2013
Toyota Sienna

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Available trims

See the differences side-by-side to compare trims.
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 L FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $26,585
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 LE FWD (GS)
    Starts at
    $30,135
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 LE FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $30,135
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 LE FWD (SE)
    Starts at
    $30,135
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 LE FWD (SE)
    Starts at
    $30,335
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 LE FWD (GS)
    Starts at
    $30,335
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 LE FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $30,335
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 LE AWD (GS)
    Starts at
    $32,465
    16 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 LE AWD (SE)
    Starts at
    $32,465
    16 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 LE AWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $32,465
    16 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 XLE FWD (GS)
    Starts at
    $33,510
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 XLE FWD (SE)
    Starts at
    $33,510
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 XLE FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $33,510
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 SE FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $33,725
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 SE FWD (SE)
    Starts at
    $33,725
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 8-Pass Van V6 SE FWD (GS)
    Starts at
    $33,725
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    8
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 XLE FWD (GS)
    Starts at
    $35,015
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 XLE FWD (SE)
    Starts at
    $35,015
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 XLE FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $35,015
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    -
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 XLE AWD (GS)
    Starts at
    $35,950
    16 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 XLE AWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $35,950
    16 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 XLE AWD (SE)
    Starts at
    $35,950
    16 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 LE AAS FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $36,370
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 Ltd FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $40,105
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 XLE AAS FWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $40,780
    18 City / 25 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    Front Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs
  • 5dr 7-Pass Van V6 Ltd AWD (Natl)
    Starts at
    $41,475
    16 City / 23 Hwy
    MPG
    7
    Seat capacity
    Gas V6
    Engine
    All Wheel Drive
    Drivetrain
    See all specs

Photo & video gallery

2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna 2013 Toyota Sienna

Notable features

Standard V-6 engine
four-cylinder no longer offered
Available AWD
Seats seven or eight
Available lounge-style second-row seats
Available 180-degree backup camera

The good & the bad

The good

Ride comfort
Versatile second row
Cargo volume
Capable V-6

The bad

Mushy brakes
Some cheap cabin materials
Indecisive transmission
Highway steering response
No second-row floor storage

Expert 2013 Toyota Sienna review

our expert's take
Our expert's take
By Jennifer Geiger
Full article
our expert's take

Toyota offers an expansive vehicle lineup that starts with the tiny Yaris and climbs to the humongous Land Cruiser. Plenty of its cars make good family-mobiles, but those looking for loads of room and features would be best served by its minivan, the Sienna.

The 2013 Toyota Sienna is roomy, comfortable and the only minivan to offer all-wheel drive, but its loud powertrain and unwieldy rear rows leave it behind its competitors.The 2013 Toyota Sienna comes in five trim levels: L, LE, SE, XLE and Limited.

Not much has changed on the minivan since it was redesigned for 2011. For 2013, it loses its available four-cylinder engine and certain trims gain some new safety and convenience features. Compare the 2012 and 2013 model years here.

There are several major players in the minivan class, including the Honda Odyssey and the Chrysler Town & Country/Dodge Grand Caravan twins. Compare all four here.

Business in the Front, Party in the Back
The minivan is the automotive equivalent of the mullet: business in the front, party in the back. Toyota paid equal attention to both zones in the Sienna, but it’s not enough to keep it competitive.

The first row has a really open and inviting feel, but the dashboard is an expansive sea of hard plastic. Some extra padding in key areas, like the door panel, would make it more elbow-friendly. A lot of rich-looking imitation-wood trim in my top-of-the-line Limited test car classed it up, but beware of much more plastic in lower trims. In fact, cabin chintziness was one reason why this generation of the Sienna finished at the bottom in Cars.com’s 2011 Minivan Shootout.

The large dashboard also leaves plenty of room for button overload. Visually, the sweeping control panel has too many of them for my liking, but at least the climate controls are intuitive. The audio functions are incorporated into the small touch-screen, but they’re easy to use too. The touch-screen itself reacts quickly to inputs, and the optional navigation system was a no-brainer to operate.

The first row’s wide, long seats are really comfortable; they’re both supportive and cushy, and leather is standard on higher trim levels. A couple different types of cloth, including a new stain-resistant one, are standard on lower trim levels.

The Sienna has seating for seven or eight on standard second-row buckets or a bench. The eight-passenger bench has a center-mounted jump seat that can be stowed in the cargo area when not in use, providing a configuration similar to the captain’s chairs. Although the second-row captain’s chairs are comfortable, they’re a pain when it comes to anything other than sitting. They don’t fold in a useful way: If frequent trips to Ikea are on your agenda, you’ll have to remove the heavy seats to make room — and the multistep process is about as complicated as assembling cheap Swedish furniture. The second-row seats sit at one end of the flexibility spectrum, opposite Chrysler’s Stow ‘n Go buckets, which fold quickly and easily into the floor but are not as comfortable.

All minivans are roomy (check out the table below for specifics), but what keeps them competitive is how they adapt to a family’s needs and the level of innovation taken to do so. Toyota’s contribution is the Sienna’s lounge seating, which is standard on Limited models. In reality, the seats are more gimmicky than useful. If you slide the captain’s chairs all the way back (no one can sit behind you), you can pop out the leg rest and recline the seat. The van’s engineers likely envisioned a living room recliner, but it feels more like a dentist’s chair.

 

  2013
Chrysler Town & Country
2013 Toyota Sienna 2013
Honda Odyssey
Front headroom (in.) 39.8 41 39.7
Front legroom (in.) 40.7 40.5 40.9
Rear headroom (in.) 39.3 39.7 39.5
Rear legroom (in.) 36.5 37.6 40.9
Max. cargo volume (cu. ft.) 143.8 150 148.5
Cargo room behind 3rd row (cu. ft.) 33.0 39.1 38.4
Source: Manufacturers

 

Folding the Third Row — Let’s Get Physical
Where the competition gets another leg up over the Sienna is cargo versatility. By the numbers, there’s plenty of room, beating out the competition in both maximum cargo volume and room behind the third row. Accessing that space, however, is tougher. In fact, it’s an aerobic workout.

Like the second row, folding the third is a multistep process, and the seats are pretty heavy; only front-drive Limited models offer a power-folding feature as standard. In my all-wheel-drive van, I had to get into the cargo area to get enough leverage to fold the seat — a first for me — and it wasn’t pretty. First, pull a strap to fold each of the 60/40-split seatbacks down, then pull a handle to nestle the seatback and bottom into the cargo well. The result is a flat load floor, but the process requires much less sweat in competing vans.

Although the Sienna doesn’t offer under-floor storage cubbies like the Chrysler vans, cargo room is pretty competitive. There’s a huge, deep storage well behind the third row when the seats are raised, and all three rows are filled with cupholders (there are 10 to 12 total, depending on trim level) and small cubbies. The front row’s sliding center console is particularly useful; it opens to reveal a couple of storage areas and cupholders and extends to reach the second row. For useful storage spaces, the Honda Odyssey is tough to beat. The winner of Cars.com’s 2013 Family Car of the Year award has 15 bottle and cupholders, a pop-up trash-bag holder and a cubby that cools up to four drinks.

This Minivan Is Quick, Really
One of the 
Toyota Sienna’s biggest strengths is its unexpected peppiness. Low-end power from a stop is strong, and it gathers steam steadily thanks to a prompt six-speed automatic. The standard 3.5-liter V6 has plenty of power for the highway too; the four-cylinder was dropped for 2013.

The Sienna is still the only minivan with available all-wheel drive — often on the must-have list for snow-belt families — but you’ll pay for it at the pump. Two-wheel-drive versions are rated 18/25 mpg city/highway, and AWD V6 models at 16/23 mpg. The most efficient minivan in the class is the Odyssey, with an EPA rating of 19/28 mpg, though that’s with the more expensive of two available transmissions, a six-speed automatic.

Although the Sienna’s drivetrain is much smoother than the Town & Country’s, it’s also far less quiet. In fact, it may be louder than your kids. It’s gruff at idle, and engine noise escalates intrusively. Wind and road noise, however, are well-checked (or maybe drowned out by the powertrain).

Ride and maneuverability are also high points. The Toyota Sienna feels pretty composed, with good bump absorption and road isolation. Despite its long length, it’s also surprisingly maneuverable, thanks to one of the smallest turning circles in the class. Body lean is definitely present, especially on highway off-ramps, but handling never feels sloppy.

Features & Price
Base, front-wheel-drive models start just more than $27,000, and the line tops out around $42,000 for a Limited model with AWD (all prices include destination charges). My test car was decked out with options like a 16.4-inch dual-screen entertainment system, navigation and a wide-angle rearview camera; it checked in at $47,100. All trims come standard with tri-zone climate control and air conditioning.

If that sounds like a lot for a minivan, it is. Competitors offer expensive topline trims too — a Town & Country Limited starts just more than $41,000 and an Odyssey Touring tops $44,000 — but your dollar goes a little further with them. For example, the base Town & Country has standards that the base Sienna doesn’t, including leather seats, a Stow ‘n Go second row, a single-screen DVD player, a backup camera, power-adjustable pedals and power-sliding side doors. If your kids want DVD entertainment in the Sienna, you’ll have to opt for a pricey package.

Safety
In Insurance Institute for Highway Safety crash tests, the 
Toyota Sienna earned the top score, Good, in frontal, side-impact, rear-impact and roof-strength tests. The Chrysler Town & Country, Dodge Grand Caravan and Honda Odyssey also received Good scores in all those tests. In National Highway Traffic Safety Administration testing, front- and all-wheel-drive versions of the 2013 Sienna earned an overall score of four out of five stars. The Odyssey has a five-star rating.

Toyota’s minivan offers plenty of standard safety features, with a full complement of airbags including a driver’s knee airbag and side curtain airbags that protect all three rows. A backup camera is standard on all but the base model; a wide-angle version is also available. The Limited trim now comes with a blind spot warning system; it’s optional on other models.

Click here for a full list of safety features, and see how the Sienna accommodates child-safety seats in our Car Seat Check.

In the Market
At the beginning of this decade, crossovers threatened to turn minivan body-types into dinosaurs, but innovation has kept the segment alive and attractive to families — with little thanks to the Sienna. Toyota’s minivan has plenty of room and is surprisingly quick, but engine noise and unwieldy seats are big annoyances. All minivans make parenting a little easier. The 
Toyota Sienna does, too, but in several ways, the competition does it better.

 

email  

 

News Editor
Jennifer Geiger

News Editor Jennifer Geiger joined the automotive industry in 2003, much to the delight of her Corvette-obsessed dad. Jennifer is an expert reviewer, certified car-seat technician and mom of three. She wears a lot of hats — many of them while driving a minivan.

2013 Toyota Sienna review: Our expert's take
By Jennifer Geiger

Toyota offers an expansive vehicle lineup that starts with the tiny Yaris and climbs to the humongous Land Cruiser. Plenty of its cars make good family-mobiles, but those looking for loads of room and features would be best served by its minivan, the Sienna.

The 2013 Toyota Sienna is roomy, comfortable and the only minivan to offer all-wheel drive, but its loud powertrain and unwieldy rear rows leave it behind its competitors.The 2013 Toyota Sienna comes in five trim levels: L, LE, SE, XLE and Limited.

Not much has changed on the minivan since it was redesigned for 2011. For 2013, it loses its available four-cylinder engine and certain trims gain some new safety and convenience features. Compare the 2012 and 2013 model years here.

There are several major players in the minivan class, including the Honda Odyssey and the Chrysler Town & Country/Dodge Grand Caravan twins. Compare all four here.

Business in the Front, Party in the Back
The minivan is the automotive equivalent of the mullet: business in the front, party in the back. Toyota paid equal attention to both zones in the Sienna, but it’s not enough to keep it competitive.

The first row has a really open and inviting feel, but the dashboard is an expansive sea of hard plastic. Some extra padding in key areas, like the door panel, would make it more elbow-friendly. A lot of rich-looking imitation-wood trim in my top-of-the-line Limited test car classed it up, but beware of much more plastic in lower trims. In fact, cabin chintziness was one reason why this generation of the Sienna finished at the bottom in Cars.com’s 2011 Minivan Shootout.

The large dashboard also leaves plenty of room for button overload. Visually, the sweeping control panel has too many of them for my liking, but at least the climate controls are intuitive. The audio functions are incorporated into the small touch-screen, but they’re easy to use too. The touch-screen itself reacts quickly to inputs, and the optional navigation system was a no-brainer to operate.

The first row’s wide, long seats are really comfortable; they’re both supportive and cushy, and leather is standard on higher trim levels. A couple different types of cloth, including a new stain-resistant one, are standard on lower trim levels.

The Sienna has seating for seven or eight on standard second-row buckets or a bench. The eight-passenger bench has a center-mounted jump seat that can be stowed in the cargo area when not in use, providing a configuration similar to the captain’s chairs. Although the second-row captain’s chairs are comfortable, they’re a pain when it comes to anything other than sitting. They don’t fold in a useful way: If frequent trips to Ikea are on your agenda, you’ll have to remove the heavy seats to make room — and the multistep process is about as complicated as assembling cheap Swedish furniture. The second-row seats sit at one end of the flexibility spectrum, opposite Chrysler’s Stow ‘n Go buckets, which fold quickly and easily into the floor but are not as comfortable.

All minivans are roomy (check out the table below for specifics), but what keeps them competitive is how they adapt to a family’s needs and the level of innovation taken to do so. Toyota’s contribution is the Sienna’s lounge seating, which is standard on Limited models. In reality, the seats are more gimmicky than useful. If you slide the captain’s chairs all the way back (no one can sit behind you), you can pop out the leg rest and recline the seat. The van’s engineers likely envisioned a living room recliner, but it feels more like a dentist’s chair.

 

  2013
Chrysler Town & Country
2013 Toyota Sienna 2013
Honda Odyssey
Front headroom (in.) 39.8 41 39.7
Front legroom (in.) 40.7 40.5 40.9
Rear headroom (in.) 39.3 39.7 39.5
Rear legroom (in.) 36.5 37.6 40.9
Max. cargo volume (cu. ft.) 143.8 150 148.5
Cargo room behind 3rd row (cu. ft.) 33.0 39.1 38.4
Source: Manufacturers

 

Folding the Third Row — Let’s Get Physical
Where the competition gets another leg up over the Sienna is cargo versatility. By the numbers, there’s plenty of room, beating out the competition in both maximum cargo volume and room behind the third row. Accessing that space, however, is tougher. In fact, it’s an aerobic workout.

Like the second row, folding the third is a multistep process, and the seats are pretty heavy; only front-drive Limited models offer a power-folding feature as standard. In my all-wheel-drive van, I had to get into the cargo area to get enough leverage to fold the seat — a first for me — and it wasn’t pretty. First, pull a strap to fold each of the 60/40-split seatbacks down, then pull a handle to nestle the seatback and bottom into the cargo well. The result is a flat load floor, but the process requires much less sweat in competing vans.

Although the Sienna doesn’t offer under-floor storage cubbies like the Chrysler vans, cargo room is pretty competitive. There’s a huge, deep storage well behind the third row when the seats are raised, and all three rows are filled with cupholders (there are 10 to 12 total, depending on trim level) and small cubbies. The front row’s sliding center console is particularly useful; it opens to reveal a couple of storage areas and cupholders and extends to reach the second row. For useful storage spaces, the Honda Odyssey is tough to beat. The winner of Cars.com’s 2013 Family Car of the Year award has 15 bottle and cupholders, a pop-up trash-bag holder and a cubby that cools up to four drinks.

This Minivan Is Quick, Really
One of the 
Toyota Sienna’s biggest strengths is its unexpected peppiness. Low-end power from a stop is strong, and it gathers steam steadily thanks to a prompt six-speed automatic. The standard 3.5-liter V6 has plenty of power for the highway too; the four-cylinder was dropped for 2013.

The Sienna is still the only minivan with available all-wheel drive — often on the must-have list for snow-belt families — but you’ll pay for it at the pump. Two-wheel-drive versions are rated 18/25 mpg city/highway, and AWD V6 models at 16/23 mpg. The most efficient minivan in the class is the Odyssey, with an EPA rating of 19/28 mpg, though that’s with the more expensive of two available transmissions, a six-speed automatic.

Although the Sienna’s drivetrain is much smoother than the Town & Country’s, it’s also far less quiet. In fact, it may be louder than your kids. It’s gruff at idle, and engine noise escalates intrusively. Wind and road noise, however, are well-checked (or maybe drowned out by the powertrain).

Ride and maneuverability are also high points. The Toyota Sienna feels pretty composed, with good bump absorption and road isolation. Despite its long length, it’s also surprisingly maneuverable, thanks to one of the smallest turning circles in the class. Body lean is definitely present, especially on highway off-ramps, but handling never feels sloppy.

Features & Price
Base, front-wheel-drive models start just more than $27,000, and the line tops out around $42,000 for a Limited model with AWD (all prices include destination charges). My test car was decked out with options like a 16.4-inch dual-screen entertainment system, navigation and a wide-angle rearview camera; it checked in at $47,100. All trims come standard with tri-zone climate control and air conditioning.

If that sounds like a lot for a minivan, it is. Competitors offer expensive topline trims too — a Town & Country Limited starts just more than $41,000 and an Odyssey Touring tops $44,000 — but your dollar goes a little further with them. For example, the base Town & Country has standards that the base Sienna doesn’t, including leather seats, a Stow ‘n Go second row, a single-screen DVD player, a backup camera, power-adjustable pedals and power-sliding side doors. If your kids want DVD entertainment in the Sienna, you’ll have to opt for a pricey package.

Safety
In Insurance Institute for Highway Safety crash tests, the 
Toyota Sienna earned the top score, Good, in frontal, side-impact, rear-impact and roof-strength tests. The Chrysler Town & Country, Dodge Grand Caravan and Honda Odyssey also received Good scores in all those tests. In National Highway Traffic Safety Administration testing, front- and all-wheel-drive versions of the 2013 Sienna earned an overall score of four out of five stars. The Odyssey has a five-star rating.

Toyota’s minivan offers plenty of standard safety features, with a full complement of airbags including a driver’s knee airbag and side curtain airbags that protect all three rows. A backup camera is standard on all but the base model; a wide-angle version is also available. The Limited trim now comes with a blind spot warning system; it’s optional on other models.

Click here for a full list of safety features, and see how the Sienna accommodates child-safety seats in our Car Seat Check.

In the Market
At the beginning of this decade, crossovers threatened to turn minivan body-types into dinosaurs, but innovation has kept the segment alive and attractive to families — with little thanks to the Sienna. Toyota’s minivan has plenty of room and is surprisingly quick, but engine noise and unwieldy seats are big annoyances. All minivans make parenting a little easier. The 
Toyota Sienna does, too, but in several ways, the competition does it better.

 

email  

 

Available cars near you

Safety review

Based on the 2013 Toyota Sienna 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
5/5
Frontal barrier crash rating driver
5/5
Frontal barrier crash rating passenger
3/5
Overall frontal barrier crash rating
4/5
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
4/5
14.0%
Risk of rollover
Side barrier rating driver
5/5
Side barrier rating passenger rear seat
5/5
Side pole rating driver front seat
4/5
14.0%
Risk of rollover

Factory warranties

New car program benefits

Basic
3 years / 36,000 miles
Corrosion
5 years
Powertrain
5 years / 60,000 miles
Maintenance
2 years / 25,000 miles
Roadside Assistance
2 years / 25,000 miles

Certified Pre-Owned program benefits

Age / mileage
7 years / less than 85,000 miles
Basic
12 months / 12, 000 miles
Dealer certification
160- or 174-point inspections

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Consumer reviews

4.6 / 5
Based on 105 reviews
Write a review
Comfort 4.7
Interior 4.5
Performance 4.5
Value 4.4
Exterior 4.5
Reliability 4.6

Most recent

Most reliable new car I have ever owned.

This vehicle has been extremely reliable and fits my needs for hauling lots of cargo and pulling a utility trailer. The engine has great power and the interior comfort if excellent. It make long trips very comfortable. It is the main reason why we purchased a second Sienna, 2021 XLE AWD.
  • Purchased a New 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
24 people out of 25 found this review helpful. Did you?
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Great family vehicle.

The Sienna is a great vehicle for trips. Hauls people and everything in comfort. Has lots of safety features and is very reliable. Better looking than the new Toyota models.
  • 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
8 people out of 9 found this review helpful. Did you?
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FAQ

What trim levels are available for the 2013 Toyota Sienna?

The 2013 Toyota Sienna is available in 7 trim levels:

  • L (1 style)
  • LE (9 styles)
  • LE AAS (1 style)
  • Ltd (2 styles)
  • SE (3 styles)
  • XLE (9 styles)
  • XLE AAS (1 style)

What is the MPG of the 2013 Toyota Sienna?

The 2013 Toyota Sienna offers up to 18 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 2013 Toyota Sienna?

The 2013 Toyota Sienna compares to and/or competes against the following vehicles:

Is the 2013 Toyota Sienna reliable?

The 2013 Toyota Sienna 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 2013 Toyota Sienna owners.

Is the 2013 Toyota Sienna a good Minivan?

Below are the cars.com consumers ratings for the 2013 Toyota Sienna. 89.5% of drivers recommend this vehicle.

4.6 / 5
Based on 105 reviews
  • Comfort: 4.7
  • Interior: 4.5
  • Performance: 4.5
  • Value: 4.4
  • Exterior: 4.5
  • Reliability: 4.6

Toyota Sienna history

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