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CarComplaints.com Notes: 2008 is the first year of the 2nd generation Highlander, & it may be a model year to avoid as Toyota most likely worked out some production quality issues with the new model.
The 2009 Highlander is the has far fewer complaints.
10.0
really awful- Typical Repair Cost:
- $1,000
- Average Mileage:
- 10,000 miles
- Total Complaints:
- 2 complaints
Most Common Solutions:
- not sure (1 reports)
- sold the car (1 reports)
wheels / hubs problem
Helpful websites
- No one has added a helpful site for this 2008 Highlander problem yet. Be the first!
A D V E R T I S E M E N T S
My wife and I bought a brand new 2008 Highlander Sport. The car is absolutely beautiful and comfortable. We moved to the Chicago area, after living in NH for several years so driving in the snow is nothing new to us.
I must agree with the Bill from Mass. The tires are terrible and unsafe. After owning the car for only 2 weeks, we got an inch of snow. We could not drive up our drive way. The tires started to spin, we lost momentum, and we slid backwards all the back to the street. The next attempt to get up, the car slid off of the driveway and was stuck in the snow covered grass. Typical snow driving skills would have you turn the wheels, and/or rock back and forth to get unstuck, but Toyota's built in protection cuts the power to the transmission when the wheels start to spin (a function you cannot shut off on the 2008 Highlander Sport). We took it back to the dealer and they told us that it is common with new cars. There is a film on the tires that needs to wear off. Reluctantly, we agreed to disagree, and fortunately, the rest of the year was nearly snowless.
However, this past fall, was not the same. We can also attest to the fish tailing. When turning from a side street on to a busier street, we ended up facing on coming traffic as we slid uncontrollably into their lane of traffic. I know what you are thinking...it was not poor driving, it was not ice, it was 1-2 inches of snow. My Sbaru and/or my work's Xterra experience none of these problems.
Also I can attest to Bill's complaints about the availability of tires. There simply were not any besides the stock tires, the Blizzak snow tires (which were out of stock), or if my memory serves me correctly, Open Country tires, which were an alternate stock tire that also received very poor reviews. The 19" rims make it difficult. My options were to buy new wheels and tires (go up or down a size) or wait for the winter tires to become available and pay twice a year to have them installed/removed.
Quite honestly, I was not interested in doing either one. We sold our Highlander. We did not feel safe driving it and the dealer could offer us not great alternatives without spending another $3k. Yes, we took a huge loss. Which I am still disappointed with since we bought a Toyota for safety and retaining value.
I am not ranting against Toyota like the rest of the world. We replaced our 2008 Highlander with a slightly used 2007 Highlander. It is the older body style. Certainly not as plush as the newer one. It lacked the 3rd row seats. It has less towing capacity. But it is tried and true and has been around for 6+ years.
I have not experienced another problem with my 2007 Toyota Highlander.
- Brian O., St. Charles, IL, US