2025 LE AWD… What’s a Fair Price?

Just picked up a 2025 LE AWD and wanted to check if the price I got was reasonable. What do you all think?

Looks like a solid deal. Nice to see you got some savings off MSRP.

How’d you manage to get roof rails and a spare tire? This looks a lot like one we’re waiting on.

Cairo said:
How’d you manage to get roof rails and a spare tire? This looks a lot like one we’re waiting on.

They’re out there, just need to search around a bit. I found this one using Toyota’s inventory tool: https://www.toyota.com/search-inventory/model/sienna/

Is this a hybrid too?

True said:
Is this a hybrid too?

Yep, all 4th-gen Siennas in the U.S. are hybrids.

That’s a great deal!

Jane said:
That’s a great deal!

Appreciate it, but honestly, I wasn’t planning on buying a new van so soon. Just last week, I was driving a 2015 Sienna with only 84k miles. Bought it used in 2020 for $19.5k and took great care of it—oil changes every 5k miles, transmission drain and fills every 40k. Thought I’d drive it past 200k miles… but life had other plans.

@ethan_johnson
What happened to the old one?

Moe said:
@ethan_johnson
What happened to the old one?

A tree happened. Insurance adjuster said the repair cost was more than 75% of its value, so they totaled it. The body shop it got towed to actually wants to buy it from me. They’ll fix it and sell it with a salvage title. I’ll be taking the owner-retained option, so I’ll get some insurance money and sell it to them. Just gotta let it go at this point. Now I’m moving from a trusty V6 with a 6-speed auto to a 4-cylinder hybrid AWD. Should be interesting. But honestly, I bet the interior isn’t all that different from 10 years ago.

@ethan_johnson
I get it. Had a 2010 Sienna with 97k miles, but a driver ran a red light and bent the frame. Insurance wrote it off. Ended up replacing it with a 2025 LE AWD too. I was hoping to keep mine for 200k+ miles, so I feel your pain.

$1,260 in sales tax? That seems low! Where are you located?

robertson said:
$1,260 in sales tax? That seems low! Where are you located?

It’s 3%, which is exactly right for North Carolina.