Buyer's guide

15 min read

Toyota Land Cruiser Prado

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1984-present
US legal
2027
25-yr rule
Market range
$9K–$95K
median ~$32K
For sale
84
active now
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado (J90)
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado (J90)
On this page
  1. Overview
  2. Key takeaways
  3. Shared traits
  4. Generation timeline
  5. Should you buy?
  6. Common issues
  7. JDM vs USDM
  8. Technical specs
  9. Variants & trims
  10. Pricing
  11. Inspection checklist
  12. Comparable alternatives
  13. How it compares
  14. Gallery
  15. FAQ
  16. Sources & references

Quick answer

The Toyota Land Cruiser Prado is a mid-size Land Cruiser known for durability, off-road ability, and strong resale. Prices vary widely by generation and diesel vs petrol, with late 120/150-series commanding premiums as global demand stays high.

Background

Overview

Toyota split the Land Cruiser Prado off the 70-series line in 1990 — body-on-frame, low-range transfer case, diesel reputation intact, but shorter, narrower, and lighter. Five generations followed: J70 (1990–1996), J90 (1996–2002), J120 (2002–2009), J150 (2009–2023), and J250 (2023–present). Most buyers are shopping the J120 or J150, where the 1KD-FTV and 1GD-FTV diesels are available, the JDM TZ-G grade adds a factory rear locker and Multi-Terrain Select, and the Lexus GX is the US-market equivalent for buyers outside the 25-year import window.

The J90 1KZ-TE story — when the Prado got its own identity

The J90 dropped the 70-series chassis entirely — Toyota built a new platform 300+ pounds lighter, replaced the square-body styling with rounder forms, and rebuilt the suspension around coil-overs front and rear. Both body styles carried over: four-door long wheelbase and two-door short wheelbase.

Diesel options carried forward from the J70 alongside the new 1KD-FTV turbodiesel. Petrol engines were entirely new: the 2.7L 3RZ-FE four-cylinder and 3.4L 5VZ-FE V6 replaced the older 22R/22R-E lineup, and the 4-speed automatic or 5-speed manual transmission choices carried over.

The 1KZ-TE became the JDM volume diesel — a 3.0L turbodiesel with usable low-end torque and a documented cylinder-head cracking risk when the cooling system is neglected. IH8MUD forum threads trace the root cause consistently: marginal cooling system design, infrequent coolant service, and an engine that doesn't tolerate temperature excursions or low-coolant towing.

Buyers shopping J90 1KZ-TE cars should treat the head as a known-cost item — replace the radiator, hoses, thermostat, and water pump as a service set. Watch for coolant-in-oil sludge, and verify the timing belt and water pump have been done together since they share a drive.

The J150 1GR-FE and the long facelift cycle

The J150 launched in late 2009 and ran through three facelifts across fourteen-plus years, adding Toyota Safety Sense, Crawl Control and Multi-Terrain Select on higher grades, and progressively larger infotainment screens. Powertrain options carried over from the J120 — 2TR-FE 2.7 petrol, 1GR-FE 4.0 V6 petrol, 1KZ-TE and 1KD-FTV diesels — and Toyota added the 1GD-FTV 2.8 D-4D in 2015.

The 1GR-FE V6 paired with a 5-speed automatic at launch, moved to a 6-speed at mid-cycle, and selected 2017-onward facelift markets received an 8-speed automatic on petrol-V6 variants. JDM-only TX and TZ-G grades carry hardware the export Lexus GX460 never received: factory rear locker, Multi-Terrain Monitor on later cars, Multi-Terrain Select with five terrain modes (mud and sand, loose rock, mogul, rock and dirt, rock), and JDM-spec interior trim that the GX460 didn't offer.

Late-facelift TZ-G with documented service history is the highest-value J150 configuration on the JDM auction market. Buyers shopping J150 cars should prioritize 1GD-FTV DPF/EGR service records, 1KD injector history on earlier cars, and KDSS hydraulic system condition where fitted.

Editorial notes

Quick read

Key takeaways

  • 150-series is the sweet spot for modern comfort + resale
  • Diesels command premiums; verify injector/DPF history
  • Rust is the #1 value killer; inspect frame and seams
  • KDSS improves handling but adds complexity to service
  • GX/Prado parts support is strong; trim spec varies by market
  • Modded builds rarely add full value; stock, documented wins
From JDMBUYSELL

Import a JDM car — step-by-step guide

Read the guide

Constants

Common across all Land Cruiser Prado generations

  • Body-on-frame ladder chassis across all Prado generations
  • Part-time or full-time 4WD with low-range transfer case
  • Petrol and turbo-diesel engine options; diesel variants common in JDM spec
  • Positioned below the full-size Land Cruiser station wagon
  • Right-hand drive available in all JDM-spec generations

Chassis history

Generation timeline

The Prado has run through five generations from 1990 to today, and each one shops differently. The J70 is the rawest one and the cheapest to fix. The J90 is where the Prado got its own identity and the 1KZ-TE diesel reputation. The J120 and J150 are the modern buyer's choice, and the J250 is too new for the used market to have settled.

J70

J70-series lighter-duty Land Cruiser; Prado-badged from 1990 (1984–1996)

Guide coming soon
J90

First dedicated Prado platform — J90 (1996–2002)

J120

Second Prado generation — J120 (2002–2009)

Guide coming soon
J150

Third Prado generation — J150 (2009–2024)

Guide coming soon

Buyer's call

Should you buy a Toyota Land Cruiser Prado?

The Prado earns its price the same way a Land Cruiser does. It's overbuilt, it holds value, and it goes places other SUVs can't. What you pay for that is fuel economy, a Toyota tax at purchase, and the cost of diesel injector or DPF work if you buy one with no records.

Why you'll love it

  • Exceptional long-term durabilityDrivetrains routinely exceed 200k+ miles with proper fluids, cooling, and timing service.
  • Strong resale and liquidityHigh global demand keeps values firm; easier to sell than most 4x4 SUVs.
  • Real off-road hardwareBody-on-frame, low range, strong axles; some trims add lockers, Crawl, MTS, KDSS.
  • Diesel efficiency and torque1KD/1GD deliver usable low-end torque; great for touring and towing in many markets.
  • Parts and service ecosystemExcellent OEM/aftermarket support; shared components with Hilux/4Runner/FJ in regions.
  • Comfortable daily driverJ120/J150 ride quality and cabin ergonomics suit commuting while retaining 4x4 ability.
  • Overland-ready platformLarge accessory market: suspension, armor, drawers, tanks; proven remote-area reliability.
  • Safety and refinement (later gens)J150 late models add modern safety suites; quieter cabins and better infotainment.

Why you might not

  • Rust risk on importsFrame, rear crossmember, seams, and underbody corrosion can be severe; repairs are costly.
  • Diesel injector/DPF costs1KD injector wear and 1GD DPF/EGR issues can be expensive without documented maintenance.
  • KDSS complexityGreat handling, but leaks/valve issues add diagnostic time and cost vs non-KDSS trucks.
  • Fuel economy varies widelyPetrol V6 models can be thirsty; lifted tires and racks worsen consumption significantly.
  • Trim/spec confusion by marketPrado equipment differs by region; verify lockers, 4WD type, airbags, and tow ratings.
  • Modifications can hide wearBig lifts and tunes may mask drivetrain fatigue; poor installs create electrical issues.
  • High buy-in vs rivalsToyota tax is real; comparable Pajero/Montero often costs less for similar capability.
  • Third-row practicality mixedSome markets have side-fold or small third rows; cargo space and comfort can disappoint.
Who should not buy this
  • Anyone expecting cheap fuel costs
  • Short-trip drivers (diesel/DPF variants)
  • People who won't maintain 4WD actuators regularly
  • Rust-belt buyers without lift/inspection access
  • Buyers needing modern crash tech and ADAS
  • Those who hate body roll and truck handling
  • Anyone unwilling to budget $2k+ for catch-up service
  • Owners without a diesel specialist nearby (D-4D)
  • People who need quiet cabin at highway speeds
  • Those who tow heavy without adding trans cooling
  • Buyers who can't verify mileage/import paperwork
  • Anyone wanting fast acceleration or sporty driving
  • People who won't grease driveline regularly
  • Those needing wide 3rd-row seating for adults
  • City-only drivers needing tight turning/parking ease
  • Emissions-strict regions if diesel compliance unclear
  • Anyone expecting dealer support for JDM-only trims
  • Buyers who can't DIY small fixes and trim issues

Reliability

Common issues & solutions

Most Prado problems trace to two things. Cooling neglect on the 1KZ-TE diesel cracks heads. Skipped injector and DPF service on the 1KD-FTV and 1GD-FTV diesels turns into a wallet hit. Outside the engine bay, rust is what kills Prado values, so the underbody inspection matters more than the test drive.

IssueCauseSolutionEst. cost
Frame rust/rotRoad salt, poor undercoating, trapped mudAvoid rot; treat early, weld/replace sections$800-6000
Rear link mount rustSalt/mud collects at brackets and seamsInspect/probe; weld repair plates if needed$600-2500
Lower ball joint failureWear, torn boots, oversized tires, neglectReplace both sides with OEM; align afterward$350-900
Steering rack leak/playSeal wear, torn boots, contaminated fluidRebuild/replace rack; flush fluid; align$900-2200
KDSS hydraulic leaksCorroded lines/cylinders, seal agingReplace leaking lines/cyl; bleed/calibrate$1200-4500
Air suspension sagCracked air bags, tired compressor, leaksReplace bags/lines; compressor if weak$900-3000
Driveshaft clunkDry slip yoke/U-joints from missed greasingGrease properly; replace U-joints if worn$80-600
Front CV boot tearsAge, lift angles, off-road debrisReboot or replace axle; check lift geometry$250-900
Wheel bearing noiseWater ingress, heavy tires, ageReplace hub/bearing; inspect seals$350-900
Brake line corrosionSalt exposure, clipped line traps moistureReplace hard lines; flush brake fluid$400-1500
Seized brake calipersCorrosion, torn boots, infrequent servicingRebuild/replace calipers; new pads/rotors$350-1200
ABS/VSC warning lightsWheel speed sensor, cracked tone ring, wiringScan; replace sensor/repair harness; clean hubs$150-900
4WD actuator stuckInfrequent use, corrosion, old greaseCycle regularly; remove/clean or replace actuator$400-1800
Center diff lock inopActuator seizure, switch faults, wiringDiagnose; free actuator or replace; verify ECU$300-1600
Transfer case leaksAged seals, overfilled, clogged breatherReplace seals; service fluid; clear breather$250-900
Auto trans shudderOld ATF, torque converter wear, overheatingFluid exchange; add cooler; TC if persists$300-3500
Auto trans harsh shiftsSolenoid wear, valve body varnish, old ATFService ATF; valve body/solenoids as needed$300-2500
Diesel injector wearPoor fuel, long intervals, high mileageTest balance; replace injectors; code if needed$1200-4500
Diesel injector seat leakWasher failure, improper torque, carbon buildReplace seats/washers; clean bores; re-torque$400-1400
Diesel SCV failureDenso suction control valve wear/contaminationReplace SCV; reset learning; change fuel filter$250-600
EGR/intake cloggingSoot + oil vapor buildup over timeClean EGR/intake; catch can; ensure proper temps$250-900
Turbo oil consumptionWorn seals/bearings, poor oil changesRebuild/replace turbo; clean intercooler$900-2800
Cooling system failuresAged radiator tanks, hoses, weak capReplace radiator/hoses/thermostat; flush coolant$400-1200
Diesel head gasket/headOverheating, clogged radiator, high EGT towingHead gasket; machine head; address root cause$2500-6500
Timing belt overdueUnknown history, skipped intervalDo belt, tensioner, idlers, water pump ASAP$700-1600
Fuel filter head leaksAged seals, cracked primer, loose fittingsReseal/replace head; new filter; bleed system$150-600
DPF clogging (if fitted)Short trips, failed regen, bad injectorsForced regen/clean; fix injectors/sensors$400-3500
A/C compressor failureAge, low refrigerant, contaminated oilReplace compressor/drier; flush; recharge$700-1800
Heater core seepCorrosion, old coolant, electrolysisReplace core; flush system; correct coolant mix$700-1600
Door lock actuator failWorn motor/gears, cold weather stressReplace actuator; verify wiring in door jamb$150-450
Window regulator failureCable fray, dry tracks, worn motorReplace regulator; lube tracks; check glass guides$200-600
Cluster pixel/backlightAging LCD/backlight, solder cracksCluster repair service or replacement$150-700
Sunroof drain leaksClogged drains, cracked tubes, poor sealingClear drains; replace tubes; reseal if needed$100-600
Rear axle seal leakWorn seal, bearing play, clogged breatherReplace seal/bearing; clean/extend breather$400-1200

Market

Differences between JDM & USDM

The Prado was never sold under its own name in the United States. From 2003 the J120 platform reached the US badged as the Lexus GX470, powered by the 4.7L 2UZ-FE V8 borrowed from the Land Cruiser, and the J150 followed in 2010 as the Lexus GX460. Both export GX cars ran petrol V8s and lost the JDM diesel option entirely. The JDM Prado kept the 1KZ-TE (J90/early J120), 1KD-FTV (J120/J150), and 1GD-FTV (J150 from 2015) D-4D diesels that drove most of the global volume. Beyond the engine, JDM Prados got grades that have no GX equivalent: the J120 TZ-G with factory adjustable air suspension, the J150 TX (a 7-seat JDM-only mid grade), and the J150 TZ-G with factory rear locker and Multi-Terrain Select. Under the US 25-year rule, the J70 (1990–1996) is fully importable to the US today and the J90 (1996–2002) enters legality model year by model year — a 1996 J90 is legal in 2026. Canadian residents face a 15-year rule, which means J120 cars (2002–2009) are already eligible. The configuration value proposition is straightforward: if you want a Prado in the US, the GX is the legal path until the J120 starts hitting 25 years in 2027; if you want JDM grades with diesel, rear locker, and TZ-G content, only an imported JDM-build car carries that hardware.

Specs

Technical specifications

Every Prado is body-on-frame with a low-range transfer case. From there, the choices are diesel or petrol, manual or automatic, and which generation's electronics you want to live with. The J70 keeps it simple with a 4-speed automatic or a 5-speed manual, and the J150 stretches the range up to a 6-speed manual on diesels and an 8-speed automatic on late-facelift petrol V6 cars.

Engine options

ChassisEngineDisplacementPowerBoostNotes
LJ71/LJ78 (J70 Prado)2L-T2.4LestimatedTurboExact JDM rating varies; verify by frame/VIN
LJ71/LJ78 (J70 Prado)2L-TE2.4LestimatedTurboEFI turbo diesel; exact rating market-dependent
LJ71/LJ78 (J70 Prado)3L2.8LestimatedN/ANA diesel; exact rating varies by year/market
RJ70/RJ77 (J70 Prado)22R2.4LestimatedN/ACarb petrol; market-dependent calibration
RJ70/RJ77 (J70 Prado)22R-E2.4LestimatedN/AEFI petrol; market-dependent calibration
RZJ90/RZJ95 (J90 Prado)3RZ-FE2.7LestimatedN/AExact kW/PS differs by market emissions spec
VZJ90/VZJ95 (J90 Prado)5VZ-FE3.4LestimatedN/AV6 petrol; rating varies by market/ECU
KZJ90/KZJ95 (J90 Prado)1KZ-TE3.0LestimatedTurboTurbo diesel; rating varies by intercooler/market
RZJ120/RZJ125 (J120 Prado)3RZ-FE2.7LestimatedN/ASome markets retained 3RZ-FE early J120
TRJ120/TRJ125 (J120 Prado)2TR-FE2.7LestimatedN/AVVT-i petrol I4; rating varies by market
GRJ120/GRJ121/GRJ125 (J120 Prado)1GR-FE4.0LestimatedN/AV6 petrol; dual VVT-i on later calibrations
KDJ120/KDJ121/KDJ125 (J120 Prado)1KD-FTV3.0LestimatedTurboD-4D; output varies by year (Euro spec changes)
TRJ150/TRJ155 (J150 Prado)2TR-FE2.7LestimatedN/AVVT-i petrol I4; market-dependent rating
GRJ150/GRJ151/GRJ155 (J150 Prado)1GR-FE4.0LestimatedN/AV6 petrol; rating varies by emissions/market
KDJ150/KDJ155 (J150 Prado)1KD-FTV3.0LestimatedTurboD-4D; later years replaced by 1GD-FTV
GDJ150/GDJ155 (J150 Prado)1GD-FTV2.8LestimatedTurboD-4D 2.8; ratings vary by market/aftertreat
GDJ250 (J250 Prado/LC250)1GD-FTV2.8LestimatedTurboMarket-dependent; some regions pair with 48V MHEV
TRJ250 (J250 Prado/LC250)2TR-FE2.7LestimatedN/AOffered in select markets; rating varies
T24A-FTS applications (LC250 market)T24A-FTS2.4LestimatedTurboi-FORCE turbo; exact output market-specific

Transmission options

TypeRatiosAvailabilityNotes
5-speed ManualestimatedJ70/J90/J120/J150 (market)Exact ratios vary by gearbox family
6-speed ManualestimatedJ150/J250 (diesel, market)Market/engine dependent
4-speed AutomaticestimatedJ90/J120 (market)Aisin 4AT; ratios vary by model
5-speed AutomaticestimatedJ120/J150 (market)Aisin 5AT; engine/market dependent
6-speed AutomaticestimatedJ150 (1GD/late 1GR, market)Aisin 6AT; calibration varies
8-speed AutomaticestimatedJ250 (market)New-gen Aisin 8AT; market dependent

Lineup

Variants & trims

JDM Prados use the RX, TX, TZ, TZ-G, and (on the J150) the TX 7-seat ladder. The grade tells you what features the car has, not what's under the hood. TZ-G is the JDM-only top trim that adds the factory rear locker, adjustable air suspension on the J120, and Multi-Terrain Select on later J150 cars. If you want those features, you're shopping an imported Prado, not a Lexus GX.

GenerationTrimEngineKey features
J70 Prado (LJ/RJ/KZJ) 1990-1996Prado SX2L-TE/2L-T/3L/22R/22R-E (market)Cloth, part-time 4WD, basic audio, steel wheels
J70 Prado (LJ/RJ/KZJ) 1990-1996Prado TX2L-TE/2L-T/3L/22R/22R-E (market)Upgraded trim, power windows, alloys (market)
J70 Prado (LJ/RJ/KZJ) 1990-1996Prado TZ2L-TE/2L-T/3L/22R/22R-E (market)Top grade, sunroof (market), premium interior
J90 Prado (RZJ/VZJ/KZJ) 1996-2002RX3RZ-FE/5VZ-FE/1KZ-TE (market)Entry grade, cloth, part-time 4WD (market)
J90 Prado (RZJ/VZJ/KZJ) 1996-2002TX3RZ-FE/5VZ-FE/1KZ-TE (market)Mid grade, power equipment, alloys (market)
J90 Prado (RZJ/VZJ/KZJ) 1996-2002TZ3RZ-FE/5VZ-FE/1KZ-TE (market)Top grade, sunroof (market), premium audio
J120 Prado (RZJ/GRJ/KDJ/TRJ) 2002-2009GX2TR-FE/1GR-FE/1KD-FTV (market)Entry grade, cloth, basic audio, 4WD
J120 Prado (RZJ/GRJ/KDJ/TRJ) 2002-2009GXL2TR-FE/1GR-FE/1KD-FTV (market)Alloys, upgraded trim, power features (market)
J120 Prado (RZJ/GRJ/KDJ/TRJ) 2002-2009VX1GR-FE/1KD-FTV (market)Leather (market), climate, premium audio (market)
J120 Prado (RZJ/GRJ/KDJ/TRJ) 2002-2009Grande1GR-FE/1KD-FTV (market)Top grade, leather, sunroof (market), NAV
J150 Prado (GRJ/TRJ/GDJ) 2009-2023GX2TR-FE/1GR-FE/1KD-FTV/1GD-FTV (market)Entry grade, cloth, basic infotainment, 4WD
J150 Prado (GRJ/TRJ/GDJ) 2009-2023GXL2TR-FE/1GR-FE/1KD-FTV/1GD-FTV (market)Alloys, upgraded interior, roof rails (market)
J150 Prado (GRJ/TRJ/GDJ) 2009-2023VX1GR-FE/1KD-FTV/1GD-FTV (market)Leather (market), KDSS (market), premium audio
J150 Prado (GRJ/TRJ/GDJ) 2009-2023Kakadu1GR-FE/1KD-FTV/1GD-FTV (market)Top grade, air suspension (market), NAV, sunroof
J150 Prado (GRJ/TRJ/GDJ) 2009-2023TX (JDM)1GR-FE/1KD-FTV/1GD-FTV (market)JDM grade, 7-seat (market), Toyota Safety (late)
J150 Prado (GRJ/TRJ/GDJ) 2009-2023TZ-G (JDM)1GR-FE/1KD-FTV/1GD-FTV (market)JDM top, leather, multi-terrain (market), NAV
J250 Prado (Land Cruiser 250) 2023-presentGX (market)2.7 2TR-FE (market)/2.8 1GD-FTV (market)Entry grade, cloth, Toyota Safety Sense, 4WD
J250 Prado (Land Cruiser 250) 2023-presentVX (market)2.7 2TR-FE (market)/2.8 1GD-FTV (market)Mid grade, larger screen (market), alloys, 4WD
J250 Prado (Land Cruiser 250) 2023-presentZX/First Edition (market)2.4T T24A-FTS (market)/2.8 1GD-FTV (market)Top grade, round lamps (FE), off-road tech (market)

Pricing

Average prices & original MSRP

Prado values reflect global demand. A rough J70 import sits at the bottom of the range and a clean late-facelift J150 TZ-G sits at the top. Diesel and 7-seat configurations command premiums in most markets, and a Prado with documented service history routinely outsells a lower-mile Prado that arrived without paperwork.

Today's market range: $9,000 to $95,000 (median ~$32,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.

Prado prices remain firm due to global overland demand and limited clean supply. J120/J150 diesels lead premiums; rust-free, documented trucks outperform. Expect steady-to-up bias, with best buys in higher-mile, well-serviced examples.

Inspect

Pre-purchase inspection checklist

Use this list with a flashlight and a creeper. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no documentation backing them up, especially the diesel injector and timing belt records. The High items can usually be priced into the deal. Don't skip the underbody, the rear crossmember, or the KDSS reservoir on cars that have it.

Critical priority

High priority

Medium priority

Low priority

Cross-shop

Comparable alternatives

If the Prado doesn't fit, the natural alternatives depend on what you're after. The Lexus GX470 or GX460 is the legal US path to the same chassis on a V8. The Toyota 4Runner is the same idea in a US-market wrapper. If you want similar capability for less money, the Mitsubishi Pajero V80 and Nissan Patrol Y61 both deliver, and the Patrol is the more serious off-road truck of the three.

Lexus GX470 (J120)

Prado sibling; V8, luxury, strong parts support

Lexus GX460 (J150)

Closest US equivalent; modern safety, strong resale

Toyota 4Runner (N210)

Similar size/capability; easier US ownership

Nissan Patrol Y61

Hardcore off-road; solid axles; strong enthusiast support

Compare

How it compares

Among the body-on-frame 4x4s the Prado competes with, it's the most reliable and the easiest to resell. The Pajero V80 is the value play, with Super Select 4WD and a softer ride. The Patrol Y61 is the hardcore one with solid axles. The table below leans toward the Prado's strengths because that's where it actually wins, on long-term durability and parts availability.

FeatureToyota Land Cruiser PradoMitsubishi Pajero V80Nissan Patrol Y61
Chassis/4WD layoutBody-on-frame; low rangeBody-on-frame; low rangeBody-on-frame; low range
Typical diesel engines1KD 3.0 / 1GD 2.84M41 3.2 DI-DZD30 3.0 / TD42 4.2
Typical petrol engines1GR-FE 4.0 V6 (some)6G74 3.5 / 6G75 3.8 V6TB45 4.5 / TB48 4.8 I6
Power (common trims)Diesel ~170-204 hpDiesel ~160-200 hpPetrol up to ~280 hp
Torque (common diesels)~343-500 Nm (gen/market)~373-441 Nm~354-420 Nm (ZD30/TD42)
Transmission options5AT/6AT; some 5MT5AT; some 5MT5MT/4AT/5AT (market)
On-road handlingStable; KDSS trims excelGood; independent rear helpsTruck-like; solid axle feel
Off-road stock abilityVery strong; aids on someStrong; Super Select 4WDExcellent; solid axles
4WD system typePart/full-time varies by specSuper Select (2H/4H/4HLc/4LLc)Part-time w/ low range (most)
Lockers/traction aidsATRAC; rear locker on someTraction control; rear locker rareRear locker on some; simple
Interior/cabin qualityDurable; J150 feels upscaleComfortable; older designUtilitarian; rugged
Reliability reputationExcellent; maintenance-sensitive dieselGood; cooling/auto trans careVery strong; age/rust issues
Running costsModerate-high; Toyota parts premiumOften lower buy-in; parts varyFuel heavy; parts depend on market
Towing suitabilityStrong; check market tow ratingStrong; stable wheelbaseVery strong; big petrol torque
Aftermarket supportHuge global supportGood; smaller than ToyotaHuge in AU/ME; strong off-road
Value retentionTop-tier; Toyota taxWeaker; better bargainsStrong; depends on engine
US-market analogClosest: Lexus GX / 4RunnerClosest: Montero (older US)Closest: Armada/Patrol (newer)

Gallery

Editorial

The buyer's read

For most buyers, the answer is a documented J150 with the 1KD-FTV or 1GD-FTV diesel and a clean underbody. That combination delivers modern safety hardware, a serious off-road platform, and resale that holds over time. Skip anything with rust on the rear crossmember or seams — frame corrosion on imports is typically worse in person than the photos show, and a cheap Prado with frame rot ends up costing more than a clean one once you start repairing it.

If the JDM grades are the goal, focus on TX or TZ-G. TZ-G carries the factory rear locker, Multi-Terrain Select on later J150 cars, and JDM-spec interior trim the Lexus GX never received. On the J120 generation, TZ-G also includes adjustable air suspension — budget for the air struts and ride-height sensors on high-mileage examples, since the system is worthwhile when functional and expensive when it isn't.

The J90 with the 1KZ-TE diesel takes the most vetting. A paperwork trail showing the radiator, hoses, thermostat, water pump, and timing belt done as a service set is the key evidence. White or grey exhaust smoke and coolant in the oil are the head-cracking tells — either condition warrants walking away without a firm repair quote in hand. The head cracking risk is known and traceable; it's not a reason to avoid J90s, but it is a reason to require documentation.

Diesel injector records matter on every 1KD-FTV and 1GD-FTV Prado. Ask for them by name. No records means pricing in a full injector service. On the 1GD-FTV, short-trip city use clogs the DPF, and a failed regen cascades into sensor and injector issues you don't want to inherit without a discount.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Which Prado generation is best for most buyers?
Most choose J150 for modern safety/comfort and resale. J120 is best value if injector/rust history is clean.
Are Prado diesels reliable (1KD/1GD)?
Yes with records. Watch 1KD injectors and cooling; on 1GD, check DPF/EGR service and quality fuel use.
What are the biggest inspection red flags?
Rust, overheating history, delayed shifts, diff/transfer leaks, injector knock, and poorly wired accessories are top red flags.
Does KDSS matter and should I avoid it?
KDSS improves road handling and articulation, but adds hydraulic complexity. Buy it if serviced; avoid if leaking or neglected.
What mileage is 'too high' for a Prado?
Mileage matters less than maintenance. A 250k-mile truck with records can beat a 120k truck with rust and no service history.
What trims/specs are most desirable?
Desirability favors diesel, 7-seat, factory rear locker/ATRAC, clean underbody, and stock or lightly modified examples.
Are modified Prados worth more at resale?
Usually not dollar-for-dollar. Quality suspension/armor helps, but buyers pay most for condition, rust-free, and documentation.
When is a Prado US-legal under 25-year rule?
It depends on build year. Example: a 2002 J90 becomes legal in 2027; a 2003 J120 becomes legal in 2028.

Citations

Sources & references

Sources (11)
  1. Toyota EPC/parts catalogs (Prado J90/J120/J150) — Toyota Motor CorporationVerified
  2. Toyota service manuals (selected markets) — Toyota Motor CorporationVerified
  3. Land Cruiser Prado model history and specs — Toyota GlobalVerified
  4. Toyota Land Cruiser Prado — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  5. Lexus GX — US-market Prado twin — WikipediaVerified
  6. Toyota Land Cruiser Prado — Japanese encyclopedic overview — Wikipedia (Japanese)Verified
  7. 120-series Prado owner forum (technical and TSB discussions) — IH8MUDVerified
  8. Lexus GX long-term review and reliability reporting — EdmundsVerified
  9. Lexus GX road test and specifications — MotorTrendVerified
  10. Lexus GX comparison and rivals coverage — Car and DriverVerified
  11. Toyota Land Cruiser (current US-market sibling line) — Toyota USAVerified

Sources last verified:

Report a correction

Spotted something wrong on this page? Tell us and we'll review.