
2026 Toyota Corolla Cross price, spec details leaked
Key details of the updated 2026 Toyota Corolla Cross lineup, including pricing, has been leaked online.
A dealer bulletin shared on the Toyota Corolla Cross Owners Australia group on Facebook reveals the entire lineup will receive a $960 price hike, while also detailing some of the spec changes coming to the small crossover SUV.
Toyota has previously confirmed a local launch for the upgraded small SUV in the second half of 2025. We've contacted the company for an update.
Per the bulletin, the Corolla Cross will arrive at dealerships in late July in both GX and Atmos trims, with the GXL and new GR-S trim (pictured below) arriving in early October.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
The bulletin mentions "production delays due to pending certification" for the GXL and GR-S, which were originally set to arrive alongside the rest of the range.
The updated lineup will open at $37,440 before on-road costs for the base front-wheel drive GX, and top out at $50,990 before on-roads for both the all-wheel drive Atmos and GR-S.
All variants get HF01234YF refrigerant for their air-conditioning systems and an Acoustic Vehicle Alerting System (AVAS) to alert passersby to the hybrid SUV's presence.
The front and rear Parking Support Brake function, which applies the brakes if it detects an object or vehicle and which was previously exclusive to the Atmos, is being rolled out to the GX and GXL.
The GXL also picks up the following features from the Atmos:
The Atmos gains ventilated front seats.
There's also updated centre console trim for the GX, GXL and Atmos.
The new GR-S (or GR Sport) variant revealed in May features unique front and rear bumpers, as well as lower sports suspension, retuned steering, and unique 19-inch alloy wheels.
Ever since petrol-powered variants were dropped locally in 2024, all Australian-market Corolla Cross vehicles come with a 2.0-litre four-cylinder hybrid powertrain delivering 146kW of total system power.
The wider range receives refreshed exterior styling including new LED headlight internals for the GXL and Atmos.
Toyota may be the best-selling car brand in Australia by a country mile, but the Corolla Cross was only the seventh best-selling vehicle in its segment last year, behind the MG ZS, Hyundai Kona, GWM Haval Jolion, Mazda CX-30, Mitsubishi ASX and Subaru Crosstrek.
Here's the pricing as it appears in the dealer bulletin:
MORE: Everything Toyota Corolla Cross
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Key details of the updated 2026 Toyota Corolla Cross lineup, including pricing, has been leaked online.
A dealer bulletin shared on the Toyota Corolla Cross Owners Australia group on Facebook reveals the entire lineup will receive a $960 price hike, while also detailing some of the spec changes coming to the small crossover SUV.
Toyota has previously confirmed a local launch for the upgraded small SUV in the second half of 2025. We've contacted the company for an update.
Per the bulletin, the Corolla Cross will arrive at dealerships in late July in both GX and Atmos trims, with the GXL and new GR-S trim (pictured below) arriving in early October.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
The bulletin mentions "production delays due to pending certification" for the GXL and GR-S, which were originally set to arrive alongside the rest of the range.
The updated lineup will open at $37,440 before on-road costs for the base front-wheel drive GX, and top out at $50,990 before on-roads for both the all-wheel drive Atmos and GR-S.
All variants get HF01234YF refrigerant for their air-conditioning systems and an Acoustic Vehicle Alerting System (AVAS) to alert passersby to the hybrid SUV's presence.
The front and rear Parking Support Brake function, which applies the brakes if it detects an object or vehicle and which was previously exclusive to the Atmos, is being rolled out to the GX and GXL.
The GXL also picks up the following features from the Atmos:
The Atmos gains ventilated front seats.
There's also updated centre console trim for the GX, GXL and Atmos.
The new GR-S (or GR Sport) variant revealed in May features unique front and rear bumpers, as well as lower sports suspension, retuned steering, and unique 19-inch alloy wheels.
Ever since petrol-powered variants were dropped locally in 2024, all Australian-market Corolla Cross vehicles come with a 2.0-litre four-cylinder hybrid powertrain delivering 146kW of total system power.
The wider range receives refreshed exterior styling including new LED headlight internals for the GXL and Atmos.
Toyota may be the best-selling car brand in Australia by a country mile, but the Corolla Cross was only the seventh best-selling vehicle in its segment last year, behind the MG ZS, Hyundai Kona, GWM Haval Jolion, Mazda CX-30, Mitsubishi ASX and Subaru Crosstrek.
Here's the pricing as it appears in the dealer bulletin:
MORE: Everything Toyota Corolla Cross
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Key details of the updated 2026 Toyota Corolla Cross lineup, including pricing, has been leaked online.
A dealer bulletin shared on the Toyota Corolla Cross Owners Australia group on Facebook reveals the entire lineup will receive a $960 price hike, while also detailing some of the spec changes coming to the small crossover SUV.
Toyota has previously confirmed a local launch for the upgraded small SUV in the second half of 2025. We've contacted the company for an update.
Per the bulletin, the Corolla Cross will arrive at dealerships in late July in both GX and Atmos trims, with the GXL and new GR-S trim (pictured below) arriving in early October.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
The bulletin mentions "production delays due to pending certification" for the GXL and GR-S, which were originally set to arrive alongside the rest of the range.
The updated lineup will open at $37,440 before on-road costs for the base front-wheel drive GX, and top out at $50,990 before on-roads for both the all-wheel drive Atmos and GR-S.
All variants get HF01234YF refrigerant for their air-conditioning systems and an Acoustic Vehicle Alerting System (AVAS) to alert passersby to the hybrid SUV's presence.
The front and rear Parking Support Brake function, which applies the brakes if it detects an object or vehicle and which was previously exclusive to the Atmos, is being rolled out to the GX and GXL.
The GXL also picks up the following features from the Atmos:
The Atmos gains ventilated front seats.
There's also updated centre console trim for the GX, GXL and Atmos.
The new GR-S (or GR Sport) variant revealed in May features unique front and rear bumpers, as well as lower sports suspension, retuned steering, and unique 19-inch alloy wheels.
Ever since petrol-powered variants were dropped locally in 2024, all Australian-market Corolla Cross vehicles come with a 2.0-litre four-cylinder hybrid powertrain delivering 146kW of total system power.
The wider range receives refreshed exterior styling including new LED headlight internals for the GXL and Atmos.
Toyota may be the best-selling car brand in Australia by a country mile, but the Corolla Cross was only the seventh best-selling vehicle in its segment last year, behind the MG ZS, Hyundai Kona, GWM Haval Jolion, Mazda CX-30, Mitsubishi ASX and Subaru Crosstrek.
Here's the pricing as it appears in the dealer bulletin:
MORE: Everything Toyota Corolla Cross
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Key details of the updated 2026 Toyota Corolla Cross lineup, including pricing, has been leaked online.
A dealer bulletin shared on the Toyota Corolla Cross Owners Australia group on Facebook reveals the entire lineup will receive a $960 price hike, while also detailing some of the spec changes coming to the small crossover SUV.
Toyota has previously confirmed a local launch for the upgraded small SUV in the second half of 2025. We've contacted the company for an update.
Per the bulletin, the Corolla Cross will arrive at dealerships in late July in both GX and Atmos trims, with the GXL and new GR-S trim (pictured below) arriving in early October.
Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now.
The bulletin mentions "production delays due to pending certification" for the GXL and GR-S, which were originally set to arrive alongside the rest of the range.
The updated lineup will open at $37,440 before on-road costs for the base front-wheel drive GX, and top out at $50,990 before on-roads for both the all-wheel drive Atmos and GR-S.
All variants get HF01234YF refrigerant for their air-conditioning systems and an Acoustic Vehicle Alerting System (AVAS) to alert passersby to the hybrid SUV's presence.
The front and rear Parking Support Brake function, which applies the brakes if it detects an object or vehicle and which was previously exclusive to the Atmos, is being rolled out to the GX and GXL.
The GXL also picks up the following features from the Atmos:
The Atmos gains ventilated front seats.
There's also updated centre console trim for the GX, GXL and Atmos.
The new GR-S (or GR Sport) variant revealed in May features unique front and rear bumpers, as well as lower sports suspension, retuned steering, and unique 19-inch alloy wheels.
Ever since petrol-powered variants were dropped locally in 2024, all Australian-market Corolla Cross vehicles come with a 2.0-litre four-cylinder hybrid powertrain delivering 146kW of total system power.
The wider range receives refreshed exterior styling including new LED headlight internals for the GXL and Atmos.
Toyota may be the best-selling car brand in Australia by a country mile, but the Corolla Cross was only the seventh best-selling vehicle in its segment last year, behind the MG ZS, Hyundai Kona, GWM Haval Jolion, Mazda CX-30, Mitsubishi ASX and Subaru Crosstrek.
Here's the pricing as it appears in the dealer bulletin:
MORE: Everything Toyota Corolla Cross
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
24 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Section 899 of Trump's Big Beautiful Bill makes US assets ‘less attractive' to Aussie investors
AMP economist My Bui has claimed she is 'quite concerned' about the impact of section 899 of US President Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill on Australian businesses. Treasurer Jim Chalmers spoke to his American counterpart Scott Bessent this morning and used the call to lobby him over the Section 899 tax proposal, which forms part of Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill. If the Bill passes, it could result in Australia being deemed a 'discriminatory foreign country', which could result in Australian businesses investing in America being charged higher taxes.

News.com.au
24 minutes ago
- News.com.au
ASX 200 finishes flat on Wednesday despite weak mining sector
Sky News Business Reporter Edward Boyd says the local market had a flat day of trading on Wednesday. 'Banks were strong, mining companies were weak,' Mr Boyd said. The ASX 200 finished the day up just 0.04 per cent – virtually flat.

News.com.au
24 minutes ago
- News.com.au
$33 million disappears from Gold Coast road upgrades and improvements list
Millions of dollars in funding for road upgrades across the Gold Coast have disappeared from the state budget, casting doubt over ten transport projects. More than $33 million is no longer listed in the Queensland Transport and Roads Investment Program (QTRIP) released by the state government this week. The annual document provides a detailed breakdown of projects to be delivered by the Department of Transport and Main Roads and the funding allocations over the coming years. At least ten previously funded Gold Coast projects now appear to have no money budgeted to deliver them in the latest QTRIP covering 2025-26 to 2028-29. Instead, the transport projects are listed as still in the planning phase or have been placed on hold to be delivered at a later date. Gaven MP Meghan Scanlon said she feared the lack of transparency over the funding amounts could mean the projects won't be delivered at all. 'Its been a long-standing tradition from both sides of politics to provide that long-term funding breakdown so Queenslanders can openly see how much money has been allocated,' Ms Scanlon said. 'That's all been swept under the rug, it's kept secret, I suspect because the transport minister made some bold claims that he now can't deliver.' Among the funding amounts that have vanished from QTRIP are: $1.9M to upgrade pedestrian facilities at the Broadbeach Rd and Carrara Rd (Ross St) intersection, Nerang. $1.16M for intersection improvements on Hope Island Rd (Oxley Dr) and Sunbird Ave, Paradise Point. $12.29M for bus infrastructure upgrades on Burleigh Connection Rd and Varsity Lakes Train station. $6M for upgrades on Currumbin Creek Rd and Bienvenue Dr. $1.64M for intersection upgrades on Currumbin Creek Rd and Stewart Rd. $5M for intersection upgrades at Burleigh Rd and Markeri St, Southport. $1.48M intersection improvements at Nerang Rd, Minnie St and Anne St, Southport. $800K for planning on upgrades to Burleigh Rd, Southport. $1.41M for intersection improvements Burleigh Rd and Slayter Ave, Southport. $2.03M for safety improvements on Nerang Rd and Ashmore Rd, Ashmore. Last week the LNP flagged changes to the way QTRIP is published in what Transport Minister Brent Mickelberg said would 'restore respect' for taxpayers' money. 'This is about ending the waste and restoring fiscal discipline to make every dollar stretch further for Queenslanders,' Minister Mickelberg said. 'Labor routinely announced project cost allocations before the market had a chance to competitively tender – locking in big prices and locking out better value.' However Ms Scanlon accused the LNP of failing to be 'transparent' about the changes. 'The problem is, if it's now secret, I think the LNP should come out, be open and transparent with Queenslanders about where this money is,' she said. 'They went to the election saying they were going to be transparent, saying they were going to be a government with integrity. We have seen the complete opposite almost every day from the Crisafulli government.' The Bulletin asked the Transport Minister's office why the previous funding commitments for the Gold Coast projects had disappeared and how they would still be delivered by the government. A spokeswoman for the Minister said: 'All projects are either in planning or about to start procurement. Once the contract has been awarded the full project costs will be disclosed within QTRIP with all the other contracted projects.'