Enthusiasts — long loyal to the cult of the Land Cruiser —have long known the Sequoia as Toyota’s other three-row SUV. But that’s about to change. Toyota has dropped the Land Cruiser from the American lineup, and now, the company is reintroducing the Sequoia with its first all-new version since 2007 — the year Apple launched the iPhone. And, based on price, size and capability, the Sequoia is Toyota’s flagship model — at least for now.
The 2023 Toyota Sequoia is upgraded from the old reliable but inefficient 5.7-liter V8 to the company’s best powertrain, a twin-turbocharged 3.5-liter (well, 3.4-liter, if you want to be technical) twin-turbo hybrid V6. That powerplant puts out 437 horsepower and a mammoth 583 lb-ft of torque. The Tundra gets that engine on fancier grades; the Lexus LX 600 and J300 Land Cruiser don’t get it all. On the Sequoia, the hybrid motor comes standard.
The Sequoia rides on Toyota’s new TNGA-F truck platform. It sports swaggy new looks cribbed heavily from the new Tundra. It uses Toyota’s sharp-looking new North American-developed infotainment system. And Toyota believes it’s quite the package — enough to sell about three times as many of them as before.
Toyota enticed me to Plano, TX, with the promise to drive the new 2023 Sequoia on-road and off it for a day (I also sampled a TRD Pro model for a week at my home in Michigan). And like the Tundra it is based on, the Sequoia is a comprehensive improvement over what came before. The full-size, three-row market is fierce. And for the first time since Rihanna asked you to stand under her umbrella, ella, ella, eh eh eh, the all-new Sequoia is prepared to compete in it.
How does the Toyota Sequoia differ from the Land Cruiser?

So, the J300 Land Cruiser and Sequoia share a segment, platform, manufacturer and commitment to durability. Beyond that, they are very much different vehicles.