The New 2025 Lincoln Navigator Is Here and It's Spectacular
Cadillac’s Escalade 3-row full-size luxury SUV copycat has stolen the sales lead. Might this sanctuary on wheels, this rejuvenating “third space” put Lincoln back on top?The OG luxobarge body-on-frame SUV enters its fifth generation with the new 2025 Lincoln Navigator. These days the Cadillac Escalade outsells the Navigator by more than two to one, so some of us need reminding that Lincoln was first to woo pop culture and other “influencers” with these jumbotrons back in 1998. Many buyers upgraded their stock 16- or 17-inch wheels to 20-inch “dubs” back in the day. Well, with the march of time, dub-deuces are now standard (and said to ride the best), with FoMoCo-first 24s optional (sorry, no spinners, but each one weighs an incredible 95 pounds!). Might this mostly new model—on its sick factory rims—claw back some sales from Caddy’s ’Slade?
How New Is the 2025 Lincoln Navigator?
Folks won’t mistake it for the fourth-gen Navi—only the door sheetmetal is unchanged. The interior and “Lincoln Digital Experience” user-interface is also entirely new and fully Google-integrated (while retaining wireless Apple and Android mirroring). Underneath all that newness, the 440-hp, 510-lb-ft EcoBoost twin-turbo V-6 engine and 10-speed automatic transmission carry over, as does most of the chassis. Max towing capacity remains at 8,700 pounds, but the limit for trailers without a weight-distributing hitch rises from 5,000 to 7,000 pounds, and the new truck inherits the F-150’s Trailer Hitch Assist and Pro Trailer Backup Assist features, all of which should greatly de-stress trailering vacations.
What’s New Outside?
Up front there’s a bolder, more upright grille with a light-up Lincoln emblem that forms the fuselage of the “glider-wing” daytime running-lamps that sweep across to the headlamps. A similar cross-car taillamp spans the rear, and both help deliver a Lincoln Embrace welcome animation. A panoramic moonroof is standard and the roof rails now mount flush to the bodywork. A Jet Package blacks out the wheels and exterior trim. The biggest upgrade is out back, where the liftgate is swapped for a Split Gate (with the wiper hidden up under the spoiler). The top three-quarters opens upward, while the rest forms a tailgate rated for 600 pounds of merrymaking.
There’s even a panel that stows under the rear floor, which can be positioned as a backrest, or as a snackbar—either a foot above the cargo floor, or with legs extended, out over the tailgate. That short gate won’t hit the tongue jack of a trailer, it’s easy to reach in over, and it’ll keep unrestrained bottles of Dom from christening the driveway. The whole thing opens automatically when a key fob (or phone-as-key) pauses for three seconds behind it, no one-legged kicking underneath the bumper necessary.




