2011
Subaru Legacy

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$25,995
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  • 4dr Sdn H4 Man 2.5i
    Starts at
    $19,995
    19 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
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  • 4dr Sdn H4 Man 2.5i Prem AWP/Pwr Moon
    Starts at
    $20,995
    19 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Man 2.5i Prem AWP
    Starts at
    $20,995
    19 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Man 2.5i Prem
    Starts at
    $20,995
    19 City / 27 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i
    Starts at
    $20,995
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Prem
    Starts at
    $21,995
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Prem AWP
    Starts at
    $21,995
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Prem AWP/Pwr Moon
    Starts at
    $21,995
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Prem AWP/HK/Pwr Moon
    Starts at
    $21,995
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Prem AWP/HK Audio
    Starts at
    $21,995
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H6 Auto 3.6R
    Starts at
    $24,995
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Ltd Pwr Moon/Navigation
    Starts at
    $25,295
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Ltd Pwr Moon
    Starts at
    $25,295
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Auto 2.5i Ltd
    Starts at
    $25,295
    23 City / 31 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H6 Auto 3.6R Prem Pwr Moon
    Starts at
    $25,995
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H6 Auto 3.6R Prem
    Starts at
    $25,995
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H6 Auto 3.6R Prem HK Audio/Pwr Moon
    Starts at
    $25,995
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H6 Auto 3.6R Ltd Pwr Moon
    Starts at
    $28,295
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H6 Auto 3.6R Ltd
    Starts at
    $28,295
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H6 Auto 3.6R Ltd Pwr Moon/Navigation
    Starts at
    $28,295
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Gas Flat 6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Man 2.5GT Ltd
    Starts at
    $31,395
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Turbocharged Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 4dr Sdn H4 Man 2.5GT Ltd Navigation
    Starts at
    $31,395
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    5
    Seat capacity
    Turbocharged Gas Flat 4
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy 2011 Subaru Legacy

Notable features

Larger, restyled interior
Three engine choices
Standard AWD
Manual or automatic
Standard electronic stability system

The good & the bad

The good

Responsive steering
Roomy backseat
Good gas mileage for an AWD car
Available turbocharged drivetrain
Well-equipped base model

The bad

Middling cabin materials
Tiny stereo controls
Overly restrictive USB/iPod integration
Significant body roll in base model
Road noise

Expert 2011 Subaru Legacy review

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

Editor’s note: This review was written in July 2009 about the 2010 Subaru Legacy. Little of substance has changed with this year’s model. To see what’s new for 2011, click here, or check out a side-by-side comparison of the two model years.

The Subaru Legacy has been redesigned for 2010 and now boasts a bigger backseat and improved gas mileage, with the same nimble steering the 2009 model had. Snowbelt drivers will appreciate its standard all-wheel drive, which few competitors offer.

Among midsize family sedans, the Legacy is a jack of all trades. In trying to do everything, though, it doesn’t master very much. The Legacy doesn’t feel as high-rent as some of its competitors — particularly the suburb-infesting Honda Accord. Nor will its polarizing styling work for everyone.

The 2010 Legacy — you can compare it with the ’09 model here — comes in base, Premium and Limited trim levels, with a four- or six-cylinder engine. The related Outback wagon, also redesigned for 2010, is covered here. I drove a four-cylinder Legacy Limited. There’s also a turbocharged four-cylinder available in Premium and Limited trims, though it only comes with a stick shift.

On the Road
Today’s four-cylinder family cars are hardly the dogs they used to be (my point of reference being the mid-90s Accord I drove in high school — a car that won me few stoplight-revving contests and even fewer dates). The Legacy gets up and goes without protest, with around-town oomph that’s comparable to a four-cylinder Accord or Toyota Camry. At highway speeds, Subaru’s continuously variable automatic transmission takes a while to serve up the passing power you asked for, and the same is true on hills. If you prefer to shift your own gears — or just want to save $1,000 — a six-speed manual comes standard.

The all-wheel-drive system provides a confident grip — six-cylinder models get a more sophisticated all-wheel-drive system that’s supposed to give the car a more rear-wheel-drive-like experience — and the steering wheel carves corners with admirable precision. Unfortunately, those same maneuvers cause excessive body roll, like you’d expect in a Camry. Subaru says suspension tuning is the same across all variants.

Ride quality is good and wind noise is low, but road noise with my test car’s 17-inch wheels seemed loud. Above 70 mph, crosswinds can make the steering wheel a bit jittery. I spent a good chunk of time on the interstate making minor corrections to stay on course. The Camry has its own problems — mostly its numb, lollygagging highway steering — but the Accord feels more settled than the other two.

Four-wheel-disc antilock brakes are standard, with turbo and six-cylinder models getting beefier discs. My Legacy’s brakes worked well, with a linear pedal feel and decent stopping power.

Gas mileage, at an EPA-estimated 23/31 mpg city/highway with the CVT, is better than last year’s four-speed automatic Legacy, but it trails segment leaders like the 33-mpg Camry and Chevrolet Malibu and the 34-mpg Ford Fusion. Subaru’s standard all-wheel drive adds weight. With that in mind, its mileage is hardly below par: The all-wheel-drive Fusion’s best mpg numbers are 18/25 mpg (though that’s with a V-6 engine). Ford doesn’t offer all-wheel drive with the four-cylinder, so the Legacy’s price of entry for an all-wheel-drive midsize sedan is roughly $8,000 less than Ford’s, with 5 mpg of fuel savings to boot.

The Legacy’s gas mileage with a manual transmission and non-turbo four-cylinder is 19/27 mpg. Trade the 170-horsepower four-cylinder for either of the more powerful drivetrains — the 256-hp six-cylinder with a five-speed automatic or a 265-hp, turbo four-cylinder with a six-speed manual — and mileage drops to 18/25 mpg.

Horsepower fans, take note: The turbocharged Legacy requires premium fuel. Other drivetrains use regular gas.

The Outside
I liked the outgoing Legacy. Its appearance — assertive up front, aggressive in profile — set it apart from a number of tubbier-looking competitors. Sadly, times have changed. The Legacy has caught up in girth, which Subaru says was in response to shoppers finding the last one too small. It isn’t appreciably heavier by the numbers, but it no longer looks skinny, at least to my eyes.

The actual styling is a whole other affair. I see some Infiniti G37 up front, a Saab 9-5 in back and some Subaru Impreza along the sides. I find it not so much controversial — that can be a good thing — as simply overwrought, chaotic even. It’s no worse than the Accord, another car stuck nursing wounds from the ugly stick. Decide for yourself about the Legacy’s appeal, and drop me an email when you do.

The Inside
The cabin boasts more conventional lines and adult-friendly room, with a number of welcome changes. The doors now have window frames, yielding a more substantial thunk when you shut them. The backseat gains 4 inches of legroom, Subaru says, and it’s about as roomy as the Accord’s, which has been a benchmark for backseat comfort since its 2008 redesign.

Still, I can’t shake the feeling that the interior feels low-rent. Too many areas — the wood trim, the silver-painted center controls, the italicized gauges — look trendy, chintzy almost, as if Subaru picked style over substance in a dozen small ways. (To be fair, other Cars.com staffers found the interior quality more to their liking.) The center controls feel needlessly crammed together, and major dials like volume and stereo tuning are too small to find without looking away from the road. The leather upholstery falls closer to Mazda6 territory than to Accord or Camry cowhide. Small gripes, perhaps, but the sum of them all determines whether a cabin feels like something $20,000 to $30,000 ought to get you. Relative to an Accord, Malibu or Fusion, the Legacy’s interior feels a few grand short.

Drivers of various sizes should find the space adequate, thanks to long adjustment ranges for both seats. The front seats have less padding than the Fusion’s or Camry’s chairs, however, and my back grew sore over a few long interstate trips. Shorter drivers should also note that the center armrest doesn’t extend forward to accommodate their elbows, as several competitors’ armrests now do.

Cargo volume, at 14.7 cubic feet, is comparable to that of an Accord or Camry. If you’re looking to pack in suitcases or golf clubs, the Mazda6 and Fusion lead the pack with more than 16 cubic feet apiece.

Tech Features
The optional navigation system includes a large screen with excellent graphics and plenty of street labels, but some simple actions — canceling route guidance, for instance — require an excessive number of intermediary screens.

An MP3 jack is standard on all trims, and the navigation system adds USB/iPod integration. The iPod controls leave something to be desired: A few songs into my iPod’s classic rock playlist, I wanted to meander off into some deeper Who cuts. No dice. As Subaru later confirmed, the Legacy’s system doesn’t let you change playlists, albums or artists unless the car is stopped. I’ll agree that distracted driving should be avoided — which is why a lot of navigation systems don’t allow you to enter new destinations while you’re on the move — but locking out simple music changes is equivalent to barring radio-station changes during a road trip. I’ve never seen another system that does this. It’s nannying at its worst, and it defeats the point of having a massive song library on your iPod in the first place.

The navigation system includes a backup camera, something many family sedans now include. Just a few years ago, you were lucky to find backup cameras in luxury cars.

Safety & Pricing
The new Legacy has yet to be tested by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Standard safety features for 2010 include six airbags, an electronic stability system and antilock brakes. Click here to see the full list. Active head restraints are no longer included — they were standard last year — but Subaru says the 2010 Legacy’s seats use a whiplash-mitigating design.

The base Legacy 2.5i starts at $19,995. That’s $800 less than last year, and in league with competitors’ base trims — not bad, given the Legacy’s standard all-wheel drive. Other four-cylinder trims include the 2.5i Premium and 2.5i Limited. The six-cylinder Legacy 3.6R comes in base ($24,995), Premium ($25,995) and Limited ($27,995) trims, while the turbocharged 2.5GT comes only as a Premium ($27,995) or Limited ($29,995). Premium models get a power driver’s seat, while the Limited adds a power passenger seat, leather upholstery and dual-zone automatic climate control. Heated seats, a moonroof and Harman Kardon audio are optional across most trims; the navigation system is optional only on the Limited trim level.

Check all the boxes, and a 2.5GT Limited tops out around $33,000.

Legacy in the Market
Subaru calls the 2010 Legacy a response to what its customers wanted — durability, value and performance, with a bit more cabin room. Those customers ought to be happy: The Legacy is all that, and it should continue to serve as a mildly unconventional alternative for buyers who equate Accord or Camry ownership with a voyage of the bland. Whether Subaru can go toe-to-toe with those heavy hitters, however, remains to be seen. The Legacy will find its buyers, but until Subaru irons out some usability issues and moves its cabin quality upstream, its midsize sedan will have a tough time breaking into the mainstream.

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.

2011 Subaru Legacy review: Our expert's take
By Kelsey Mays

Editor’s note: This review was written in July 2009 about the 2010 Subaru Legacy. Little of substance has changed with this year’s model. To see what’s new for 2011, click here, or check out a side-by-side comparison of the two model years.

The Subaru Legacy has been redesigned for 2010 and now boasts a bigger backseat and improved gas mileage, with the same nimble steering the 2009 model had. Snowbelt drivers will appreciate its standard all-wheel drive, which few competitors offer.

Among midsize family sedans, the Legacy is a jack of all trades. In trying to do everything, though, it doesn’t master very much. The Legacy doesn’t feel as high-rent as some of its competitors — particularly the suburb-infesting Honda Accord. Nor will its polarizing styling work for everyone.

The 2010 Legacy — you can compare it with the ’09 model here — comes in base, Premium and Limited trim levels, with a four- or six-cylinder engine. The related Outback wagon, also redesigned for 2010, is covered here. I drove a four-cylinder Legacy Limited. There’s also a turbocharged four-cylinder available in Premium and Limited trims, though it only comes with a stick shift.

On the Road
Today’s four-cylinder family cars are hardly the dogs they used to be (my point of reference being the mid-90s Accord I drove in high school — a car that won me few stoplight-revving contests and even fewer dates). The Legacy gets up and goes without protest, with around-town oomph that’s comparable to a four-cylinder Accord or Toyota Camry. At highway speeds, Subaru’s continuously variable automatic transmission takes a while to serve up the passing power you asked for, and the same is true on hills. If you prefer to shift your own gears — or just want to save $1,000 — a six-speed manual comes standard.

The all-wheel-drive system provides a confident grip — six-cylinder models get a more sophisticated all-wheel-drive system that’s supposed to give the car a more rear-wheel-drive-like experience — and the steering wheel carves corners with admirable precision. Unfortunately, those same maneuvers cause excessive body roll, like you’d expect in a Camry. Subaru says suspension tuning is the same across all variants.

Ride quality is good and wind noise is low, but road noise with my test car’s 17-inch wheels seemed loud. Above 70 mph, crosswinds can make the steering wheel a bit jittery. I spent a good chunk of time on the interstate making minor corrections to stay on course. The Camry has its own problems — mostly its numb, lollygagging highway steering — but the Accord feels more settled than the other two.

Four-wheel-disc antilock brakes are standard, with turbo and six-cylinder models getting beefier discs. My Legacy’s brakes worked well, with a linear pedal feel and decent stopping power.

Gas mileage, at an EPA-estimated 23/31 mpg city/highway with the CVT, is better than last year’s four-speed automatic Legacy, but it trails segment leaders like the 33-mpg Camry and Chevrolet Malibu and the 34-mpg Ford Fusion. Subaru’s standard all-wheel drive adds weight. With that in mind, its mileage is hardly below par: The all-wheel-drive Fusion’s best mpg numbers are 18/25 mpg (though that’s with a V-6 engine). Ford doesn’t offer all-wheel drive with the four-cylinder, so the Legacy’s price of entry for an all-wheel-drive midsize sedan is roughly $8,000 less than Ford’s, with 5 mpg of fuel savings to boot.

The Legacy’s gas mileage with a manual transmission and non-turbo four-cylinder is 19/27 mpg. Trade the 170-horsepower four-cylinder for either of the more powerful drivetrains — the 256-hp six-cylinder with a five-speed automatic or a 265-hp, turbo four-cylinder with a six-speed manual — and mileage drops to 18/25 mpg.

Horsepower fans, take note: The turbocharged Legacy requires premium fuel. Other drivetrains use regular gas.

The Outside
I liked the outgoing Legacy. Its appearance — assertive up front, aggressive in profile — set it apart from a number of tubbier-looking competitors. Sadly, times have changed. The Legacy has caught up in girth, which Subaru says was in response to shoppers finding the last one too small. It isn’t appreciably heavier by the numbers, but it no longer looks skinny, at least to my eyes.

The actual styling is a whole other affair. I see some Infiniti G37 up front, a Saab 9-5 in back and some Subaru Impreza along the sides. I find it not so much controversial — that can be a good thing — as simply overwrought, chaotic even. It’s no worse than the Accord, another car stuck nursing wounds from the ugly stick. Decide for yourself about the Legacy’s appeal, and drop me an email when you do.

The Inside
The cabin boasts more conventional lines and adult-friendly room, with a number of welcome changes. The doors now have window frames, yielding a more substantial thunk when you shut them. The backseat gains 4 inches of legroom, Subaru says, and it’s about as roomy as the Accord’s, which has been a benchmark for backseat comfort since its 2008 redesign.

Still, I can’t shake the feeling that the interior feels low-rent. Too many areas — the wood trim, the silver-painted center controls, the italicized gauges — look trendy, chintzy almost, as if Subaru picked style over substance in a dozen small ways. (To be fair, other Cars.com staffers found the interior quality more to their liking.) The center controls feel needlessly crammed together, and major dials like volume and stereo tuning are too small to find without looking away from the road. The leather upholstery falls closer to Mazda6 territory than to Accord or Camry cowhide. Small gripes, perhaps, but the sum of them all determines whether a cabin feels like something $20,000 to $30,000 ought to get you. Relative to an Accord, Malibu or Fusion, the Legacy’s interior feels a few grand short.

Drivers of various sizes should find the space adequate, thanks to long adjustment ranges for both seats. The front seats have less padding than the Fusion’s or Camry’s chairs, however, and my back grew sore over a few long interstate trips. Shorter drivers should also note that the center armrest doesn’t extend forward to accommodate their elbows, as several competitors’ armrests now do.

Cargo volume, at 14.7 cubic feet, is comparable to that of an Accord or Camry. If you’re looking to pack in suitcases or golf clubs, the Mazda6 and Fusion lead the pack with more than 16 cubic feet apiece.

Tech Features
The optional navigation system includes a large screen with excellent graphics and plenty of street labels, but some simple actions — canceling route guidance, for instance — require an excessive number of intermediary screens.

An MP3 jack is standard on all trims, and the navigation system adds USB/iPod integration. The iPod controls leave something to be desired: A few songs into my iPod’s classic rock playlist, I wanted to meander off into some deeper Who cuts. No dice. As Subaru later confirmed, the Legacy’s system doesn’t let you change playlists, albums or artists unless the car is stopped. I’ll agree that distracted driving should be avoided — which is why a lot of navigation systems don’t allow you to enter new destinations while you’re on the move — but locking out simple music changes is equivalent to barring radio-station changes during a road trip. I’ve never seen another system that does this. It’s nannying at its worst, and it defeats the point of having a massive song library on your iPod in the first place.

The navigation system includes a backup camera, something many family sedans now include. Just a few years ago, you were lucky to find backup cameras in luxury cars.

Safety & Pricing
The new Legacy has yet to be tested by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. Standard safety features for 2010 include six airbags, an electronic stability system and antilock brakes. Click here to see the full list. Active head restraints are no longer included — they were standard last year — but Subaru says the 2010 Legacy’s seats use a whiplash-mitigating design.

The base Legacy 2.5i starts at $19,995. That’s $800 less than last year, and in league with competitors’ base trims — not bad, given the Legacy’s standard all-wheel drive. Other four-cylinder trims include the 2.5i Premium and 2.5i Limited. The six-cylinder Legacy 3.6R comes in base ($24,995), Premium ($25,995) and Limited ($27,995) trims, while the turbocharged 2.5GT comes only as a Premium ($27,995) or Limited ($29,995). Premium models get a power driver’s seat, while the Limited adds a power passenger seat, leather upholstery and dual-zone automatic climate control. Heated seats, a moonroof and Harman Kardon audio are optional across most trims; the navigation system is optional only on the Limited trim level.

Check all the boxes, and a 2.5GT Limited tops out around $33,000.

Legacy in the Market
Subaru calls the 2010 Legacy a response to what its customers wanted — durability, value and performance, with a bit more cabin room. Those customers ought to be happy: The Legacy is all that, and it should continue to serve as a mildly unconventional alternative for buyers who equate Accord or Camry ownership with a voyage of the bland. Whether Subaru can go toe-to-toe with those heavy hitters, however, remains to be seen. The Legacy will find its buyers, but until Subaru irons out some usability issues and moves its cabin quality upstream, its midsize sedan will have a tough time breaking into the mainstream.

Send Kelsey an email  

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2011 Subaru Legacy base trim
NHTSA crash test and rollover ratings, scored out of 5.
Overall rating
4/5
Combined side rating front seat
5/5
Combined side rating rear seat
4/5
Frontal barrier crash rating driver
4/5
Frontal barrier crash rating passenger
4/5
Overall frontal barrier crash rating
4/5
Overall side crash rating
4/5
Rollover rating
5/5
Side barrier rating
4/5
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
4/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
3/5
10.1%
Risk of rollover
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
4/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
3/5
10.1%
Risk of rollover

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

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

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
5 years / 80,000 miles
Basic
Coverage available for purchase
Dealer certification
152-point inspection

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Consumer reviews

4.5 / 5
Based on 77 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.6
Interior 4.5
Performance 4.3
Value 4.5
Exterior 4.5
Reliability 4.6

Most recent

Great little car, good gas mileage, comfortable!

Amazing car! Bought it with about 92k miles on it almost a year ago. Great reliability so far, no issues at all. Very well maintained, my only issue is that it doesn't have Bluetooth, which, I know, it's a minor thing, but my old car had it (2013 base Subaru Forester, -10/10 do not recommend). The Legacy still drives like brand new, and is very comfortable on the highway and backroads. Decent gas mileage for the age, averaging around 25 in the city and 32/35 on the highway. No issues with the CVT, either. Not even showing signs of wear, after more than 10 years and 100k miles! Built to last!
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does recommend this car
Comfort 5.0
Interior 4.0
Performance 4.0
Value 4.0
Exterior 4.0
Reliability 5.0
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not so nice for the price

It works great. But it broke down. I am not happy. I used to love Subaru but this car was not good. No more Subaru.
  • Purchased a Used car
  • Used for Commuting
  • Does not recommend this car
Comfort 3.0
Interior 3.0
Performance 3.0
Value 3.0
Exterior 5.0
Reliability 5.0
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2011 Subaru Legacy?

The 2011 Subaru Legacy is available in 18 trim levels:

  • 2.5GT Ltd (1 style)
  • 2.5GT Ltd Navigation (1 style)
  • 2.5i (2 styles)
  • 2.5i Ltd (1 style)
  • 2.5i Ltd Pwr Moon (1 style)
  • 2.5i Ltd Pwr Moon/Navigation (1 style)
  • 2.5i Prem (2 styles)
  • 2.5i Prem AWP (2 styles)
  • 2.5i Prem AWP/HK Audio (1 style)
  • 2.5i Prem AWP/HK/Pwr Moon (1 style)
  • 2.5i Prem AWP/Pwr Moon (2 styles)
  • 3.6R (1 style)
  • 3.6R Ltd (1 style)
  • 3.6R Ltd Pwr Moon (1 style)
  • 3.6R Ltd Pwr Moon/Navigation (1 style)
  • 3.6R Prem (1 style)
  • 3.6R Prem HK Audio/Pwr Moon (1 style)
  • 3.6R Prem Pwr Moon (1 style)

What is the MPG of the 2011 Subaru Legacy?

The 2011 Subaru Legacy offers up to 19 MPG in city driving and 27 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 2011 Subaru Legacy?

The 2011 Subaru Legacy compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2011 Subaru Legacy reliable?

The 2011 Subaru Legacy has an average reliability rating of 4.6 out of 5 according to cars.com consumers. Find real-world reliability insights within consumer reviews from 2011 Subaru Legacy owners.

Is the 2011 Subaru Legacy a good Sedan?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2011 Subaru Legacy. 87.0% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.5 / 5
Based on 77 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.6
  • Interior: 4.5
  • Performance: 4.3
  • Value: 4.5
  • Exterior: 4.5
  • Reliability: 4.6

Subaru Legacy history

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