- Joined
- Aug 17, 2025
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 41
- Reaction score
- 32
- Location
- Mid atlantic
- Vehicle(s)
- 2025 4runner TRD Offroad
Agreed - the ride quality is absolutely unacceptable in my OR.
It’s the suspension, not the tires or frame. There is barely any give when pressing down the rear bumper of my OR, yet pressing down on the back of a ‘24 (or really any other car) makes it move like 4-5 times more. The 2025's suspension are as stiff as a board for the first few inches of travel. I encourage yall to test this yourself.
Perhaps the shocks on these are somehow digressive vs linear/progressive, which imo is an insane choice for a stock vehicle by toyota. https://accutuneoffroad.com/article...sLb5RELJd6r1EnQgvP9ukT-yS9jbBjHbJbzi7v2b1Etri
Telling people to “live with the issue” is ridiculous, I paid over 50k for my car and have every right to insist on ride quality standards. At the very least there should not be a significant regression in ride quality from the previous gen.
I really just see 3 ways of fixing this problem:
1. Complain to dealer, have them replace shocks with LandCruiser 250 shocks or something (I believe 4runner/LC250 shocks are interchangeable). Hopefully have dealer cover at least part of it. (I feel like this would have a low chance of success)
2. Spend $3k + and buy https://accutuneoffroad.com/product/kit-2024-land-cruiser-250-king-2-5-shocks/, then pay for the install ($500). Can anyone find a cheaper kit which would fix the ride quality?
3. Trade the car for a 5th gen 4runner and move on, eat the depreciation + taxes + fees lost
This is all very very strange to me, bilstein is a reputable brand, no idea why ride quality is DOA. Issue is confirmed by Motortrend and multiple other reviewers:
- https://www.edmunds.com/car-news/2025-toyota-4runner-trd-pro-long-term-update.html
-
It’s the suspension, not the tires or frame. There is barely any give when pressing down the rear bumper of my OR, yet pressing down on the back of a ‘24 (or really any other car) makes it move like 4-5 times more. The 2025's suspension are as stiff as a board for the first few inches of travel. I encourage yall to test this yourself.
Perhaps the shocks on these are somehow digressive vs linear/progressive, which imo is an insane choice for a stock vehicle by toyota. https://accutuneoffroad.com/article...sLb5RELJd6r1EnQgvP9ukT-yS9jbBjHbJbzi7v2b1Etri
This is in-line with my experience - the suspension seems to perform fine over large speed bumps and whoops. It's the small potholes and imperfections which cause the jitter and harshness.Digressive shocks struggle with both small bumps and large hits, but excel at handling and g-outs. Progressive shocks, on the other hand, are great for small bumps and big hits but fall short in handling and g-outs. Linear shocks offer the best all-around performance.
Telling people to “live with the issue” is ridiculous, I paid over 50k for my car and have every right to insist on ride quality standards. At the very least there should not be a significant regression in ride quality from the previous gen.
I really just see 3 ways of fixing this problem:
1. Complain to dealer, have them replace shocks with LandCruiser 250 shocks or something (I believe 4runner/LC250 shocks are interchangeable). Hopefully have dealer cover at least part of it. (I feel like this would have a low chance of success)
2. Spend $3k + and buy https://accutuneoffroad.com/product/kit-2024-land-cruiser-250-king-2-5-shocks/, then pay for the install ($500). Can anyone find a cheaper kit which would fix the ride quality?
3. Trade the car for a 5th gen 4runner and move on, eat the depreciation + taxes + fees lost
This is all very very strange to me, bilstein is a reputable brand, no idea why ride quality is DOA. Issue is confirmed by Motortrend and multiple other reviewers:
- https://www.edmunds.com/car-news/2025-toyota-4runner-trd-pro-long-term-update.html
-
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