2010
Honda Element

Starts at:
$20,525
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New 2010 Honda Element
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 2WD 5dr Auto LX
    Starts at
    $20,525
    20 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 5dr Auto LX
    Starts at
    $21,775
    19 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 5dr Auto EX
    Starts at
    $22,635
    20 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 5dr Auto EX
    Starts at
    $23,885
    19 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 5dr Auto SC
    Starts at
    $24,320
    20 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 5dr Auto EX w/Navi
    Starts at
    $24,335
    20 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 5dr Auto EX w/Navi
    Starts at
    $25,585
    19 City / 24 Hwy
    MPG
    4
    Seat capacity
    Gas I4
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element 2010 Honda Element

Notable features

Roomy, functional interior
FWD or AWD
Sport-tuned SC variant
Optional navigation system
Optional backup camera

The good & the bad

The good

Cargo versatility
Safety features
Backseat room

The bad

Blind spots
Modest highway acceleration

Expert 2010 Honda Element review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Scott Burgess
Full article
our expert's take


I have always liked the Honda Element.

There is a quirkiness about this vehicle that helps you overlook some of its misgivings. It doesn’t have the best ride, and it’s kind of noisy, but it still warms your heart.

It’s an automotive pug, so ugly it’s kind of cute.

And like a well-bred dog, the Element improves with every generation. When Honda updated the Element for the 2009 model year, it cleaned up the exterior lines and provided more comfort inside. All of the driver-friendly features remain — the little ledge near the glove box and a nice low center console. It feels like the old Element, just better.

The Element still boasts those ingenious second-row seats that fold flat and then up against the outside walls, creating a cavern of space. The plastic-covered floor is easy to clean (please, don’t use a hose on it; water and wiring don’t mix), and the boxy shape provides maximum utility — nearly 75 cubic feet of space.

For the 2010 model, Honda has begun offering a $995 accessory package to transform an Element into a more dog-friendly version. Technically, this is not a new model in the lineup, but it’s one of those special features that the press and crowds at auto shows, myself included, were wagging our tongues over.

The Element has always been dog friendly and now, it is supposed to be dog friendlier. It’s almost too much of a good thing.

After a week of testing, my dog, Bogart, a floppy-eared shepherd, decided he would rather walk. Me? I’m not particularly fond of it either. It’s a great idea that doesn’t work out in real life, kind of like a chow chow.

Now in fairness to Honda Motor Co., there very well could be dogs that like riding in a comfortable kennel with a nice sleeping pad and spill-proof water dish. These are the kind of dogs that don’t care about their owners, never listen and constantly plot their escape. In most places, they’re known as cats.

Safe, but no fun for Fido

Really, this system is safer for man and beast. If a person is in an accident, a dog becomes a projectile — and could result in injury to the owner and animal. Eventually, California will pass a law requiring dogs to wear seat belts or be in some sort of container — and the federal fat cats will follow suit. (Most people agree with these principles and expect everyone else to follow them, just not them, kind of like the Bible.)

Ride-loving Bogart, however, would rather chew a good book than ride in the back.

First of all, he was too big for the crate and too spoiled to ride in it. At 90-something pounds and standing 30 inches tall, he went over the kennel’s 80-pound limit. But for the sake of testing, I used two Beggin’ Strips and tricked him into it to get a measure of what he thought. Beggin’ Strips good; crate, not so much.

Bogart enjoys a seat with a view — due to his ever-vigilant search for tennis balls, which the Element kennel doesn’t offer. Instead, light leaks in through the ventilated top and an electric fan on the door can keep him cool. He could only hear my voice as we drove, until I stopped, opened up the back and let him ride with the grown-ups.

The Dog Friendly Element also provides an extendable ramp that lets man’s best feeble friend saunter up into the zipper-closing kennel — it’s very cute — and the most annoying feature around. It collapses nicely and fits right below the crate — and clanks around every time you hit the brake or gas.

The most annoying thing about the kennel is not being able to fold up the seats when it’s there. The folding seats give the Element a lot of its utility.

And if you have the kennel and not the dog, you have to put whatever you may happen to buy, say groceries, where the dog was sleeping earlier (or in the second-row seats). Bogart may be clean for a dog, but he’s not a dinner table.

The kennel and ramp easily pull out of the Element. It’s lightweight so moving it around is not a problem. This is good. The best place to keep this kennel is in your garage, where it can collect dust until some one runs it over and then you throw it away — along with the ramp.

Seats a winning feature

The rest of the Dog Friendly features are kind of cool. The dog-bone pattern floor mats look awesome, though they can be a little slippery if your shoes are wet.

The hair-resistant second row seat covers look cool and work very well. Even what little strands of barbed wire Bogart shed didn’t stick to them. I’d like to have my entire house upholstered in that fabric — as well as a couple of suits. Think of the money I’d save on lint rollers.

Really, the package seems to balance practicality with personality. It’s fun — though it may be a little too much for some people. I love my dog, but every time I leave him home, I don’t need to tell the world I’m a dog person. Most people can tell that without me saying so.

And what do you do with this Element once your dog is gone? It’s like owning a chew toy without any teeth.

The paw print on the front driver’s side fender and the little Dog Friendly badge on the lift gate serve only as reminders of summers past.

Really, all of the accessories other than the kennel are nice, and Honda should consider selling them individually — right now, there’s an all-or-nothing tactic that feels a little heavy-handed. And a heavy hand is not dog friendly.

I still like the Element, but I like my dog more.

So $1,000 worth of tennis balls would be the better investment.

sburgess@detnews.com (313) 223-3217

Doggone accessories

For the 2010 Honda Element EX, Honda offers a $995 Dog Friendly package that includes:

— A soft-sided cargo area car kennel made from seat belt-grade netting

— A cushioned pet bed in the cargo area with an elevated platform

— A 12V DC rear ventilation fan

— Second-row seat covers with a dog pattern design (matches the bed fabric)

— An extendable ramp (stores under the pet bed platform)

— All-season rubber floor mats with a toy bone pattern

— A spill-resistant water bowl

— Dog Friendly exterior emblems

Report card

Overall : *** for the Element

** for the dog accessories

Exterior : Good. Additional badges add a friendly element to an already friendly vehicle. The Element maintains its distinctive looks.

Interior: Good. Protective seat covers are cute and work very well. The rubber floor mat adds more personality. Feels dog friendly.

Performance: Fair. The kennel lacks the practical side for many dog owners. It looks good on paper but feels like it was designed by cats.

Pros: A totally dog-friendly vehicle.

Cons: Loses some function and utility with the dog kennel in use.

Grading Scale

**** Excellent *** Good ** Fair * Poor

2010 Honda Element EX Dog Friendly Edition

Price: $23,630

Type: Five-passenger, front-wheel or all-wheel drive

Engine: 2.4-liter I-4

Power: 166 horsepower; 161 pound-feet torque

Transmission: Five-speed automatic transmission

EPA gas mileage: FWD, 20 mpg city / 25 mpg highway; AWD, 19 mpg city / 24 mpg highway

2010 Honda Element review: Our expert's take
By Scott Burgess


I have always liked the Honda Element.

There is a quirkiness about this vehicle that helps you overlook some of its misgivings. It doesn’t have the best ride, and it’s kind of noisy, but it still warms your heart.

It’s an automotive pug, so ugly it’s kind of cute.

And like a well-bred dog, the Element improves with every generation. When Honda updated the Element for the 2009 model year, it cleaned up the exterior lines and provided more comfort inside. All of the driver-friendly features remain — the little ledge near the glove box and a nice low center console. It feels like the old Element, just better.

The Element still boasts those ingenious second-row seats that fold flat and then up against the outside walls, creating a cavern of space. The plastic-covered floor is easy to clean (please, don’t use a hose on it; water and wiring don’t mix), and the boxy shape provides maximum utility — nearly 75 cubic feet of space.

For the 2010 model, Honda has begun offering a $995 accessory package to transform an Element into a more dog-friendly version. Technically, this is not a new model in the lineup, but it’s one of those special features that the press and crowds at auto shows, myself included, were wagging our tongues over.

The Element has always been dog friendly and now, it is supposed to be dog friendlier. It’s almost too much of a good thing.

After a week of testing, my dog, Bogart, a floppy-eared shepherd, decided he would rather walk. Me? I’m not particularly fond of it either. It’s a great idea that doesn’t work out in real life, kind of like a chow chow.

Now in fairness to Honda Motor Co., there very well could be dogs that like riding in a comfortable kennel with a nice sleeping pad and spill-proof water dish. These are the kind of dogs that don’t care about their owners, never listen and constantly plot their escape. In most places, they’re known as cats.

Safe, but no fun for Fido

Really, this system is safer for man and beast. If a person is in an accident, a dog becomes a projectile — and could result in injury to the owner and animal. Eventually, California will pass a law requiring dogs to wear seat belts or be in some sort of container — and the federal fat cats will follow suit. (Most people agree with these principles and expect everyone else to follow them, just not them, kind of like the Bible.)

Ride-loving Bogart, however, would rather chew a good book than ride in the back.

First of all, he was too big for the crate and too spoiled to ride in it. At 90-something pounds and standing 30 inches tall, he went over the kennel’s 80-pound limit. But for the sake of testing, I used two Beggin’ Strips and tricked him into it to get a measure of what he thought. Beggin’ Strips good; crate, not so much.

Bogart enjoys a seat with a view — due to his ever-vigilant search for tennis balls, which the Element kennel doesn’t offer. Instead, light leaks in through the ventilated top and an electric fan on the door can keep him cool. He could only hear my voice as we drove, until I stopped, opened up the back and let him ride with the grown-ups.

The Dog Friendly Element also provides an extendable ramp that lets man’s best feeble friend saunter up into the zipper-closing kennel — it’s very cute — and the most annoying feature around. It collapses nicely and fits right below the crate — and clanks around every time you hit the brake or gas.

The most annoying thing about the kennel is not being able to fold up the seats when it’s there. The folding seats give the Element a lot of its utility.

And if you have the kennel and not the dog, you have to put whatever you may happen to buy, say groceries, where the dog was sleeping earlier (or in the second-row seats). Bogart may be clean for a dog, but he’s not a dinner table.

The kennel and ramp easily pull out of the Element. It’s lightweight so moving it around is not a problem. This is good. The best place to keep this kennel is in your garage, where it can collect dust until some one runs it over and then you throw it away — along with the ramp.

Seats a winning feature

The rest of the Dog Friendly features are kind of cool. The dog-bone pattern floor mats look awesome, though they can be a little slippery if your shoes are wet.

The hair-resistant second row seat covers look cool and work very well. Even what little strands of barbed wire Bogart shed didn’t stick to them. I’d like to have my entire house upholstered in that fabric — as well as a couple of suits. Think of the money I’d save on lint rollers.

Really, the package seems to balance practicality with personality. It’s fun — though it may be a little too much for some people. I love my dog, but every time I leave him home, I don’t need to tell the world I’m a dog person. Most people can tell that without me saying so.

And what do you do with this Element once your dog is gone? It’s like owning a chew toy without any teeth.

The paw print on the front driver’s side fender and the little Dog Friendly badge on the lift gate serve only as reminders of summers past.

Really, all of the accessories other than the kennel are nice, and Honda should consider selling them individually — right now, there’s an all-or-nothing tactic that feels a little heavy-handed. And a heavy hand is not dog friendly.

I still like the Element, but I like my dog more.

So $1,000 worth of tennis balls would be the better investment.

sburgess@detnews.com (313) 223-3217

Doggone accessories

For the 2010 Honda Element EX, Honda offers a $995 Dog Friendly package that includes:

— A soft-sided cargo area car kennel made from seat belt-grade netting

— A cushioned pet bed in the cargo area with an elevated platform

— A 12V DC rear ventilation fan

— Second-row seat covers with a dog pattern design (matches the bed fabric)

— An extendable ramp (stores under the pet bed platform)

— All-season rubber floor mats with a toy bone pattern

— A spill-resistant water bowl

— Dog Friendly exterior emblems

Report card

Overall : *** for the Element

** for the dog accessories

Exterior : Good. Additional badges add a friendly element to an already friendly vehicle. The Element maintains its distinctive looks.

Interior: Good. Protective seat covers are cute and work very well. The rubber floor mat adds more personality. Feels dog friendly.

Performance: Fair. The kennel lacks the practical side for many dog owners. It looks good on paper but feels like it was designed by cats.

Pros: A totally dog-friendly vehicle.

Cons: Loses some function and utility with the dog kennel in use.

Grading Scale

**** Excellent *** Good ** Fair * Poor

2010 Honda Element EX Dog Friendly Edition

Price: $23,630

Type: Five-passenger, front-wheel or all-wheel drive

Engine: 2.4-liter I-4

Power: 166 horsepower; 161 pound-feet torque

Transmission: Five-speed automatic transmission

EPA gas mileage: FWD, 20 mpg city / 25 mpg highway; AWD, 19 mpg city / 24 mpg highway

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2010 Honda Element base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Frontal driver
5/5
Frontal passenger
5/5
Nhtsa rollover rating
3/5
Side driver
5/5
Side rear passenger
5/5

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

4.8 / 5
Based on 28 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.3
Interior 4.5
Performance 4.1
Value 4.7
Exterior 4.2
Reliability 4.9

Most recent

Love my Element!

This is my second Honda Element and it is perfect for transporting 1 large dog and 2 cats in kennels to the mountain cabin and return. The roomy interior is comfortable and it has no problem at all with snow. Not the best gas mileage but I wouldn’t drive anything else!
  • Purchased a New car
  • Used for Having fun
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 4.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
9 people out of 9 found this review helpful. Did you?
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Love my Element

This is the second Element that I have owned. I love the versatility that it has. I can haul everything that I want to then take a house and clean it out if needed. It’s not for everyone but is great for me.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Transporting family
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
4 people out of 4 found this review helpful. Did you?
Yes No

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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2010 Honda Element?

The 2010 Honda Element is available in 4 trim levels:

  • EX (2 styles)
  • EX w/Navi (2 styles)
  • LX (2 styles)
  • SC (1 style)

What is the MPG of the 2010 Honda Element?

The 2010 Honda Element offers up to 20 MPG in city driving and 25 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 2010 Honda Element?

The 2010 Honda Element compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2010 Honda Element reliable?

The 2010 Honda Element has an average reliability rating of 4.9 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2010 Honda Element owners.

Is the 2010 Honda Element a good SUV?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2010 Honda Element. 96.4% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.8 / 5
Based on 28 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.3
  • Interior: 4.5
  • Performance: 4.1
  • Value: 4.7
  • Exterior: 4.2
  • Reliability: 4.9
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