’s advantages column. The brand’s efforts to minimize the compromises one has to make in order to turn a traditional SUV into a coupe are clear, and the trade-offs do indeed seem to be minimized. The QX55 makes it easier to enjoy the style and look of this custom chop job while greatly reducing the penalty such a thing usually brings. 

2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman

Even the QX55’s cargo room is appropriately sizable — if, again, smaller than the QX50’s. You lose some space due to the lower roofline, but the rear seats can be adjusted forward and back, allowing for either maximum rear passenger legroom or maximum cargo compartment depth. So while it is smaller than the QX50, the size of the cargo area is overall quite surprising: There’s 26.9 cubic feet with the rear seats up, 54.1 cubic feet with the seatbacks folded. That’s considerably more space than in the X4 or GLC Coupe (based on manufacturer specs) and makes the QX55 as legitimately useful as it is stylish. 

Upgraded Interior

The QX55 is the latest Infiniti to hit our shores, so it comes with the brand’s latest take on what makes a luxury interior. It’s a good one: Materials quality is excellent, the designs and shapes are equally appealing, and the overall feeling the experience imparts is definitely one of a premium automobile. 

The interior design is somewhat let down, however, by some questionable choices, such as the two-screen multimedia system. It just seems unnecessary given pretty much everyone else makes it work with one screen. The top screen is generally for navigation and peripheral systems, like Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, both of which are standard. The lower screen is for audio, climate controls and other vehicle functions. This enables you to have CarPlay running on one screen while adjusting the climate settings on the other, or to have navigation running while changing channels on the native onboard audio system. Frankly, though, the reach to that top screen is a bit of a chore. Why not just do one screen well? 

2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman

The native audio and ancillary multimedia controls use several small fonts that are not easy to read at a glance, and that lower screen’s position on the console doesn’t make it easy to use while driving, either. It’s not the worst multimedia setup out there, not even close, but it’s definitely not the best. 

Driving comfort is excellent, though the driving position is a little high. This is where you start getting reminders that despite the low roofline and aggressive styling, you’re still, in fact, driving an SUV. The seat doesn’t descend quite as much as I’d like, leaving you with a slight driving-on-a-barstool feeling, but it’s not uncomfortable, just a little higher than you might expect looking at the QX55. The seats are well padded and covered in very nice leather, and I can never really fault an automaker offering a red upholstery option — one of my favorite looks. 

The QX55’s interior is almost on par with the top luxury contenders in this field, but it stops short of being fully competitive. The Mercedes-Benz GLC300 Coupe’s interior goes beyond the Infiniti’s premium feel and into genuine luxury territory, while both the Benz and the BMW X4 have better, more cohesive approaches to their multimedia systems. The Infiniti’s interior isn’t all that different from the QX50, which is competitive with premium brands like Acura, Buick and Lexus, but the luxury German brands pay a bit more attention to detail, giving their buttons, layouts and construction a sense of specialness that’s lacking in a nameplate sharing components with non-luxury brands. 

2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman

It Only Looks Sporty

Perhaps one of the most surprising aspects of the QX55 is that it doesn’t have the athletic chops to back up its looks — and that’s perfectly fine. If its seating position clues you in to the fact that this was an SUV, not a sports sedan, it’s the driving experience that cements the idea. Infiniti stylists had a great time turning a QX50 into the sleek QX55, but the mechanicals don’t feel that different from the original. 

The only available engine is a turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder pumping out 268 horsepower and 280 pounds-feet of torque, and it’s sufficient to move the QX55 with surprising quickness. It’s mated to a continuously variable automatic transmission with standard all-wheel drive, and together, that powertrain combo proves to be the sportiest thing about the QX55. It is perhaps one of the best-tuned CVTs I’ve ever sampled, mated perfectly with the power available from the torquey turbo four, and it’s always eager to move the QX55 smartly via a stab of the accelerator. It makes the QX55 genuinely pleasant to drive, just like most any vehicle with ample on-demand acceleration. 

For all the powertrain’s entertainment ability, however, the chassis is set up very differently. It’s harder to disguise the QX55’s SUV roots here, as it tends to understeer through corners and lean over noticeably. The ride is well controlled but tuned toward the softer end of the spectrum in order to provide some damping, this given the massive standard 20-inch wheels and low-profile tires don’t provide much cushion from road imperfections. 

2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman 2022 Infiniti QX55 | Cars.com photo by Aaron Bragman

The real knockout punch to the QX55’s athletic pretense, though, is the utter lack of steering feel from the electronic Direct Adaptive by-wire steering. For all the feedback it gives you, you may as well be operating a video game steering wheel. It’s light and even has a relatively quick-feeling ratio, but combined with the QX55’s softer ride, the message it sends the driver is that the QX55 is a vehicle meant for style, not speed — which, once again, works just fine. SUVs make terrible sports cars thanks to their copious mass, high centers of gravity and a host of other issues that make them much better suited to causeway cruising than back-road bruising. 

Perfectly Premium

As long as you’re OK with the idea that the QX55 is better suited to the style-over-substance set, it’s a highly suitable choice for your next ride. There’s no denying it looks good and provides a comfortable, perfectly premium driving experience; that it comes packed with all the technology and safety equipment you could want; and it does all that at a price that undercuts similarly equipped models. 

There are three grades of QX55, starting with the Luxe trim, at $47,525 (prices include destination). This is nearly $10,000 more than the starting price of a QX50 SUV, but there is no equivalent to the QX50’s base Pure trim level for the QX55; it starts with the QX50’s mid-level trim equipment. If you compare those trims, the QX55 costs about $3,000 more for less space and more style. Two more grades of QX55 are available: the $52,625 Essential trim and the top-of-the-line $58,075 Sensory trim, which was the version I tested. Not much is optional at that top level, and my test vehicle came with an as-tested price of $58,770 thanks to the addition of $695 Slate Gray paint. 

It doesn’t have many competitors, but the QX55 starts at a significantly lower price than the BMW X4 ($52,595) and Mercedes-Benz GLC300 Coupe ($52,700). A loaded Sensory version of the QX55 is significantly less expensive than the top-equipped version of either German car. Yet there is one other option you might not have considered: a Tesla Model Y. It features a very similar style and interior layout to these crossover coupe models, but with an all-electric drivetrain, it’s a very different animal meant to appeal to a different audience. A Long Range version theoretically starts at $50,190 (if Elon Musk hasn’t changed the price twice since this was written) and is equipped with an electric powertrain that’s far more zippy than any of these examples powered by gasoline. 

If you’re intent on getting a coupified SUV — and if looking good and feeling good is more a priority than a quasi-athletic, entertaining driving experience — Infiniti’s new QX55 should satisfy your needs quite nicely.

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.

Photo of Aaron Bragman
Detroit Bureau Chief Aaron Bragman has had over 25 years of experience in the auto industry as a journalist, analyst, purchasing agent and program manager. Bragman grew up around his father’s classic Triumph sports cars (which were all sold and gone when he turned 16, much to his frustration) and comes from a Detroit family where cars put food on tables as much as smiles on faces. Today, he’s a member of the Automotive Press Association and the Midwest Automotive Media Association. His pronouns are he/him, but his adjectives are fat/sassy. Email Aaron Bragman

Consumer reviews

Rating breakdown (out of 5):
  • Comfort 4.6
  • Interior 4.4
  • Performance 4.4
  • Value 4.2
  • Exterior 4.8
  • Reliability 4.2

Most recent consumer reviews

5.0

Love it

Love the body design, the interior is comfortable. However the technology could be more updated. Car is very reliable it does 26 GPM on the highway, engine is very powerful.

2.0

Not reliable QX55

This car has really unique styling on the exterior. But for the overall reliability it's not up-to-date at all. The dual touchscreen keep disappearing when the vehicle is started. The performance of this vehicle it's not at all as seen in reviews. The electronics in this Infiniti is totally out of date and not reliable at all. The failure rate of the duel screens is unacceptable with the amount for this vehicle. Totally wish I kept my old vehicle....

5.0

QX55 is Sporty upgrade over the prior QX50 model.

Only had this QX55 for a few days, so cannot comment on reliability yet. Very high quality fits and finishes. Interior is very high end with real leather, carbon fiber, sensible instrumentation, peppy engine, very quiet and smooth ride, despite having run flat tires. Quality of paintwork is excellent, white tricoat is really eye catching, wheel finish is well done. This Essential model is a bit pricey compared to the Luxe model, but does have several nice extras. We traded in our 2016 Infiniti QX50, which was super reliable; so hoping for the best.

See all 5 consumer reviews

Warranty

New car and Certified Pre-Owned programs by INFINITI
New car program benefits
Bumper-to-bumper
48 months/60,000 miles
Corrosion
84 months/unlimited distance
Powertrain
72 months/70,000 miles
Roadside assistance
48 months/unlimited distance
Certified Pre-Owned program benefits
Maximum age/mileage
Months from In-Service Date (ISD): Less than or equal to 60 months from ISD | Vehicle Mileage: Less than or equal to 15,000 Miles | Greater than 15,000 Miles but less than or equal to 60K miles
Basic warranty terms
6 years/75K miles from original ISD | 6 years/unlimited miles from original ISD
Powertrain
72 months/70,000 miles
Dealer certification required
167-point inspection
Roadside assistance
Yes
View all cpo program details

Have questions about warranties or CPO programs?

Compare the competitors

See all 2022 INFINITI QX55 articles