The updated 2025 Mitsubishi Outlander will start from $39,990 plus on-road costs when it arrives next month.
That starting figure is $2250 higher than before, with prices across the board having risen up to $2950 depending on the variant – a full breakdown of the increases can be found at the bottom of this report.
The extra cash nets buyers new Australian-developed suspension – recalibrated shock absorbers, thinner front sway bar – and steering tunes, a mildly revised exterior design, updated centre console layout, new rear seats and a few select equipment enhancements.
Every variant gets a 12.3-inch infotainment system – packing wireless smartphone projection, connected services and sat-nav – and a matching 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster, additional USB-C ports and an expanded active safety suite that now includes driver monitoring, camera-linked rear autonomous braking, a top-view camera and traffic sign recognition with active cruise control and speed limit link.
The top-spec Exceed and Exceed Tourer go a step further with a frameless digital rear-view mirror and ventilated front seats, the latter also adding heated rear outboard seats and access to a pair of Yamaha sound systems.
It’s worth noting however the flagships have lost their third rows of seating to become five-seaters only.
No changes have been made to the 2.5-litre four-cylinder petrol engine hiding under the bonnet or the continuously variable transmission it operates through which still sends power to either the front or all four wheels.
Local pricing and spec details of the updated PHEV versions will be announced at a later date.
How much does the 2025 Mitsubishi Outlander cost?
ES 5-seat FWD – $39,990 (+$2250)
ES 5-seat AWD – $42,490 (+$2250)
LS 7-seat FWD – $43,290 (+$2050)
LS 7-seat AWD – $45,790 (+$2050)
Aspire 7-seat FWD – $47,790 (+$2950)
Aspire 7-seat AWD – $50,290 (+$2950)
Exceed 5-seat AWD – $55,140 (+$2500)
Exceed Tourer 5-seat AWD – $57,990 (+$2800)
* Prices exclude on-road costs