Lexus UX 300h Toyota C-HR

Two cars on the same rows. The figures are all here, with their sources, so you can read them yourself and decide what matters.

Comparison table

18 of these rows differ. They sit at the top. Figures come straight from the makers, indicative. A bullet (•) marks a differing row.
Lexus UX 300h Toyota C-HR
Model years (differs) 2018-now 2023-now
From (indicative) (differs) € 44,995 € 35,995
Status Available Available
Fuel Hybrid Hybrid
RatingsRating figures: higher is better (scale 0-100). What each category measures is explained on the methodology page.
Reliability (differs) 85/100 83/100
Efficiency (differs) 78/100 81/100
Practicality (differs) 58/100 62/100
Sustainability (environmental impact) (differs) 64/100 63/100
Value retention (differs) 76/100 74/100
Specifications
Body style (differs) SUV Crossover
Power (hp) (differs) 199 140
0–100 km/h (s) (differs) 8.1 9.9
Top speed (km/h) (differs) 177 170
Length (mm) (differs) 4495 4362
Width (mm) (differs) 1840 1832
Height (mm) (differs) 1540 1564
Kerb weight (kg) (differs) 1615 1505
Consumption WLTP (l/100km) (differs) 5.2 4.7
Max. towing weight, braked (kg) (differs) 750 725
Boot (l) (differs) 320 364
Seats 5 5
Doors 5 5

OEM datasheets + RDW + ADAC (see methodology); rating and reference dates are listed per figure

Show sources and reference dates per rating
  • Lexus UX 300h · Reliability: ADAC breakdown statistics 2025 (Toyota/Lexus hybrid historically low) + aggregated owner reviews · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Lexus UX 300h · Efficiency: Owner-reported real-world consumption vs WLTP 5.2 l/100km, public forums · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Lexus UX 300h · Practicality: Boot 320 l cramped + 750 kg braked towing weight (premium-SUV comparison), editorial weighting · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Lexus UX 300h · Sustainability (environmental impact): WLTP 5.2 l/100km hybrid without plug, indicative weighting · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Lexus UX 300h · Value retention: Residual-value indication valuation guides premium segment (Lexus historically stable) · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Toyota C-HR · Reliability: ADAC breakdown statistics 2025 (Toyota hybrid historically low) + aggregated owner reviews · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Toyota C-HR · Efficiency: Owner-reported real-world consumption vs WLTP 4.7 l/100km (public forums) · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Toyota C-HR · Practicality: Boot 364 l + cramped rear seat/visibility (segment comparison, owner reviews) · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Toyota C-HR · Sustainability (environmental impact): Full-hybrid without a plug (stays fossil) + low urban consumption, indicative weighting · reference date 2026-05-18
  • Toyota C-HR · Value retention: Residual-value indication ANWB/valuation guides segment (Toyota hybrid historically strong) · reference date 2026-05-18

Who they are

A short write-up on each car, one paragraph apiece. We describe them on their own terms rather than picking a winner.

Profile · 300h Hybrid (ZAA10, facelift 2023)

Lexus UX 300h

Compact premium SUV on the Toyota GA-C platform, shared with the Corolla and C-HR. Since the 2023 facelift the hybrid version is called UX 300h (199 hp system power, predecessor UX 250h had 184 hp). WLTP consumption 5.2 l/100km; owners report around 5.7 l/100km mixed.

Profile · 1.8 Hybrid (AX20, tweede generatie)

Toyota C-HR

Full-hybrid crossover without a plug, second generation (2023). Strong point is a low urban fuel use and the Toyota hybrid reliability reputation; weak point is the modest rear space and the low towing weight (725 kg braked). Indicative starting price.

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No tax or financial advice. Every figure shows its source and reference date. Always compare with an independent adviser and the official source. Source: OEM datasheets + RDW + ADAC (see methodology); rating and reference dates are listed per figure.