NetCarShow.comFor years, the performance luxury SUV space has basically been a German playground. BMW, Mercedes-AMG, and Porsche set the tone with sharp tuning, hard-hitting power delivery, and chassis setups built to feel razor-focused at speed.That formula still works, but it's starting to show cracks as daily driving gets messier and ownership expectations shift toward long-term comfort and usability. Instead of chasing lap times and headline acceleration runs, the focus is slowly moving toward balance—how these SUVs behave in real-world conditions, not just on perfect roads.That shift has given Japanese engineering a clearer opening. Rather than chasing extremes, it leans into composure, consistency, and control you can actually live with, quietly challenging the idea that German SUVs automatically set the benchmark for performance luxury.AdvertisementAdvertisementTo give you the most up-to-date and accurate information possible, the data used to compile this article was sourced from Acura and other authoritative sources, including CarEdge, Edmunds, Kelley Blue Book, and TopSpeed.Acura MDX Type S: Turbo V-6 meets SH-AWDHow Acura delivers performance without sacrificing balanceNetCarShow.comThe 2026 Acura MDX Type S is Acura's most direct push yet into proper performance SUV territory, not just upscale comfort with a sporty badge. Under the hood sits a 3.0-liter turbocharged V-6 making 355 horsepower.On paper, that puts it right up against rivals like the BMW X3 M50 and Mercedes-AMG GLC 43. The real difference isn't raw numbers, though, but how that power is managed and put to the road.The MDX Type S leans on Acura's Super Handling All-Wheel Drive (SH-AWD), one of the more advanced torque-vectoring systems in the segment. Instead of just splitting power front to rear like a typical AWD setup, it can send up to 70 percent of torque to the rear axle and then fine-tune it side to side between the rear wheels.AdvertisementAdvertisementThat extra level of control lets the SUV actively help rotate into corners instead of pushing wide or resisting turn-in. In practice, it makes the MDX feel more agile and composed than its size would suggest.Calm, composed, and confident at speedNetCarShow.comAcura pairs the setup with an adaptive air suspension that adjusts ride height and damping depending on the drive mode. Switch into Sport+ and body control tightens up noticeably, cutting down on nose dive under braking and squat under hard acceleration.Even then, it doesn't drift into the overly stiff, brittle feel you get in some AMG-tuned rivals. In testing from outlets like Car and Driver, the MDX Type S isn't the quickest in a straight line, but it stands out for its calm, predictable balance through corners—especially when the road surface isn't perfect.Where German SUVs lose their edgeGreat on paper, less consistent in daily drivingMercedes-AMGOn paper, the German rivals still grab most of the attention. The BMW X3 M50 brings 393 horsepower, while the Mercedes-AMG GLC 43 leans on hybrid-assisted punch and the Porsche Macan S still leads for steering feel.AdvertisementAdvertisementBut once you move beyond spec sheets and into real roads, the picture gets less clear. In MotorTrend testing, both the X3 M50 and Macan S were praised for performance, but ride comfort suffered on rough pavement.The result is the same familiar tradeoff—sharp performance, but not always great long-distance comfort. Even the X3 M50, often seen as the most balanced of the bunch, has been described in Car and Driver testing as feeling a bit "busy" at highway speeds thanks to its firm damping and aggressive shift behavior.A different kind of performance SUV approachNetCarShow.comIt's not trying to top every single category outright. Instead, the goal is to keep compromise to a minimum across the board.Where a lot of German SUVs make you pick between comfort and control, Acura tries to blend both into a more consistent baseline. It might not lead any one performance stat, but over longer drives, that steady balance becomes a real advantage you don't always see on a spec sheet.Precision-tuned AWD and chassis setupFocused on control and response, not just reducing weightNetCarShow.comThe MDX Type S is built on Acura's global light truck platform, but most of the work here is in tuning rather than simply scaling up components. Its torque-vectoring SH-AWD system can send a significant amount of rear torque to the outside wheel in a corner, helping pull the SUV through rather than letting it push wide.AdvertisementAdvertisementThat setup reduces understeer and sharpens turn-in without relying on an overly stiff suspension. Acura pairs it with a multi-link rear suspension tuned for grip over rigidity, so the SUV still feels controlled without beating up the ride.Despite weighing around 4,700 pounds, it hides that mass better than you'd expect in quick direction changes. Careful weight placement and a lower ride height at speed from the adaptive air suspension both help keep it composed during fast lane shifts.Acura's balanced take on performance drivingNetCarShow.comLarge 14.3-inch front discs and upgraded calipers handle braking, giving the MDX Type S strong fade resistance even under repeated hard stops. It's not as track-focused as a lighter Macan GTS, but it's built to stay consistent under sustained load without the pedal going soft.The difference comes down to philosophy. German rivals tend to chase maximum stiffness to manage weight, while Acura leans into controlled flexibility, so the chassis works with the mass instead of fighting it.Why Japanese luxury SUVs hold their valueStronger resale, lower running costs, and fewer surprises over timeShot of the steering wheel and dashboard inside the cbain of a 2022 Acura MDX Type S.Performance is only part of the luxury SUV equation. Ownership costs, depreciation, and long-term reliability matter more than ever as modern vehicles get more complex and software-heavy.AdvertisementAdvertisementThat's where Japanese luxury brands tend to shine. Data from Kelley Blue Book and Edmunds shows Acura models often hold their value better after five years than many German rivals, with SUVs typically outperforming Mercedes-Benz and BMW equivalents in resale retention.How the MDX Type S benefits from this trendNetCarShow.comUnlike some German rivals that need more frequent suspension work, electronic recalibration, and pricier brake replacements, Acura's maintenance schedule tends to be more predictable and easier on the wallet over time. Its SH-AWD system also has a reputation for long-term durability thanks to its mechanical design instead of relying heavily on complex electronic clutch systems.Insurance is another area where the gap shows up. Performance-focused German SUVs often sit in higher insurance brackets due to repair costs and parts pricing, while Acura models usually stay more affordable to cover in the same segment.The result is a performance SUV that doesn't punish ownership. It keeps its character without the rising cost curve that often comes with German performance engineering.