Nissan Rogue (2022-2024)

S / SV / SL / Platinum · Intelligent AWD (on-demand) · 8.2" clearance · 74.1 cu ft cargo · 33 mpg combined

Nissan Rogue AWD 2022–2024 (post-redesign)

Status: wave-2 complete — triangulated. Verdict: 🔴 RED — brand-scar replaced, not resolved.

Why this is a re-examination: Wave 1 demoted Rogue as a LEMON PATTERN due to the 2014-2018 CVT class action. The 2021 full redesign (T33 platform) + 2022 VC-Turbo engine swap is a materially different vehicle — new transmission unit, new engine, new platform. Fair re-examination was warranted. Result: the CVT problem looks genuinely improved, but a new engine defect (VC-Turbo bearing failure) has generated two active federal recalls covering ~640,000 vehicles as of February 2026 — replacing one lemon scar with a fresh one.


Reliability

The headline problem: VC-Turbo engine bearing failure (active recalls)

Two federal recalls now cover the 1.5L VC-Turbo engine in the Hannah-window years:

Technician reports put typical failure between 45,000–60,000 miles, with early failures documented as young as 15,000 miles.11 Defect rate estimated at 1.2% for the 1.5L I3.12 The remedy for both recalls is ECM reprogram + oil-pan metal-debris inspection + engine replacement if needed.

Interpretation: the VC-Turbo is a genuinely novel design (variable-compression is unique in mass production, marketed as a reason to buy). It is also the Rogue's current active safety-recall problem. For a lemon-prevention shopper coming off an F-150 lemon, this is disqualifying on its face.

2024-2025 throttle-body recall (additional risk on newer years)

CVT — the old scar, and whether the T33 actually heals it

Year-by-year

MY CR predicted reliability J.D. Power Quality Recall count Notes
2022 Average (CR)1 In 25V-437 bearing recall 1.5L VC-Turbo first full year. No 26V-080 (builds before Oct 2022 excluded).
2023 Average (CR) / 83 JDP ("Great")24 83/100 6 NHTSA recalls5, in BOTH bearing recalls 80%+ of 2023 NHTSA complaints are gasoline-odor in cabin.20
2024 84 CR3 / not rated JDP In both bearing recall + throttle-body recall Throttle-body recall covers 100% of affected builds.

Other commonly-reported issues (2023 specifically)

Safety

CPO Availability (Denver)

Pricing (Denver market)

The price advantage is real. Nissan depreciates harder than Toyota/Honda, so a 2023 SV AWD non-CPO at ~$20k-$22k or a 2024 SV AWD in the low-$20k range is achievable in Denver — well under the $25k ceiling and close to the $20k target. A 2023 CPO SV AWD with remaining factory warranty fits right at $25k-$27k, at or just above ceiling.

But the price advantage exists because the market has priced in the reliability risk. The depreciation curve is the market telling us something.

Cargo Fit (1 dog + field gear)

The Brand-Scar Question — honest answer

Wave 1 demoted the Rogue for 2014-2018 CVT failures. Wave 2 needs to ask: is the 2022+ vehicle actually a different story?

Fair answer, triangulated:

  1. The specific CVT hardware IS different. T33 platform (2021+) uses an updated Jatco CVT8 with reinforced internals. Complaint volume for CVT-specific issues on 2021-2024 is lower than 2014-2018 era. Partial credit earned.
  2. But the CVT class-action scar legally extends to 2022. Stringer v. Nissan covers 2019-2022 Rogue + 2017-2022 Rogue Sport, still in active litigation. You cannot honestly tell a shopper "the CVT lawsuit is over" when the model year she's looking at is a named-class vehicle.
  3. The bigger issue: the scar has moved from transmission to engine. The 1.5L VC-Turbo engine introduced for 2022 has two active federal recalls (25V-437, 26V-080) covering ~767,000 vehicles combined. Failure mode is bearing seizure → engine destruction + fire risk. Nissan has 690 warranty claims and is replacing engines under warranty. This is the same pattern as 2014-2018 CVT: unique technology, insufficient durability validation, owners finding out at 45k-60k miles.
  4. The 2024-2025 throttle-body recall is an own-goal: Nissan's own startup diagnostic breaks the throttle body. 100% defect rate on affected builds. That's not a manufacturing variance — that's a design error that shipped.
  5. For a lemon-prevention shopper specifically coming off an F-150 lemon, the rational filter is: "Is there current, active, un-remedied evidence that this model has a shipping defect?" For the 2022-2024 Rogue, the answer is yes, twice, with NHTSA paper on file.

Conclusion: The post-redesign Rogue is not the 2014-2018 CVT-lemon vehicle — but it is its own lemon-pattern vehicle, and the pattern is fresher (Feb 2026 recall). The brand-scar has not been escaped; it has been relocated from transmission to engine, and Hannah's target years sit squarely inside both recall populations.

Verdict

🔴 RED — do not shortlist.

Reasoning: - Two active federal engine-bearing recalls (25V-437 + 26V-080) cover the entire 2022-2024 Hannah window. Failure mode is engine seizure, not a nuisance item. - A third recall (throttle body, 100% defect rate on 2024-2025) adds a second independent failure point. - An active class-action (Stringer v. Nissan) covers the 2022 CVT. The "CVT is fixed" story is not yet legally or statistically settled. - Price advantage exists but is the market pricing in the risk. Not a deal — a discount for taking on the problem. - Hannah's explicit goal is lemon-prevention after an F-150 lemon. Buying into two active recalls contradicts the project premise.

If Hannah genuinely loves driving a Rogue, the only defensible path is: (a) 2020 or 2021 2.5L I4 (pre-VC-Turbo) with T33 platform CVT — escapes the current engine recall, still benefits from updated transmission. That's a separate candidate file, not this one. Otherwise: RAV4 / CR-V / Forester deliver comparable AWD-compact-SUV function without active federal engine-seizure recalls.


Citations

See Also


  1. Consumer Reports, "2022 Nissan Rogue Reliability" — https://www.consumerreports.org/cars/nissan/rogue/2022/reliability/ 

  2. Consumer Reports, "2023 Nissan Rogue Reliability" — https://www.consumerreports.org/cars/nissan/rogue/2023/reliability/ 

  3. Consumer Reports, "2024 Nissan Rogue Reliability" (rating 84/100) — https://www.consumerreports.org/cars/nissan/rogue/2024/reliability/ 

  4. J.D. Power, "2023 Nissan Rogue Reliability" — Quality & Reliability 83/100 ("Great") — https://www.jdpower.com/cars/2023/nissan/rogue 

  5. US News Cars, "2023 Nissan Rogue Reliability & Recalls" — 6 NHTSA recalls — https://cars.usnews.com/cars-trucks/nissan/rogue/2023/reliability 

  6. Motor1, "Nissan Rogue Recalled For Engine Issues: 642,000 Affected" — https://www.motor1.com/news/787889/nissan-rogue-recalls-engine-problems/ 

  7. CarBuzz, "Nissan Expands Recall On VC-Turbo Engine To Over 600,000 Vehicles" — https://carbuzz.com/nissan-rogues-vc-turbo-engine-cant-catch-a-break/ 

  8. NHTSA Part 573 Safety Recall Report 26V-080 (Feb 11, 2026) — https://static.nhtsa.gov/odi/rcl/2026/RCLRPT-26V080-7320.pdf 

  9. Consumer Reports, "More Nissan Rogue SUVs Recalled to Fix Faulty Engines" — https://www.consumerreports.org/cars/car-recalls-defects/more-nissan-rogue-suvs-recalled-to-fix-faulty-engines-a8724204377/ 

  10. USA Today, "Nissan recalls 600K Rogue vehicles" (Feb 19, 2026) — https://www.usatoday.com/story/cars/recalls/2026/02/19/nissan-recalls-rogue-vehicles/88758740007/ 

  11. Forbes (Harley), "5 Things Owners Must Know About Nissan's Problematic VC-Turbo Engine" — https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelharley/2023/12/21/5-things-owners-must-know-about-nissans-problematic-vc-turbo-engine/ 

  12. LemonLawHelp, "Nissan Engine Failure Lawsuit" — 1.2% defect rate on 1.5L I3 — https://lemonlawhelp.com/blog/nissan-engine-failure-lawsuit/ 

  13. Car and Driver, "Nissan Recalls 318,781 Rogue SUVs with Self-Destructing Throttle Bodies" — https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a70418916/nissan-rogue-throttle-body-recall/ 

  14. Kelley Blue Book, "Nissan Recalls Rogue Over Potential Loss of Power" — https://www.kbb.com/car-news/nissan-recalls-rogue-over-potential-loss-of-power/ 

  15. Stringer v. Nissan (2014-2018 class settlement) — https://www.roguepathfinderqx60cvtsettlement.com/ 

  16. Keller Rohrback, Nissan Faulty Transmission Litigation — https://www.kellerrohrback.com/currentcases/nissan-transmission-litigation 

  17. Valero Law, "2019-2020 Nissan Rogue CVT Class Action" (coverage extends 2019-2022) — https://www.valerolaw.com/news/2022/12/5/2019-2020-nissan-rogue-cvt-class-action 

  18. PickupTruckTalk, "How reliable is the Nissan CVT?" — https://pickuptrucktalk.com/2021/06/how-reliable-is-the-nissan-cvt/ 

  19. Wikipedia, List of Jatco transmissions (CVT8 / JF016E / JF017E) — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jatco_transmissions 

  20. Lemon Law Experts, "2023 Nissan Rogue Problems & Complaints" — 80%+ of 2023 NHTSA complaints re: gasoline odor — https://lemonlawexperts.com/2023-nissan-rogue-problems/ 

  21. Lemon Law Firm, "2023 Nissan Rogue: Common Problems" — https://lemonlawfirm.com/2023-nissan-rogue-problems-complaints/ 

  22. 247 Lemon Law, "2023 Nissan Rogue Problems" — https://247lemonlaw.com/blog/2023-nissan-rogue-problems/ 

  23. Edmunds, "Used 2023 Nissan Rogue Consumer Reviews" — https://www.edmunds.com/nissan/rogue/2023/consumer-reviews/ 

  24. IIHS, "2022 Nissan Rogue 4-door SUV ratings" — https://www.iihs.org/ratings/vehicle/nissan/rogue-4-door-suv/2022 

  25. Ron Bouchard Nissan, "2023 Nissan Rogue Safety Ratings" — TSP+ 2021/2022/2023 — https://www.ronbouchardsnissan.com/nissan-research/nissan-rogue-safety-rating/ 

  26. Kraft Nissan, "2022 Nissan Rogue Safety Ratings" — https://kraftnissan.com/blog/2022-nissan-rogue-safety-ratings 

  27. NHTSA 5-star overall rating (cited via multiple Nissan dealer pages and USNews reliability page) 

  28. Nissan USA, CPO search inventory — https://www.nissanusa.com/shopping-tools/search-inventory/certified-pre-owned 

  29. CarGurus, Used Nissan Rogue near Denver — avg $20,903 for 2023 — https://www.cargurus.com/Cars/l-Used-Nissan-Rogue-Denver-d1047_L3898 

  30. CARFAX, Used Nissan Rogue Denver, CO — https://www.carfax.com/Used-Nissan-Rogue-Denver-CO_w543_c23487 

  31. Kelley Blue Book, Nissan Rogue for Sale — https://www.kbb.com/cars-for-sale/all/nissan/rogue 

  32. r/NissanRogue, "Nissan 2023 Rogue SV Certified price" — owner-reported $27k OTD for 2023 SV CPO + premium package — https://www.reddit.com/r/NissanRogue/comments/1d88g9e/nissan_2023_rogue_sv_certified_price/ 

  33. Kelley Blue Book, 2023 Nissan Rogue Pricing — https://www.kbb.com/nissan/rogue/2023/