Toyota Reviews
- 2014 Toyota Kluger
- 2014 Toyota Yaris Hatch
- Fortuner
- Hilux Double Cab 2016
- Prado Petrol SUV
- Toyota Prius 2016
- Toyota Corolla Hybrid
- Toyota RAV4 Diesel
- Toyota RAV4 Petrol
- Prado Diesel SUV
- Toyota Prado Diesel
- LandCruiser 200 Diesel
- Toyota LandCruiser 200 Petrol
- Toyota C-HR
- 2017 Toyota Kluger
- 2018 Toyota Camry
- 2018 Toyota Camry Hybrid
- 2018 Hilux Rugged X
- 2019 Toyota Corolla Hatch
- 2019 Corolla Hybrid Hatch
- 2020 Toyota Supra
- 2019 Toyota RAV4
- 2020 Toyota Corolla Sedan
- 2020 Toyota C-HR
- 2020 Toyota Camry
- 2020 Toyota Kluger
- 2020 Toyota Yaris
- 2020 Toyota Granvia
- 2020 Toyota Hiace
- 2020 Toyota GR Yaris
- 2021 Toyota Yaris Cross
- 2021 Toyota Hilux
- 2022 Toyota Kluger
- 2022 Toyota LandCruiser 300
- 2023 Toyota Corolla Cross
- Toyota Aurion
- Hilux 4×4
- 2023 Toyota Fortuner
- Toyota Yaris
- Toyota Tarago
- Toyota Rav4
- Toyota Prius
- Toyota Prado
- Toyota Landcruiser
- Toyota Kluger
- Toyota Hilux
- Toyota Hiace
- Toyota Corolla Review
- Toyota Camry
- Toyota Avensis Verso
- Toyota Aurion TRD
- Toyota Coaster
- Toyota Hilux TRD
- Toyota Land Cruiser 70
- Toyota Presara
- Toyota Hybrid Camry
- Toyota Rukus
- Toyota FJ Cruiser
- Toyota Prius C
- 2012 Yaris Hatch
- Toyota 86
- 2012 Camry
- Prado 3dr
- Prado 5dr
- Hilux 4×2
- Corolla Hatch
- Prius v
- Toyota RAV 4 2013
Please have a look through our Toyota reviews which have been written by our independent motoring journalists. The reviews cover every available new Toyota vehicle and we continue to add to them as new models are released. If there is a Toyota review you would like to see here, please let us know. Otherwise have a read through and enjoy a brief history of Toyota below.
Take a drive down any road in Sydney, Brisbane or Melbourne and you are sure to come across a Toyota. Around town, the Starlet and Corolla make a confident companion for those needing the services of an economical and reliable runabout. Families when reviewing their options will appreciate the Corolla and Camry models and the no-fuss day in-day out practicality and reliability they provide. Head out of town and you may come across a happy Toyota owner enjoying the speedy surefootedness of the Celica and Supra models that will reliably get you where you need to go at pace. And in the outback where the dust and the flies love to get up your nose, you can bet your bottom dollar that the next vehicle rolling by might be the rugged Toyota Hilux or, Australia’s favourite, the 4X4 king of the outback – Landcruiser.
Yep, reliability and capability are what you need out beyond the black stump, and that’s why Aussies have reviewed their options, voted with their wallets and made Toyota the best selling car marque. You have no doubt been a Smart cookie and picked up the catch phrase that has been used four times to rightly help describe a Toyota. I’ll give you a hint; it starts with the letter r. Toyota’s success has been built around sensible, conservative engineering which has given generations of drivers the cheap and reliable transport that no other manufacturer has matched.
In the beginning, Toyota was not a car maker. In 1926 Toyota was Toyoda Automatic Loom Works Ltd who made good quality looms for weaving. In 1937, Toyoda Automatic Loom Works Ltd began producing cars that wove magic from a purpose-built factory in Koromo, Japan. And at this time, a numerologist gave a review on the name ‘Toyoda’ and suggested should change their name to Toyota to improve the luck of the company, which has remained with us to this day.
Kiichiro Toyoda was a man who admired Henry Ford’s production methods and he, like other Japanese car manufacturers, copied the process and did it better. The war halted Toyota’s progress, and even after the war, it was restricted to mostly making trucks. However, Toyota launched its first small car (SA Model) in 1947. In 1957, the Toyopet offshoot of Toyota made a significant new vehicle. This was called the Crown, a pleasantly styled four door sedan.
Toyota did not buy any overseas technology, and instead they undertook a vigorous research and development programme for themselves. This gave them a very strong position to design and build their own reliable cars that were cheap and economical. Perhaps this is why Toyota is the most successful motor company in the world – they have done things right more often than other car companies. Currently, Toyota is the world’s third largest manufacturer of automobiles in unit sales and in net sales. It is by far the biggest Japanese automotive manufacturer, producing more than 5.5 million vehicles per year. This is equivalent to one vehicle produced every six seconds.
In the 1990s, Toyota worked hard at producing a wide variety of vehicles. Toyota began to branch out from producing mostly compact cars and started to add many larger and more luxurious vehicles to their lineup. Toyota also began production of the world’s best selling hybrid car, the Toyota Prius, in 1997.
Toyota has also recently designed and built a four-speed electronically controlled automatic with buttons for power and economy shifting, and an eight-speed automatic transmission. Toyota, and Toyota-produced Lexus and Daihatsu cars, consistently rank and review extremely high in terms of overall quality and reliability. Consumer review surveys also back this up.
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