2009
Honda Pilot

Starts at:
$38,495
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New 2009 Honda Pilot
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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 2WD 4dr LX
    Starts at
    $27,695
    17 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr LX
    Starts at
    $29,295
    16 City / 22 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr EX
    Starts at
    $30,495
    17 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr EX
    Starts at
    $32,095
    16 City / 22 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr EX-L
    Starts at
    $33,695
    17 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr EX-L w/RES
    Starts at
    $35,295
    17 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr EX-L
    Starts at
    $35,295
    16 City / 22 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr Touring w/Navi
    Starts at
    $36,895
    17 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr EX-L w/RES
    Starts at
    $36,895
    16 City / 22 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr Touring w/Navi
    Starts at
    $38,495
    16 City / 22 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 2WD 4dr Touring w/RES & Navi
    Starts at
    $38,495
    17 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4WD 4dr Touring w/RES & Navi
    Starts at
    $40,095
    16 City / 22 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Four Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot 2009 Honda Pilot

Notable features

Seats eight
V-6 with cylinder deactivation
Standard stability system
Slab-sided looks
New high-end Touring trim

The good & the bad

The good

Highway poise
Limited body roll
First- and second-row comfort
Transmission refinement

The bad

White-faced gauges
Knob-based navigation system
Popular features only available on higher trims

Expert 2009 Honda Pilot review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Warren Brown
Full article
our expert's take


NEW YORK — Honda has a touching TV advertisement for its 2009 Pilot midsize sport-utility vehicle. A father drives in from the suburbs to one of this city’s soup kitchens. It appears to be early Thanksgiving or Christmas morning. The streets are damp, empty, cold. The feeling is desolate. The father is accompanied by a preteen son, who assists his dad in unloading big boxes of food. A soup-kitchen aide tells the son that his father is “a good man.” The feeling is warm, gracious, heroic.

But here’s the reality. I drive a 2009 Honda Pilot Touring with navigation into the city on Thanksgiving eve. It is a stupid thing to do. Under most circumstances, it is stupid to drive a midsize or full-size sport-utility vehicle into New York, where the streets are poorly maintained and frequently congested; the drivers are among the rudest and most aggressive in the world; and the pedestrians are equally devoid of courtesy and common sense.

I’ve come in from our family’s home in Cornwall, N.Y., for a medical appointment at the Rogosin Institute on East 70th Street. Already, I’ve almost lost the right side-view mirror in a squeeze play exiting the Palisades Parkway and entering the ramp to the George Washington Bridge. I was in the correct lane. It didn’t matter. Another driver wanted to get ahead of me.

The only good thing about driving a big SUV around here is that most of the newer models, such as the 2009 Pilot, have flexible side-view mirrors, which tend to bend without breaking or shattering when hit. My Pilot’s mirror got hit a lot.

Traffic on the George Washington Bridge heading east onto Harlem River Drive was at a standstill. I tried to bypass it by taking the Henry Hudson Parkway on the city’s West Side and crossing to the East Side via a side street. That was another dumb idea. This city stages a Thanksgiving Day parade featuring grandiose inflatable balloons. On Thanksgiving eve, it uses several West Side streets to inflate and stage those balloons. Those streets were blocked. Traffic was a mess.

I finally arrived at a parking garage adjacent to the Rogosin Institute. There was no kind-faced attendant to greet me — no warmth, no friendly greeting, not even a “Happy Thanksgiving.”

“You can have the night differential for $11.38. But you’re oversized. You’ll have to pay $10 extra. How long you’re staying here?”

“Why is that important?” I asked.

“Because the regular daily charge is $21.38 plus $10 for being oversized,” the attendant said. That turned out to be a bargain.

Rather than drive back to Cornwall after my appointment, I decided to grab some sack time at the lower East Side apartment of my youngest daughter, Kafi. I parked overnight at a Kinney System garage on East 9th Street. The cost for one night was $50.88 — $30.88 for general garage privileges and $20 extra for being oversized.

Kafi, a TV reporter here, was less than sympathetic.

“This is New York, Dad,” she said as we were driving to Cornwall for Thanksgiving dinner. “People who are crazy enough to drive big SUVs here park them on the street, even in rough neighborhoods. Garages here hate those things. They take up too much space.”

I relate all of this, dear reader, by way of emotional disclosure. After a week of driving the Pilot in and around this city, I wound up hating it, too.

It is simply too big for daily urban use. It does not fit in a place such as New York. It is not the least bit maneuverable in congested downtown traffic. It gets in the way and, I fear, encourages the unhinged among us to embrace road rage and other dangerous driving behavior.

And it doesn’t help that Honda has chosen to erase the relatively pleasant appearance of earlier Pilots in favor of something that looks meaner, more aggressive. Here is what I mean:

I’ve also driven predecessor Pilots into this city. They looked more like station wagons, a demeanor that often caused parking attendants to argue over — sometimes to my advantage — whether they should assess the “oversized” fee. There were no such arguments with the current edition of the Pilot. “You’re oversized!” I felt as if I was being accused of the worst sort of stupidity.

And, again, the new Pilot did little to relieve my chagrin. What it offers in commendable utility and third-row seats that satisfactorily accommodate adults, it lacks in crisp handling and acceleration. It is an oversized box on wheels. I will try to avoid driving it — or anything shaped like it — in this city in the future.

ON WHEELS WITH WARREN BROWN Listen from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesdays on WMET World Radio (1160 AM) or http://www.wmet1160.com.

2009 Honda Pilot review: Our expert's take
By Warren Brown


NEW YORK — Honda has a touching TV advertisement for its 2009 Pilot midsize sport-utility vehicle. A father drives in from the suburbs to one of this city’s soup kitchens. It appears to be early Thanksgiving or Christmas morning. The streets are damp, empty, cold. The feeling is desolate. The father is accompanied by a preteen son, who assists his dad in unloading big boxes of food. A soup-kitchen aide tells the son that his father is “a good man.” The feeling is warm, gracious, heroic.

But here’s the reality. I drive a 2009 Honda Pilot Touring with navigation into the city on Thanksgiving eve. It is a stupid thing to do. Under most circumstances, it is stupid to drive a midsize or full-size sport-utility vehicle into New York, where the streets are poorly maintained and frequently congested; the drivers are among the rudest and most aggressive in the world; and the pedestrians are equally devoid of courtesy and common sense.

I’ve come in from our family’s home in Cornwall, N.Y., for a medical appointment at the Rogosin Institute on East 70th Street. Already, I’ve almost lost the right side-view mirror in a squeeze play exiting the Palisades Parkway and entering the ramp to the George Washington Bridge. I was in the correct lane. It didn’t matter. Another driver wanted to get ahead of me.

The only good thing about driving a big SUV around here is that most of the newer models, such as the 2009 Pilot, have flexible side-view mirrors, which tend to bend without breaking or shattering when hit. My Pilot’s mirror got hit a lot.

Traffic on the George Washington Bridge heading east onto Harlem River Drive was at a standstill. I tried to bypass it by taking the Henry Hudson Parkway on the city’s West Side and crossing to the East Side via a side street. That was another dumb idea. This city stages a Thanksgiving Day parade featuring grandiose inflatable balloons. On Thanksgiving eve, it uses several West Side streets to inflate and stage those balloons. Those streets were blocked. Traffic was a mess.

I finally arrived at a parking garage adjacent to the Rogosin Institute. There was no kind-faced attendant to greet me — no warmth, no friendly greeting, not even a “Happy Thanksgiving.”

“You can have the night differential for $11.38. But you’re oversized. You’ll have to pay $10 extra. How long you’re staying here?”

“Why is that important?” I asked.

“Because the regular daily charge is $21.38 plus $10 for being oversized,” the attendant said. That turned out to be a bargain.

Rather than drive back to Cornwall after my appointment, I decided to grab some sack time at the lower East Side apartment of my youngest daughter, Kafi. I parked overnight at a Kinney System garage on East 9th Street. The cost for one night was $50.88 — $30.88 for general garage privileges and $20 extra for being oversized.

Kafi, a TV reporter here, was less than sympathetic.

“This is New York, Dad,” she said as we were driving to Cornwall for Thanksgiving dinner. “People who are crazy enough to drive big SUVs here park them on the street, even in rough neighborhoods. Garages here hate those things. They take up too much space.”

I relate all of this, dear reader, by way of emotional disclosure. After a week of driving the Pilot in and around this city, I wound up hating it, too.

It is simply too big for daily urban use. It does not fit in a place such as New York. It is not the least bit maneuverable in congested downtown traffic. It gets in the way and, I fear, encourages the unhinged among us to embrace road rage and other dangerous driving behavior.

And it doesn’t help that Honda has chosen to erase the relatively pleasant appearance of earlier Pilots in favor of something that looks meaner, more aggressive. Here is what I mean:

I’ve also driven predecessor Pilots into this city. They looked more like station wagons, a demeanor that often caused parking attendants to argue over — sometimes to my advantage — whether they should assess the “oversized” fee. There were no such arguments with the current edition of the Pilot. “You’re oversized!” I felt as if I was being accused of the worst sort of stupidity.

And, again, the new Pilot did little to relieve my chagrin. What it offers in commendable utility and third-row seats that satisfactorily accommodate adults, it lacks in crisp handling and acceleration. It is an oversized box on wheels. I will try to avoid driving it — or anything shaped like it — in this city in the future.

ON WHEELS WITH WARREN BROWN Listen from noon to 1 p.m. Tuesdays on WMET World Radio (1160 AM) or http://www.wmet1160.com.

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2009 Honda Pilot base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Frontal driver
5/5
Frontal passenger
5/5
Nhtsa rollover rating
4/5
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

4.5 / 5
Based on 86 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.6
Interior 4.4
Performance 4.3
Value 4.4
Exterior 4.3
Reliability 4.7

Most recent

Always buy Honda.

Great vehicle. Roomy, reliable, functional and smooth. Used my Pilot for work as a contractor while shuttling the family around town. The perfect SUV for anyone!
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
16 people out of 16 found this review helpful. Did you?
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One of the most reliable cars I have owned

I love this car I love the size it is very comfortable and any passenger is always comfortable and it plenty of room. It’s the perfect car
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Having fun
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 5.0
Performance 5.0
Value 5.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
11 people out of 11 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2009 Honda Pilot?

The 2009 Honda Pilot is available in 5 trim levels:

  • EX (2 styles)
  • EX-L (3 styles)
  • EX-L w/RES (1 style)
  • LX (2 styles)
  • Touring (4 styles)

What is the MPG of the 2009 Honda Pilot?

The 2009 Honda Pilot offers up to 17 MPG in city driving and 23 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 2009 Honda Pilot?

The 2009 Honda Pilot compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2009 Honda Pilot reliable?

The 2009 Honda Pilot 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 2009 Honda Pilot owners.

Is the 2009 Honda Pilot a good SUV?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2009 Honda Pilot. 89.5% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.5 / 5
Based on 86 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.6
  • Interior: 4.4
  • Performance: 4.3
  • Value: 4.4
  • Exterior: 4.3
  • Reliability: 4.7

Honda Pilot history

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