Autoblog and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article.Few midsize SUVs carry as much baggage, in the good sense, as these two. Toyota's 4Runner is a body-on-frame institution, freshly redesigned but still built around off-road durability and legendary resale value. Jeep's Grand Cherokee is the more road-polished, near-luxury alternative, refreshed for 2026 with new styling, a new engine, and an interior that punches well above its price. They attract shoppers from opposite directions, so an honest comparison means being upfront about what each one gives up to be good at what it does.2026 Toyota 4RunnerToyotaBoth promise go-anywhere capability, but they define it differently. One leans on decades of proven hardware and a reputation for running forever, while the other blends genuine off-road tech with a cabin and ride tuned for daily comfort. Here is how they stack up across the areas that actually matter.2026 Jeep® Grand Cherokee SummitJeepSpecs and pricingSpecificationToyota 4RunnerJeep Grand CherokeeStarting priceAbout $42,000 (SR5)About $41,000 (Laredo)Top trim priceAbout $68,400 (TRD Pro)About $62,600 (Summit)Engines2.4L turbo I4; i-FORCE MAX hybrid3.6L V6; 2.0L turbo I4Power278 to 326 hp293 to 324 hpTorque317 to 465 lb.ft260 to 332 lb.ftDrivetrain2WD, part-time 4WD, full-time 4WDRWD or 4WDFuel economyUp to 23 mpg combinedUp to 23 mpg combinedMax ground clearanceUp to 10.1 inAround 10.9 in (air suspension)Max cargoUp to 90.2 cu ftAbout 70.8 cu ftMax towing6,000 lb6,200 lbSeatingUp to 75Pricing lands close at the bottom and diverges at the top. A base Toyota 4Runner SR5 opens around $42,000, while a Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo starts near $41,000. Climb the range, and the 4Runner stretches higher, topping out around $68,400 for the off-road-focused TRD Pro, whereas a loaded Grand Cherokee Summit tops out near $62,600 while chasing outright luxury rather than trail hardware. That split, capability at the top for Toyota and comfort at the top for Jeep, previews the whole comparison.2026 Toyota 4Runner TRD Off-RoadCole AttishaPowertrains and performanceToyota simplified the 4Runner's engine lineup for its new generation. Gone is the old V6, replaced by a 2.4-liter turbocharged four making 278 horsepower and 317 lb.ft of torque, with an available i-FORCE MAX hybrid that lifts output to 326 horsepower and a muscular 465 lb.ft. That hybrid torque figure is the standout, giving the 4Runner the low-end pull its rugged image always implied, but the old engine never quite delivered, while trimming the thirst that plagued earlier models.2026 Jeep® Grand Cherokee SummitJeepAdvertisementAdvertisementJeep took a similar downsizing path for 2026. A 3.6-liter V6 with 293 horsepower remains the base engine, but the headline is a new 2.0-liter turbocharged Hurricane four producing 324 horsepower, 332 lb.ft, and a claimed 529 miles of range on a tank. On paper, it is strong, and it is efficient for the class. In practice, reviewers have knocked the Hurricane four for sounding coarse, closer to a diesel clatter than a luxury hum, which sits awkwardly against the Grand Cherokee's upscale ambitions. Notably, the plug-in hybrid 4xe that once anchored the lineup has been dropped for 2026, so buyers seeking electrified Jeep power will have to look elsewhere.How they driveOn the road, the 4Runner drives like what it is, a tall, honest, body-on-frame SUV. It rides with a bit of truck-like motion, its steering is relaxed, and it never pretends to be a crossover. What the new platform adds is livability, since it is calmer in traffic and more stable at highway speed than any 4Runner before it, even if quick canyon work is not its thing.2026 Toyota 4RunnerToyotaJeep tuned the Grand Cherokee for a more carlike experience, and for the most part it delivers, with a quieter cabin and a more settled highway gait, especially on models with the available air suspension. It is the easier of the two to recommend to someone crossing town rather than crossing a trail. The catch is refinement inconsistency, as some reviewers report a jerky, poorly calibrated drivetrain on the turbo four, which undercuts the otherwise premium feel.Off-road capabilityThis is the 4Runner's home turf, and it shows up loaded. Depending on trim, it offers part-time or full-time four-wheel drive, low-range gearing, an available locking rear differential, Crawl Control, Multi-Terrain Select, and a disconnecting front sway bar on the toughest trims, plus up to 10.1 inches of ground clearance. Its body-on-frame build and simple, proven mechanicals are exactly what serious off-roaders and overlanders trust to survive years of abuse.2026 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe Summit ReserveKristen BrownJeep counters with genuinely capable hardware of its own, more than most rivals can match. A two-speed transfer case, height-adjustable air suspension that can lift the Grand Cherokee to around 10.9 inches of clearance, and an electronically controlled limited-slip rear differential give it real credibility on a trail, well beyond what its luxury leanings suggest. It is more capable than most buyers will ever test. Even so, for hardcore, repeated off-road duty, the 4Runner's body-on-frame toughness and deep aftermarket support remain the safer bet.Interior, technology, and spaceCargo and seating favor the Toyota. The 4Runner offers up to 90.2 cubic feet of maximum cargo room and available seating for seven, along with its signature roll-down rear window, a charming and genuinely useful party trick. Its cabin is rugged and practical, built with hard-wearing materials and clear physical controls rather than plush surfaces.2026 Toyota 4RunnerToyotaJeep flips the priorities. The Grand Cherokee seats five in its two-row layout with around 70.8 cubic feet of maximum cargo, less than the Toyota, but its interior is the clear winner on ambiance. Upper trims like the Summit bring diamond-stitched leather, massaging seats, and available premium audio that rival established luxury brands for far less money. Technology is generous too, with a standard 12.3-inch Uconnect touchscreen and an available passenger display, though owners and reviewers have flagged occasional software glitches. If interior quality matters most, the Grand Cherokee wins comfortably.2026 Jeep® Grand Cherokee LStellantisAdvertisementAdvertisementValue, safety, and ownershipHere, the calculus splits along familiar lines. Toyota's 4Runner is the resale and reliability champion, holding its value to an almost absurd degree thanks to a reputation for indestructibility shared with its global Hilux cousin. Buying one is less an expense than a long-term investment, and that financial durability is a genuine part of its appeal. On safety, it is worth noting the redesigned 4Runner does not hold a current IIHS Top Safety Pick award, having earned only a marginal result in the updated moderate-overlap front test.2026 Toyota 4Runner TRD Off-RoadCole AttishaJeep's Grand Cherokee answers with more standard content and luxury for the money up front, plus a lower top-trim price than a maxed-out 4Runner. It carries strong federal crash-test marks, and its near-luxury cabin makes it feel richer day to day. The trade-off is a reliability and resale record that trails Toyota's, along with the software and drivetrain-refinement question marks noted above.2026 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe Summit ReserveKristen BrownThe verdictHonestly, these two only overlap on paper. The Toyota 4Runner is the clear choice for buyers who genuinely go off-road, tow near the limit, need a third row, or simply want the peace of mind that comes with bulletproof durability and class-leading resale. It is the tool you buy to keep for a decade of trailheads and still sell for strong money afterward.Jeep's Grand Cherokee is the smarter pick for the far larger group of buyers whose weeks are mostly pavement. It rides better, its interior feels a class above, its towing is competitive, and it costs less at the top of the range, all while retaining more real off-road ability than its comfort suggests. Its weaknesses, a coarse base-turbo engine, occasional tech gremlins, and weaker resale, are worth weighing, but none are dealbreakers for a comfort-first shopper. Our honest advice: Be truthful about how often you will actually leave the road. If the answer is often, the 4Runner earns its keep; if it is rarely, the Grand Cherokee is the more rewarding daily companion.AdvertisementAdvertisementThis story was originally published by Autoblog on Jul 16, 2026, where it first appeared in the Car Buying section. Add Autoblog as a Preferred Source by clicking here.