The Complete Nissan Maxima Alternatives Database
⚡ 14 full profiles · 3 interactive calculators · 22 expert FAQ · 2025 new & used · Discontinued Maxima replaced
[01] Why Maxima Shoppers Need This Guide
The Nissan Maxima (8th gen, 2016–2023) occupied a rare spot: a big FWD sedan with a 300hp V6, sporty intentions, and near-luxury interior. After MY2023, it vanished. This document is a technical reference for buyers: every vehicle that matches the Maxima’s power, size, premium feel, or driving character. We separate new 2025/2026 models, certified used, and budget sleepers.
[02] 2025 New Cars: The Maxima Successors
Closest modern equivalent – The Crown Hybrid Max uses a 2.4L turbo + electric to produce 340 hp and 400 lb-ft. It’s heavier but quicker than any Maxima (0-60 in 5.6s). The interior is hushed, materials are softer, and it includes standard AWD. The driving position is slightly elevated, but the sedan-like handling remains.
The K5 GT is the front-drive sport sedan that Maxima used to be. Its 2.5L turbo makes 290 hp and 311 lb-ft, paired with an 8-speed DCT. Handling is taut, and the exhaust has a snarl. Less interior space than Maxima, but for the enthusiast on a budget, it’s perfect.
The only remaining large sedan with a V6 option. The Pentastar V6 delivers 292 hp, and the Charger is massive inside (rear legroom beats Maxima). AWD is available. It’s softer, but the highway ride is serene.
Base 2.0T (272 hp) feels adequate, but the Type S (355 hp, 354 lb-ft) is the true Maxima rival. Superb handling, AWD, and upscale cabin. Expensive though.
Less power, but available AWD and the VC-Turbo engine is clever. The SR trim mimics Maxima styling. 32 mpg highway.
The quiet, luxurious V6 sedan. Smooth, quiet, reliable. Not sporty, but for Maxima owners who want refinement, it’s perfect.
300 hp turbo, stunning interior, RWD dynamics. A real step up in luxury, but priced higher.
[03] Pre-owned V6 Gems (2018–2023)
[04] Master Spec Table (15 Vehicles)
| Model | Engine | HP | 0-60 | Drivetrain | MPG | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toyota Crown | 2.4T hybrid | 340 | 5.6 | AWD | 29 | $41k |
| Kia K5 GT | 2.5T | 290 | 5.8 | FWD | 27 | $33k |
| Dodge Charger | 3.6L V6 | 292 | 6.4 | RWD/AWD | 23 | $37k |
| Acura TLX | 2.0T | 272 | 6.3 | FWD/AWD | 26 | $48k |
| Lexus ES 350 | 3.5L V6 | 302 | 6.6 | FWD | 26 | $44k |
| Genesis G80 | 2.5T | 300 | 6.2 | RWD/AWD | 25 | $49k |
| Infiniti Q70 (used) | 3.7L V6 | 330 | 5.9 | RWD/AWD | 21 | $28k* |
| Toyota Avalon (used) | 3.5L V6 | 301 | 6.4 | FWD | 25 | $29k* |
| Nissan Maxima (used) | 3.5L V6 | 300 | 5.9 | FWD | 24 | $25k* |
| Chrysler 300 (used) | 3.6L V6 | 292 | 6.6 | RWD/AWD | 23 | $22k* |
[05] Maxima Buyer’s FAQ (22 expert answers)
Compare any rival’s power to Maxima’s 300hp V6.
Slide to see difference (Maxima baseline 300)
Estimate 0-60 based on power/weight ratio.
* how closely engine character matches a traditional V6
- 2021-2023 · 30-50k mi · $29k–$36k
- 2018-2020 · 50-80k mi · $22k–$29k
- 2016-2017 · 80-120k mi · $16k–$22k
Platinum / SR trims command +$2k–$4k
» Cars similar to Toyota Supra
» Honda Civic Type R rivals
» Subaru Impreza AWD guide
» Chevy Malibu 2025 analysis
» Volkswagen Golf alternatives