Autoblog and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article.Lexus, Toyota's upmarket alter ego, built an entire brand on the promise of bulletproof reliability, an ethos cemented by the legendary LS400. But the automaker's later flagship, the LS460, entirely abandoned that script. A recent deep dive by Toyota master technician and popular YouTube creator The Car Care Nut exposes the grim reality of this V8 luxury sedan, labeling it the least reliable Lexus product ever manufactured.The Failure PointsThe video documents the agonizing over-engineering that turns standard repairs into massive labor bills. Under the hood, the LS460 features an unnecessarily complicated belt routing system and brittle plastic coolant connections that easily snap, turning a simple water pump job into a full radiator replacement. But routine accessory failures are just the beginning of the ownership nightmare, an experience not typically associated with Toyota-Lexus vehicles.AdvertisementAdvertisementThe real danger lies within the drivetrain. The LS460 is plagued by a notorious torque converter shudder. Repairing it requires dropping the transmission, a process where fragile manual shift linkage cables frequently snap. When that happens, technicians are forced to remove the transmission pan and valve body just to make the car drivable again. If the starter goes out, its buried location guarantees an exorbitant repair invoice.The Deal-BreakersThen comes the terminal diagnosis: oil burning. According to the technician, sourcing and installing a properly built new engine for the LS460 costs upwards of $40,000. Because no used LS460 commands that price in today's market, a failed block instantly totals the vehicle. Even meticulously maintained examples aren't safe from factory defects, pre-2014 models are infamous for severe interior material degradation, leaving owners with sticky, literally melting dashboards and door panels.TakeawayLexusFor American buyers tempted by the severe depreciation of a used luxury flagship, the presenter's verdict is a hard stop. The LS460 delivers a temperamental, German-car ownership experience disguised under a Japanese badge, carrying continuous repair cycles that far exceed the upkeep of its predecessor, the LS430. As the technician bluntly warns, "This is the least reliable Toyota product ever made". You may be better off absorbing the depreciation on a 2026 Lexus LS.This story was originally published by Autoblog on Jul 6, 2026, where it first appeared in the Features section. Add Autoblog as a Preferred Source by clicking here.