Saturday, March 18, 2017

2017 Toyota Highlander Hybrid Limited Platinum Interior Measurements (Or: will my windsurfing gear fit?)

Unlike windsurfers, I guess most folks don't buy Sports Utility Vehicles for their utility. Good luck finding measurements for the interior cargo-area of most SUVs. Yes, you can find the cargo area volume. But when's the last time you filled your car with a liquid? Did you even fill the whole thing up?

Thanks to this oversight, I had to visit car dealerships with a tape measure. Yeah, I was the dork measuring SUVs.

I personally made the following interior measurements with a tape measure. Beware: these measurements are rounded to the nearest half inch, and the geometry inside cars is complex. The Highlander is much more complex inside than the box-like Element.

Also, these measures come from a 2017 Highlander Hybrid Limited with the Platinum package. The batteries and electric motors go somewhere. Specifically, I believe the batteries live under the floor of the rear cabin.

These measurements will vary depending on where exactly you measure things. For instance, the diagonal measurements below start from a little cubby area under the rear window on the driver's side. A mast or a boom could probably fit in that cubby, but a bookshelf wouldn't. The bulkier an item, the less of that lengthy you will be able to take advantage of. Also, the cargo opening is curved in multiple dimensions. The distance from the back of a seat to the rear of the vehicle gets shorter as you move the measuring point to the outside of the Highlander.

Remember: if you're trying to fit something more bulky than a tape measure, assume you have a shorter distance to work with. Don't base the purchase of a vehicle only on my measurements -- try to fit your stuff first!

2017 Highlander Interior Cargo Measurements

  1. Rear opening height 31"
  2. Rear opening width 41.5" near the top, 47" near the bottom
  3. Minimum rear width at floor 45.5"
  4. Distance from the rear to the back of the front passenger seat (seat all the way back) 77.5
  5. Distance  from the rear to the back of the front passenger seat (seat all the way forward, probably not comfortable) 90"
  6. Distance from rear to the dashboard along the center 112"
  7. Distance from the rear to the center console 81.5"
  8. Height in rear cargo area 32.5" 
  9. Distance to the back of the middle seats 43"
  10. Distance along the ceiling from front to rear over passenger seats 98"
  11. Ceiling width at the side doors 50"
  12. Height behind front seats 46.5"
  13. Height at front seats 43.5
  14. Diagonal from the rear on the driver side to the back of the front passenger seat (seat all the way back)  95"
  15. Diagonal from the rear on the driver side to the back of the front passenger seat (seat all the way forward, not comfortable) 102"  

The 2017 Toyota Highlander vs. The 2006 Honda Element

The Highlander is a significantly larger vehicle on the outside than the Honda Element, so my measurements had me double-taking. The shorter, narrower Element wins a few dimensions!

In Favor of the Element

  • Rear opening height - a nine and a half inch advantage for the Element
  • Cargo area height  - a nine and a half inch advantage
  • The height from the floor to the ceiling in front of the driver's seat - a four and a half inch advantage

In Favor of the Highlander

  • Distance from the rear to the back of the front passenger seat - an 11 to 15 inch advantage to the Highlander
  • A 13 inch advantage to the diagonal cargo area with the passenger seat all the way back
  • A 16 inch advantage from the rear to the back of the second row of seats

5 comments:

Saqib Khatri said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Unknown said...

Thank you! I don’t have anything as fun as windsurfing gear to load. But now I can confidently go to Costco and buy a twin bed mattress and box spring and slide them in!

Unknown said...

This is definitely good news! For myself, I also thought about buying a jeep. Now I'm planning to buy a used car, because it much cheaper than to buy new car from the salon. Now I am engaged in receiving reports using https://www.faxvin.com/blog/vin-vehicle-identification-number this service I can quickly find out the most important information about the selected car, so as not to make mistakes when buying. This will give me an opportunity to make sure that the car was not in a car crash and is also not listed in the hijacking.

boblog said...

It was amazing to find this. As I am a windsurfer for last 100 yrs or so :). I have had Outbacks and they are great & w/o a passenger, stuff goes inside but with pass. seat flat. Only a one board guy these days. Been looking at highlanders, pilots, Tacoma(with a cap) so I can also easily put a MTB in there but yes maybe w/o ws gear. The diagonal length to passenger seat very important. Funny the older Pilots and highlanders seem to have more space and especially bigger tailgate openings. So I will look at a Pilot or Highlander. Pilots are slightly bigger. There is the minivan. Did that for years. Even as a single guy. Dumb. The highlander mentioned sounds like diagonally my 93 inch board (239cm) would fit in with wife still comfortably in passenger seat.

JohnRMay said...

Any more infoemation about Toyota Highlander? Toyota Malaysia