2014
Honda CR-V

Starts at:
$30,620
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New 2014 Honda CR-V
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 2WD 5dr LX
    Starts at
    $23,120
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • AWD 5dr LX
    Starts at
    $24,370
    22 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 5dr EX
    Starts at
    $25,220
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • AWD 5dr EX
    Starts at
    $26,470
    22 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 5dr EX-L
    Starts at
    $27,870
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 5dr EX-L w/RES
    Starts at
    $28,570
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • AWD 5dr EX-L
    Starts at
    $29,120
    22 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 5dr EX-L w/Navi
    Starts at
    $29,370
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • AWD 5dr EX-L w/RES
    Starts at
    $29,820
    22 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • AWD 5dr EX-L w/Navi
    Starts at
    $30,620
    22 City / 30 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Regular Unleaded I-4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Notable features

Seats five
Four-cylinder only
FWD or AWD
Standard Bluetooth phone and audio
One-step folding seats

The good & the bad

The good

Interior versatility
Ride quality
Backseat room
Backseat-folding ease
Standard backup camera

The bad

Marginal IIHS small-overlap crash tests
Some high-tech safety features missing
Drab cabin materials
Outdated navigation system

Expert 2014 Honda CR-V review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Kelsey Mays
Full article
our expert's take

Are the masses always right? We give Congress the sort of approval ratings that would fire almost anyone in any job, then overwhelmingly reelect them all. We spent a reported $402 million at the box office on the unwatchable “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.” We like coffee with extra caffeine and reality TV with extra housewives.

Good thing there’s the Honda CR-V, America’s best-selling SUV in 2012 and 2013. This time, we made the right call.

The 2014 Honda CR-V trades some cabin quality for outright utility, but for small families, it remains a compelling choice.

Honda redesigned the CR-V two model years ago, and it soon beat five competitors in a 2012 Cars.com comparison. Little changed for 2013 and 2014 (see these model years compared here), but a bad showing in a new crash test should give safety-minded buyers pause. The five-seat SUV comes in LX, EX and EX-L trims with front- or all-wheel drive. Compare them here. All three have a four-cylinder engine and automatic transmission. I tested a loaded, all-wheel-drive CR-V EX-L.

How It Drives
The Honda CR-V’s 2.4-liter four-cylinder provides adequate oomph thanks in part to a responsive five-speed automatic transmission that picks the right gear and hangs on during a smooth revving process. The drivetrain makes 185 horsepower and 163 pounds-feet of torque, and that proved enough to motivate our all-wheel-drive tester even with four adults aboard. Credit the SUV’s spry curb weight; it’s anywhere from 65 to 472 pounds lighter than comparable base and well-equipped versions of the Toyota RAV4, Chevrolet Equinox and Ford Escape.

Steering is drama-free, with natural feedback and settled highway composure. The wheel directs the SUV through curves just enough, but on winding roads the Honda CR-V feels less athletic than the Mazda CX-5 and Ford Escape. Throw it around, and the Honda’s pitchy body roll exposes a limited fun factor.

Ride quality, which was a nagging issue in the prior-gen CR-V, now impresses. For this class, the CR-V isolates well on the highway and clomps through ruts and manholes with little disruption. It’s not a particularly quiet experience, though. My test vehicle’s tires — Bridgestone Dueler Sport P225/65R17 all-seasons — filtered little road noise. Similarly, the cabin did little to quell wind noise, which was pervasive throughout my time in the Honda CR-V.

With front-wheel only, fuel economy is an EPA-estimated 23/31/26 mpg city/highway/combined. AWD loses 1 mpg across the board. The combined EPA figures are competitive in the field, and I averaged 28.1 mpg over some 610 mostly highway miles in my AWD tester. That’s decent, considering that mileage included hauling as many as four occupants and considerable time idling. Read more about my observed mileage here.

A driver-selectable Econ mode relaxes drivetrain response, cruise control and air conditioning to improve gas mileage. It introduces some sluggishness to the automatic’s downshift response, but it didn’t bog down much else.

Interior
Characteristic of Honda models, the CR-V’s seats are supportive, with more generous cushioning than is the automaker’s norm. Headroom and legroom up front should suit tall drivers thanks to an upright dash that frees up enough room to stretch out.

Indeed, space is one of the CR-V’s biggest draws. The SUV boasts an impressive 104.1 cubic feet of passenger room (101.5 in my moonroof-equipped car). It’s impressive for this group, and it shows. The low center console frees up hip and thigh room yet still packs generous storage space. The front seats afford a high driving position without sacrificing headroom, and the rear seats combine long cushions with legroom and headroom to spare. They recline a few degrees but don’t adjust forward or backward.

Cabin quality is another story. Honda delivers on cabin fit, with nary a panel gap or flimsy fixture in my test car. Cabin finish, on the other hand, underwhelms. Cheap silver plastic covers the door handles and various trim sections. The woven headliner doesn’t extend to the cut-rate sun visors, and hard plastics adorn the upper doors and entire dash in textures that range from respectable to bargain-bin. Look at the Escape, the CX-5 and the Subaru Forester, and it’s clear the class is ahead; Honda needs to catch up.

Ergonomics & Electronics
As technology goes, even the Honda CR-V’s most affordable LX version comes well-equipped, with a USB/iPod/Pandora-compatible stereo and Bluetooth phone and audio streaming standard. EX and EX-L models add speakers and stereo wattage; the latter also gets satellite radio. A rear DVD entertainment system is optional on the EX-L.

Most controls fall within easy reach. My tester’s dual-zone climate control employed dials rather than buttons, which enables easier temperature adjustments. Optional on the EX-L and included in my tester, the CR-V’s navigation system has helpful physical zoom buttons and a map-scrolling joystick, but it ditches the all-important radio-tuning knob found on the non-navigation unit. Its outdated graphics, bizarre routing choices and misanthropic voice-recognition system made quick enemies of my passengers and me, too. Skip it.

Cargo & Storage
The CR-V has 37.2 cubic feet of cargo room behind the rear seats — about even with the RAV4 and a few cubic feet ahead of the Escape (34.3 cubic feet) and Equinox (31.5). Pull a strap in the backseat cushions or a handle in the cargo area and the seats collapse to the floor in a spring-loaded performance of tumbling seat cushions, ducking head restraints and folding seats. The result is 70.9 cubic feet of maximum cargo volume — again, near the RAV4 and ahead of the other two. The act plays out even if you have the front seats all the way back in their tracks. Marvelous.

Safety
In moderate-overlap frontal impact, side-impact, roof strength and head restraint and seating crash tests by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the Honda CR-V earned the top score, good. However, the SUV scored marginal in IIHS’ small-overlap frontal tests, which simulate hitting a narrow object, like a tree, from the front-left corner. (IIHS scores are good, acceptable, marginal and poor.) In the test, IIHS said the CR-V incurred major intrusion to the passenger compartment; the results barred the SUV from the agency’s Top Safety Pick status, which now requires strong results in the small-overlap tests. Read more about it here.

The requisite airbags and electronic stability system are standard, but the CR-V lacks a lot of the advanced safety technology that’s proliferated in the class. A backup camera is standard, but blind-spot, forward-collision and lane-departure warning systems are unavailable. Click here to see how child-safety seats fit in the CR-V in our Car Seat Check of a model from 2012, the first year for the current generation. Click here to see a full list of safety features.

Value in Its Class
Honda CR-V LX trims start just below $24,000 including destination charge. Given the standard electronics, that’s something of a bargain for this class. Move up the trims, and you can get a power driver’s seat, heated leather upholstery and a moonroof. On any trim, all-wheel drive runs an affordable $1,250. EX-L models top out over $31,000 — again, below the stratosphere into which many competitors spiral – but lack similar body type features like a power liftgate, a power passenger seat, more muscle under the hood and additional safety tech. Many competitors offer one or more of those extras. Does the CR-V’s one-size-fits-all packaging leave some shoppers wanting? It doesn’t seem like it. Honda’s small SUV outsold its entire class in 2013. It’s a repeat winner of loyalty awards in its class from industry analysis firm Polk, and it’s easy to see why. The fourth generation combines drivability and utility with strong reliability thus far. But for some better crash tests and more safety tech — neither of which may require a full redesign — the Honda CR-V is compelling. If you’re shopping this group, it’s a must-drive.

Send Kelsey an email  

 

Assistant Managing Editor-News
Kelsey Mays

Former Assistant Managing Editor-News Kelsey Mays likes quality, reliability, safety and practicality. But he also likes a fair price.

2014 Honda CR-V review: Our expert's take
By Kelsey Mays

Are the masses always right? We give Congress the sort of approval ratings that would fire almost anyone in any job, then overwhelmingly reelect them all. We spent a reported $402 million at the box office on the unwatchable “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.” We like coffee with extra caffeine and reality TV with extra housewives.

Good thing there’s the Honda CR-V, America’s best-selling SUV in 2012 and 2013. This time, we made the right call.

The 2014 Honda CR-V trades some cabin quality for outright utility, but for small families, it remains a compelling choice.

Honda redesigned the CR-V two model years ago, and it soon beat five competitors in a 2012 Cars.com comparison. Little changed for 2013 and 2014 (see these model years compared here), but a bad showing in a new crash test should give safety-minded buyers pause. The five-seat SUV comes in LX, EX and EX-L trims with front- or all-wheel drive. Compare them here. All three have a four-cylinder engine and automatic transmission. I tested a loaded, all-wheel-drive CR-V EX-L.

How It Drives
The Honda CR-V’s 2.4-liter four-cylinder provides adequate oomph thanks in part to a responsive five-speed automatic transmission that picks the right gear and hangs on during a smooth revving process. The drivetrain makes 185 horsepower and 163 pounds-feet of torque, and that proved enough to motivate our all-wheel-drive tester even with four adults aboard. Credit the SUV’s spry curb weight; it’s anywhere from 65 to 472 pounds lighter than comparable base and well-equipped versions of the Toyota RAV4, Chevrolet Equinox and Ford Escape.

Steering is drama-free, with natural feedback and settled highway composure. The wheel directs the SUV through curves just enough, but on winding roads the Honda CR-V feels less athletic than the Mazda CX-5 and Ford Escape. Throw it around, and the Honda’s pitchy body roll exposes a limited fun factor.

Ride quality, which was a nagging issue in the prior-gen CR-V, now impresses. For this class, the CR-V isolates well on the highway and clomps through ruts and manholes with little disruption. It’s not a particularly quiet experience, though. My test vehicle’s tires — Bridgestone Dueler Sport P225/65R17 all-seasons — filtered little road noise. Similarly, the cabin did little to quell wind noise, which was pervasive throughout my time in the Honda CR-V.

With front-wheel only, fuel economy is an EPA-estimated 23/31/26 mpg city/highway/combined. AWD loses 1 mpg across the board. The combined EPA figures are competitive in the field, and I averaged 28.1 mpg over some 610 mostly highway miles in my AWD tester. That’s decent, considering that mileage included hauling as many as four occupants and considerable time idling. Read more about my observed mileage here.

A driver-selectable Econ mode relaxes drivetrain response, cruise control and air conditioning to improve gas mileage. It introduces some sluggishness to the automatic’s downshift response, but it didn’t bog down much else.

Interior
Characteristic of Honda models, the CR-V’s seats are supportive, with more generous cushioning than is the automaker’s norm. Headroom and legroom up front should suit tall drivers thanks to an upright dash that frees up enough room to stretch out.

Indeed, space is one of the CR-V’s biggest draws. The SUV boasts an impressive 104.1 cubic feet of passenger room (101.5 in my moonroof-equipped car). It’s impressive for this group, and it shows. The low center console frees up hip and thigh room yet still packs generous storage space. The front seats afford a high driving position without sacrificing headroom, and the rear seats combine long cushions with legroom and headroom to spare. They recline a few degrees but don’t adjust forward or backward.

Cabin quality is another story. Honda delivers on cabin fit, with nary a panel gap or flimsy fixture in my test car. Cabin finish, on the other hand, underwhelms. Cheap silver plastic covers the door handles and various trim sections. The woven headliner doesn’t extend to the cut-rate sun visors, and hard plastics adorn the upper doors and entire dash in textures that range from respectable to bargain-bin. Look at the Escape, the CX-5 and the Subaru Forester, and it’s clear the class is ahead; Honda needs to catch up.

Ergonomics & Electronics
As technology goes, even the Honda CR-V’s most affordable LX version comes well-equipped, with a USB/iPod/Pandora-compatible stereo and Bluetooth phone and audio streaming standard. EX and EX-L models add speakers and stereo wattage; the latter also gets satellite radio. A rear DVD entertainment system is optional on the EX-L.

Most controls fall within easy reach. My tester’s dual-zone climate control employed dials rather than buttons, which enables easier temperature adjustments. Optional on the EX-L and included in my tester, the CR-V’s navigation system has helpful physical zoom buttons and a map-scrolling joystick, but it ditches the all-important radio-tuning knob found on the non-navigation unit. Its outdated graphics, bizarre routing choices and misanthropic voice-recognition system made quick enemies of my passengers and me, too. Skip it.

Cargo & Storage
The CR-V has 37.2 cubic feet of cargo room behind the rear seats — about even with the RAV4 and a few cubic feet ahead of the Escape (34.3 cubic feet) and Equinox (31.5). Pull a strap in the backseat cushions or a handle in the cargo area and the seats collapse to the floor in a spring-loaded performance of tumbling seat cushions, ducking head restraints and folding seats. The result is 70.9 cubic feet of maximum cargo volume — again, near the RAV4 and ahead of the other two. The act plays out even if you have the front seats all the way back in their tracks. Marvelous.

Safety
In moderate-overlap frontal impact, side-impact, roof strength and head restraint and seating crash tests by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the Honda CR-V earned the top score, good. However, the SUV scored marginal in IIHS’ small-overlap frontal tests, which simulate hitting a narrow object, like a tree, from the front-left corner. (IIHS scores are good, acceptable, marginal and poor.) In the test, IIHS said the CR-V incurred major intrusion to the passenger compartment; the results barred the SUV from the agency’s Top Safety Pick status, which now requires strong results in the small-overlap tests. Read more about it here.

The requisite airbags and electronic stability system are standard, but the CR-V lacks a lot of the advanced safety technology that’s proliferated in the class. A backup camera is standard, but blind-spot, forward-collision and lane-departure warning systems are unavailable. Click here to see how child-safety seats fit in the CR-V in our Car Seat Check of a model from 2012, the first year for the current generation. Click here to see a full list of safety features.

Value in Its Class
Honda CR-V LX trims start just below $24,000 including destination charge. Given the standard electronics, that’s something of a bargain for this class. Move up the trims, and you can get a power driver’s seat, heated leather upholstery and a moonroof. On any trim, all-wheel drive runs an affordable $1,250. EX-L models top out over $31,000 — again, below the stratosphere into which many competitors spiral – but lack similar body type features like a power liftgate, a power passenger seat, more muscle under the hood and additional safety tech. Many competitors offer one or more of those extras. Does the CR-V’s one-size-fits-all packaging leave some shoppers wanting? It doesn’t seem like it. Honda’s small SUV outsold its entire class in 2013. It’s a repeat winner of loyalty awards in its class from industry analysis firm Polk, and it’s easy to see why. The fourth generation combines drivability and utility with strong reliability thus far. But for some better crash tests and more safety tech — neither of which may require a full redesign — the Honda CR-V is compelling. If you’re shopping this group, it’s a must-drive.

Send Kelsey an email  

 

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2014 Honda CR-V base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Overall rating
5/5
Combined side rating front seat
5/5
Combined side rating rear seat
5/5
Frontal barrier crash rating driver
4/5
Frontal barrier crash rating passenger
5/5
Overall frontal barrier crash rating
5/5
Overall side crash rating
5/5
Rollover rating
4/5
Side barrier rating
5/5
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
5/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
5/5
17.4%
Risk of rollover
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
5/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
5/5
17.4%
Risk of rollover

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
3 years / 36,000 miles
Corrosion
5 years
Powertrain
5 years / 60,000 miles

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
10 years old or newer from their original in-service date at the time of sale.
Basic
100 days / 5,000 miles
Dealer certification
112 point inspection

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Consumer reviews

4.6 / 5
Based on 333 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.5
Interior 4.5
Performance 4.5
Value 4.5
Exterior 4.5
Reliability 4.7

Most recent

Good car but it 1.

Good car but it 1. can't tow anything over 1.2k pounds which sucks for an SUV. 2. It gets dusty and dirty very easily which make it look ugly. 3. The headlights are dim which makes it not as good for night driving
  • Does not recommend this car
Comfort 4.0
Interior 3.0
Performance 4.0
Value 4.0
Exterior 3.0
Reliability 3.0
6 people out of 13 found this review helpful. Did you?
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Reliable is an understatement!

Bought in 2017 with 35K on it, this is my second CRV and fifth Honda since '95. It now has @ 140K on it and it drives almost like new. I had one major repair, a new drive shaft ($1100) which was the FIRST major repair on ANY of my Hondas since '95. Reliable and then some. Great resale value.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 4.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
10 people out of 10 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2014 Honda CR-V?

The 2014 Honda CR-V is available in 3 trim levels:

  • EX (2 styles)
  • EX-L (6 styles)
  • LX (2 styles)

What is the MPG of the 2014 Honda CR-V?

The 2014 Honda CR-V offers up to 23 MPG in city driving and 31 MPG on the highway. These figures are based on EPA mileage ratings and are for comparison purposes only. The actual mileage will vary depending on vehicle options, trim level, driving conditions, driving habits, vehicle maintenance, and other factors.

What are some similar vehicles and competitors of the 2014 Honda CR-V?

The 2014 Honda CR-V compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2014 Honda CR-V reliable?

The 2014 Honda CR-V has an average reliability rating of 4.7 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2014 Honda CR-V owners.

Is the 2014 Honda CR-V a good SUV?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2014 Honda CR-V. 89.2% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.6 / 5
Based on 333 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.5
  • Interior: 4.5
  • Performance: 4.5
  • Value: 4.5
  • Exterior: 4.5
  • Reliability: 4.7

Honda CR-V history

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