Hilux comes home: why Toyota's pickup costs more than a Land Cruiser 70 in Japan
The ninth-generation Hilux arrives in Japan with a 2.8-liter diesel, two trims and factory accessories. The Z Adventure costs slightly less than the Land Cruiser 250.
Toyota has launched the new Hilux in Japan — on its home market, where the pickup is seen almost as part of the brand’s off-road culture. The main story is not just the launch itself, but the fact that the Hilux arrives with factory Modellista and GR Parts packages straight away.
The ninth-generation Hilux was shown back in the autumn of 2025, so the new body, redesigned interior and stiffer ladder-frame platform are no longer a surprise. For Japan, however, Toyota has prepared a ready-made catalog of upgrades: buyers don’t have to wait for a tuning shop or hunt for accessories separately — part of the look can be built right at the dealership.
Modellista goes for a more urban but rugged style. The package includes black trim on the hood, accents around the headlights, decor on the tailgate, bumper inserts with built-in LEDs, front and rear underbody protection, a hard tonneau cover and 18-inch matte olive wheels with polished accents. It’s not just about looks: for a pickup, the underbody protection and body parts make sense on rough roads and light off-road.
GR Parts has a different character. For the Hilux there’s a black honeycomb grille, GR mud flaps in black or red, aero deflectors, dual stainless-steel exhaust tips, plus Performance Dampers front and rear. Toyota says these dampers reduce vibrations and make the truck more stable. There are also Door Stabilizers — parts meant to stiffen the body and sharpen steering response.
In Japan, the powertrain comes without a choice. The Hilux is sold only with a 2.8-liter four-cylinder turbodiesel, a six-speed automatic and part-time four-wheel drive. The gasoline, mild-hybrid and fully electric versions offered in some other markets aren’t available to Japanese buyers.
The equipment list, on the other hand, is generous. The base Z trim gets two 12.3-inch displays, electric power steering, synthetic-leather seats and the Toyota Safety Sense suite. The higher Z Adventure trim adds a more rugged front bumper, a larger skid plate, a sport bar, a power tailgate assist, black wheels with grippier tires and the Mineral interior.
Prices start at 4,980,800 yen (around $31,200). That’s more than the new Land Cruiser FJ and the classic Land Cruiser 70 Series, while the Z Adventure at 5,500,000 yen (about $34,500) sits just below the Land Cruiser 250.
The Japanese launch shows how Toyota itself sees the new-generation pickup: not just a workhorse, but a body-on-frame off-road product that can be turned into a pricier and more expressive vehicle right at the dealership.