2026 Toyota RAV4 Interior Review: More Muscular Appearance, Higher-Tech Screens
The inside of the new RAV4 gets the same masculine glow-up as the exterior—here’s what it’s like to use.
There is little debate about how new the new 2026 Toyota RAV4’s exterior appearance is, with the compact SUV adopting a tougher, more blocky look than its sleeker predecessor. But what about the inside? Having poked around the just-revealed 2026 RAV4’s interior—specifically, all three variations of its interior, as each of the main trim grades, including the mainstream core variant; the off-road-focused, new Woodland trim level; and the also-new GR Sport model. Every RAV4’s cabin shares a basic layout, however, and we can now speak to how effective that is with our first interior review of the sixth-generation RAV4.
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Before peeking inside the new RAV4, it’s worth taking a look at its buff new body. It’s notably taller-seeming than before, even though the overall dimensions aren’t vastly different. But Toyota clearly taffy-pulled the greenhouse skyward, giving the RAV4 an airier roofline reminiscent of Subaru’s similarly sized Forester. The boxier roof brings with it larger rear quarter windows and what feels like more glass area generally.
2026 Toyota RAV4 Cabin Adopts Beefcake Styling
Toyota matches the more SUV-ish profile with an interior design to match. The outgoing RAV4’s sleeker, more carlike innards are traded away for chunkier shapes and a deep storage shelf molded into the dashboard ahead of the front-seat passenger. The center console adopts a more user-friendly layout, too, with the cupholders shifting from a side-by-side arrangement buried back by the armrest to a longitudinal arrangement alongside the shifter, which moves to the left side of the console, closer to the driver where it should have been located before.
There are different shifters depending on the trim, with “core” versions—basically any RAV4 not named Woodland or GR Sport—getting a new small electric tab-style shifter like those in modern Porsches. (Pulling the tab back selects drive or the higher-regen “B”—like a “low” gear in a traditional automatic—while pushing forward calls up reverse and neutral, and park is a pushbutton separate from the shifter itself.) The Woodland and GR Sport trim levels get beefy, traditional PRNDL shift levers seemingly lifted straight out of Toyota’s Tacoma pickup and new 4Runner SUV
Dagmar-like protrusions low on the dashboard housing key drive mode buttons (including an EV-only button—remember, the entire RAV4 lineup goes hybrid this year, either as a gas-electric or a plug-in hybrid) are similarly reminiscent of themes used on Tacomas, Tundras, 4Runners, and the newest Land Cruiser. In short, Toyota is trying to put some hair on the RAV4’s chest for 2026 by tying its overall appearance to its body-on-frame machines, especially inside.
Ancillary buttons commanding driver assistance, traction control, and camera features are located on the center console itself ahead of the shifter and cupholders, along with a pair of 15-watt USB C ports. And above those but below the central air vents live a pair of smartphone-shaped pads; the lefthand pad has a wireless phone charger, and we suspect a second could be installed on the right (Toyota introduced dual phone charging pads that look highly similar in the new 2026 bZ EV, so it’s certainly possible here).



