2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid Overview

Likes:

  • Adequate acceleration and great fuel economy
  • Smooth, well-controlled ride
  • Very quiet cabin

Dislikes:

  • Conservative styling, with little to differentiate the Hybrid
  • Doesn't handle as well as other Camrys
  • Difficult to maintain steady speed without cruise control

Bottom Line

The experts at TheCarConnection.com studied the range of reviews on the new 2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid , then produced this comprehensive report. TheCarConnection.com's editors have also driven the 2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid and incorporated their experience with the ...

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Full Review

The 2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid goes unchanged from the 2008 edition. In appearance, it is nearly identical to the nonhybrid version. "Because it looks so much like a regular Camry, the hybrid Camry doesn't make nearly as much of a green statement as the Prius," comments Car and...

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Select a Trim:

Trim MSRP / Invoice Fuel Econ
2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid: 4dr Sedan (Natl) $26,150 / $23,796 City: 33
Hwy: 34
2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid: 4dr Sedan (GS) $26,150 / $23,796 City: 33
Hwy: 34
2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid: 4dr Sedan (SE) $26,150 / $23,796 City: 33
Hwy: 34

2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid Related News

See More 2009 Toyota Camry Hybrid Related News

Other Choices:

The Altima Hybrid, which also uses a full-hybrid system, has mileage and overall performance that's very similar to those of the Camry Hybrid, but the Camry's interior is a little roomier. The luxurious, diesel-powered Mercedes E320 BlueTEC seems like an unlikely competitor, but it also attracts buyers who want to decrease their petroleum use, and it gets 32 mpg on the highway. To its credit, the E320 BlueTEC rides, handles, and accelerates just about as well as the gasoline E350, but it's more than twice the price of the Camry Hybrid. Or if you'd like a full-hybrid powertrain in a compact SUV, there's the Ford Escape Hybrid, which is rated at 34 mpg city, 30 mpg highway. Finally, if you don't need all the space of the Camry and don't mind a hatchback, you might as well go for the much more fuel-efficient Prius, which gets 48 mpg city, 45 mpg highway.

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See the Toyota Camry Hybrid in Other Years:

2010 | 2009 | 2008 | 2007

Comments (1 total)

  1. By Edward the Good #1, Posted: 10/20/2008

    King of England

    It is obvious that if this Camry and the Honda Civic and Accord Hybrids and the Altima Hybrid and the Escape-mariner Hybrids looked SIGNIFICANTLY DIFFERENT in EXTGERIOR Styling than their NON-Hybrid twins, they would, like the PRIUS, sell DOUBLE and TRIPLE the numbers they are selling now, and the sky would NOT be restricted by the DEMAND but only on how fast they woould be able to MAKE THEM.

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