SUVs are no longer a craze or a trend. In fact, they’ve subsumed the (non-truck portion of the) car market. That’s especially true of crossover forms, which have come to dominate the category far more than the body-on-frame truck-based vehicles that pioneered the class.
Today’s crossovers are filling niches that have nothing to do with spaciousness or capability, which were the traditional arguments in their favor; even tiny, pavement-dwelling subcompacts now receive added ride height and extra cladding to justify their existence and boost their sales.
What are crossover SUVs?
Much as the sport-utility vehicle was something of a median point between the car and the truck, a crossover can basically be thought of as the halfway mark between traditional SUVs and cars.
Crossovers stand tall and boast boxy bodies, like SUVs — but those boxy bodies are built on more lightweight unibody skeletons like cars, versus the heavy-but-better-for-off-roading body-on-frame chassis used by traditional SUVs and pickups.
A crossover can basically be thought of as the halfway mark between traditional SUVs and cars.
Crossovers usually offer some way to send power to all four wheels, but it’s usually an all-wheel-drive system, not a true four-wheel-drive setup with low range.