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Believe it or not, Honda has never offered a CR-V Hybrid before the year 2020. It’s not quite as wild as Bob Dylan’s 1965 appearance at Newport, but one could argue this compact crossover is the Japanese manufacturer’s most important vehicle.
The vital task of reducing emissions depends not just on making electric vehicles, but on making the internal-combustion cars that people buy in greater numbers more efficient. The Honda CR-V, a top-five seller both in the U.S. and globally in 2019 with more than 800,000 units, certainly qualifies as one of those.
The CR-V has long been brilliant in its own way; it doesn’t have one standout trait, but it’s refined, practical, comfortable and affordable. It’s easy to get in and out of, and indeed, it offers perhaps the best all-around package available for a family CUV.
The CR-V Hybrid is the same car — just with a different power setup. It keeps the positives of the CR-V, requires few significant sacrifices, and earns 38 mpg combined. The cost premium — just $2,600 over the gas version — is reasonable. If you’re down for living that sensible CR-V life, you might as well buy the hybrid.
