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2025 Lexus NX350h Sports Luxury FWD review

2025 Lexus NX350h Sports Luxury FWD review

Posted on July 23, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on 2025 Lexus NX350h Sports Luxury FWD review

Among mid-size premium SUVs available in Australia, the Lexus NX is outsold only by the electric Tesla Model Y.

Launched in 2022, the second-generation NX has really resonated with Australian buyers, proving more popular than rivals from Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz.

There’s a sprawling range of NXs on offer, with a choice of front- or all-wheel drive, four powertrains (two petrols, one hybrid and one plug-in hybrid) and four trim levels (base, Luxury, F Sport and Sports Luxury).

A hefty chunk of the NX range undercuts even the cheapest BMW X3 or Mercedes-Benz GLC, which along with the availability of a fuel-sipping hybrid goes some way to explaining the NX’s superior sales performance in our market.

Our tester was an NX350h Sports Luxury. Think of the Sports Luxury as one of the forks in the road you can take above the regular NX350h Luxury, with less of a sporty look than the F Sport but the same price tag.

WATCH: Paul’s video review on the 2022 Lexus NX350h F Sport

Eagle-eyed readers will note this is the exact same vehicle I reviewed late in 2022. While it’s not typical for vehicles to remain on press fleets for this long, there have been no changes of note to the NX since then.

Besides, we’re always in low-mileage examples, while this one had been broken in a bit more, giving us a chance to see how it felt after a couple of years of use.

The NX hasn’t changed since 2022, but have our feelings towards it changed?

How much does the Lexus NX cost?

While it costs thousands less than even a base X3 or GLC, the NX350h Sports Luxury FWD is in turn undercut – if only by a few hundred dollars – by the entry-level Genesis GV70 which guzzles considerably more fuel but packs more features.