Buying a minivan presents one of the great automotive conundrums. Parents are looking for three rows of seating and ample cargo space. Minivans do a better job providing both of those things than any three-row crossover. AWD capability? Efficient hybrid powertrains? It’s hard to argue against them as the car parents need on paper.
But emotions and experiences — not just cold reason — factor into car buying. Minivans carry a stigma with buyers who grew up in the 1980s and 1990s. Even today’s mad penchant for peculiar Rad-era vehicles from that era hasn’t revived them. A lot of buyers will feel something like a Toyota Grand Highlander (while functionally similar) is not quite as much of a submission to parenthood.
For those adventurous folks willing to go all-in on parent life (or dealing with an oppressive number of hockey bags), we sampled the four primary minivan options on the market: the Kia Carnival, the Toyota Sienna, the Chrysler Pacifica and the Honda Odyssey. Here’s what you need to know.
Toyota Sienna

Toyota Sienna
Specs
Powertrain | 2.5-liter inline-four hybrid |
Horsepower | 245 |
Torque | 176 lb-ft |
EPA Fuel Economy | Up to 36 mpg city, 36 mpg highway |
Seats | 7–8 |
Pros
- Only minivan to offer AWD with a hybrid
- Excellent fuel economy
Cons
- Not particularly engaging to drive
- Competitors have substantially more total cargo space
Current Generation: 4th generation (new for 2021)
What’s New: The Sienna added a new XSE Premium package for 2024 with luxury features like leather seats, orange contrast stitching and heated/ventilated front seats.