Subaru Outback (non-turbo) (2018-2021)
Subaru Outback (NA) 2018–2021
Scope: Naturally-aspirated 2.5L FB25 engines only. XT turbo trims tracked separately. Generation split: 2018–2019 = 5th-gen (BS chassis). 2020–2021 = 6th-gen redesign on Subaru Global Platform (SGP).
Reliability
The generation split matters a lot here. The 2018–2019 5th-gen cars are the late-cycle, most refined version of a proven platform. The 2020 redesign introduced a long list of first-year electronic gremlins that carried into 2021, and Consumer Reports ranks both 2019 and 2020 as below-average reliability model years for the Outback — but for very different reasons.12
2018–2019 (5th-gen, late cycle)
- CR predicted reliability: Below-average overall, but complaint clusters concentrate in infotainment (audio/GPS/phone) and rear-camera quirks — not drivetrain.1
- CVT is mature: 2018 is widely regarded as one of the most reliable 5th-gen CVT years. 2019 is "the most refined version of this CVT" per aftermarket transmission specialists, who note Subaru invested in stronger chains, better cooling, and smarter shift software from 2018 onward.34
- Major CVT failures on post-2018 cars are rare with regular fluid changes (OEM fluid only, ~every 60k).3
2020–2021 (6th-gen, first & second year)
- 2020 is a first-year redesign and it shows. CR reliability scores dropped vs. the outgoing 5th-gen, with the Outback listed among the most problematic model years by NHTSA complaint volume (largely electrical).12
- Starlink infotainment freezing is a known, widespread defect — enough to trigger an active class-action lawsuit covering 2019–2023 Starlink head units. Owners report boot loops, frozen-at-the-Starlink-logo screens, and software updates that fail to resolve the issue. Some units have required full replacement under warranty.56
- DCM/CCM parasitic battery drain is the other signature 6th-gen issue. The 2020 Outback has 282 logged electrical complaints on CarComplaints with "dead battery" as the #1 subcategory; a separate lawsuit alleges 2016–2020 Outbacks and 2019–2020 Ascents drain batteries excessively via the Data Communications Module. Owners report 2–4 battery replacements under 50k miles.78
- 2021 is meaningfully better than 2020 — CR lists 2021 among the better recent years, as most first-year bugs were addressed via TSBs and a 6th-gen platform shake-out. Still not as clean as 2018.1
Cross-generation issues (all years in scope)
- FB25 oil consumption: Significantly improved vs. the 2013–2015 FB25 crisis, but not eliminated. TrueDelta and owner forums log 2018+ cars consuming ~0.5–1 qt per 5–6k miles after ~60k miles — notable but within Subaru's "acceptable" spec. Check oil at every fill-up during test-drive period; avoid any example showing visible burn-off history.910
- Windshield cracking (Subaru-wide, well-documented): Class-action settled April 2024. Replacement with EyeSight recalibration runs $650–$1,000+, and Hannah's CO gravel/chip-seal roads make this nearly a when-not-if expense. Budget for it.1112
- Recalls (2018–2021 NHTSA, all relatively minor):
- 2020: brake pedal mounting-bracket bolt (Oct 2019 campaign) — loose/missing bolt can deform pedal mount.13
- 2018–2020: fuel pump (Denso low-pressure pump, part of cross-manufacturer campaign).14
- 2021: windshield bonding clearcoat defect (Feb 2021 campaign).13
- Always run VIN through nhtsa.gov/recalls before purchase.
Safety
Outback is one of the strongest safety picks in the segment — consistent IIHS TSP+ from 2018 through 2021 when equipped with EyeSight (standard on all 2020+ trims, optional on 2018–2019).
- IIHS Top Safety Pick+: 2018, 2019, 2020, and 2021 model years all earned TSP+ with EyeSight and LED steering-responsive headlights. 2019 was one of only seven vehicles industry-wide to earn TSP+ that year.1516
- NHTSA overall: 5-star overall rating across 2018–2021 (consistent with "since 2013 to today, Subaru has earned 5-Star Overall Ratings on all but one vehicle").1718
- EyeSight (adaptive cruise, lane-keep, pre-collision braking) is the key feature to verify on any 2018–2019 example — it was optional on base trims those years, standard from 2020.
Trim Guide (Hannah-specific recommendations)
2019 Outback 2.5i NA (5th gen, last year)
Five NA trims. The EyeSight trap is the critical thing to watch: EyeSight was a $1,695 optional package on Base and Premium, STANDARD on Limited and Touring. A 2019 Premium without EyeSight loses meaningful safety-weighted score.
| Trim | Key features | Hannah fit |
|---|---|---|
| 2.5i (Base) | 17" wheels, cloth, halogen headlights, 6.5" screen, EyeSight optional | 🔴 Skip — EyeSight uncertain, too basic for daily driver |
| 2.5i Premium | 18" wheels, 8" Starlink screen, All-Weather Package (heated seats/mirrors/wipers), 10-way power driver, EyeSight still optional | 🟡 Only if VIN / window sticker confirms EyeSight factory-equipped |
| 2.5i Limited | Premium + perforated leather, 8-way power passenger, heated rear seats, EyeSight STANDARD, blind-spot + rear cross-traffic, keyless access + push-button | 🟢 Sweet spot at ~$18-20k — guaranteed EyeSight, leather wipes clean after muddy field days |
| 2.5i Touring | Limited + Nappa leather, heated steering wheel, LED steering-responsive headlights, 11-speaker Harman Kardon, navigation | 🟡 Typically $22k+, stretch not worth it for nav she has on phone |
| 3.6R Touring | H6 3.6L engine — discontinued after 2019 | 🔴 Different engine, worse fuel economy |
Recommendation for 2019 route: Target the 2.5i Limited specifically. Don't waste time on Premiums unless the listing explicitly confirms EyeSight equipped (check for "EyeSight Driver Assist Technology" on the window sticker or a Carfax build-sheet).
2021 Outback NA (6th gen, 2nd year of redesign)
Four NA trims, plus three XT turbo trims that are hard-skip per research. Key change vs 2019: EyeSight is STANDARD on every 2021 trim — no EyeSight trap to navigate.
| Trim | Key features | Hannah fit |
|---|---|---|
| Base | 17" wheels, cloth, 7" screen (NOT the big 11.6"), EyeSight standard | 🟡 Budget option, but lacks the All-Weather Package — meaningful CO winter downgrade |
| Premium | 11.6" portrait Starlink screen, All-Weather Package, 10-way power driver, moonroof opt, roof rails with integrated tie-downs, SI-DRIVE, X-MODE (snow/dirt/deep snow) | 🟢 Sweet spot at ~$22-23k — cloth seats handle dog hair/mud better than leather, all the safety tech, roof rails for field-gear overflow |
| Limited | Premium + leather, heated rear seats, 18" wheels, LED steering-responsive headlights, reverse auto-braking, front-view camera, blind-spot standard, heated steering wheel | 🟢 Worth the step-up at ~$24-25k IF she drives US-285 at night (steering-responsive LEDs are real on mountain roads) |
| Touring | Limited + Nappa leather, ventilated front seats, Harman Kardon, navigation | 🟡 Usually over $25k; navigation redundant (phone works) |
| Onyx XT / Limited XT / Touring XT | 2.4L turbo | 🔴 Skip all — premium fuel, higher maintenance, tuned-up CVT load |
The 11.6" screen is the Starlink-freeze flashpoint per the reliability section. Premium and above get it; Base has the smaller 7" unit that's less affected. If test-driving a 2021 Premium+, run the cold-boot + 20-min CarPlay test from the Pre-Trip Checklist.
Trim-Level Pattern Summary
- 2019: Hunt Limited only (EyeSight standard + leather-easy-clean). Budget $18-20k.
- 2021: Premium is the sweet spot (fabric seats, all the safety, roof rails, All-Weather Package). Budget $22-23k.
- 2021 Limited: Worth the stretch IF CO nighttime driving is frequent — the steering-responsive LEDs justify the $2-3k upcharge. Leather-vs-cloth is a wash for dog use (leather: easier wipe after mud, but scratched by claws; cloth: holds dog hair but absorbs better).
- Skip regardless of year: Base trim (missing features), any XT turbo, 3.6R (2019 only, discontinued).
Must-Verify Features Checklist
Before making any Outback offer, confirm the listing has: - [ ] EyeSight (required on all — optional trap on 2018-2019 Base/Premium, standard 2020+) - [ ] All-Weather Package (heated seats, heated mirrors, heated wiper park — standard on Premium+) - [ ] Roof rails (standard on Premium+, useful for field-gear overflow) - [ ] No XT badging (2.4L turbo = skip regardless of price) - [ ] Blind-spot + rear cross-traffic (optional on Premium, standard on Limited+ — useful but not dealbreaker)
CPO Availability (Denver)
Subaru CPO program terms:1920 - 7-year / 100,000-mile powertrain warranty from original in-service date (so a 2019 car CPO'd today gives meaningfully less runway than a 2021). - 152-point inspection. - Eligibility: ≤5 model years old AND ≤80k miles — so as of April 2026, only 2021 Outbacks still qualify for CPO. 2018–2020 cars can only be purchased as standard used (or with a 3rd-party warranty layered on). - 24/7 roadside assistance included.
Denver-metro dealers to check: - Flatirons Subaru (Boulder) — current CPO inventory page active.21 - Groove Subaru (Denver) — active used Outback inventory.22 - AutoNation Subaru Arapahoe & AutoNation Subaru West — both run Subaru's CPO program.20 - Mike Shaw Subaru (Denver) — CPO inventory active.
Rough market read (April 2026): Cars.com lists ~169 used Outbacks in Denver metro. CARFAX shows similar volume with a high proportion of 1-owner, accident-free cars (~88% 1-owner rate). For 2018–2021 NA trims under $25k with <75k miles, expect 15–30 cars available at any given time across these dealers — a healthy shopping pool, not a scarcity situation.23
Key CPO insight for Hannah: The CPO powertrain warranty only matters on 2021 examples. For 2018–2020, you're buying a standard used car and the 152-point inspection (if it exists for that car through the same dealer network as a non-CPO cert) is the main differentiator.
Pricing (Denver market)
Based on KBB dealer listings and Edmunds appraisal ranges for CO zip codes, 50–75k miles, NA Premium/Limited trims:2425262728
| Year | Trim | KBB Fair Range | Edmunds TMV | Denver avg listing |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | 2.5i Premium | $14,050–$16,000 | $13,500–$16,500 | ~$15,500 |
| 2018 | 2.5i Limited | $15,500–$17,500 | $15,000–$18,000 | ~$17,000 |
| 2019 | 2.5i Premium | $15,500–$17,500 | $15,000–$18,000 | ~$17,500 |
| 2019 | 2.5i Limited | $17,500–$19,500 | $17,000–$20,000 | ~$19,500 |
| 2020 | Premium | $18,000–$20,500 | $17,500–$21,000 | ~$20,500 |
| 2020 | Limited | $20,500–$23,000 | $20,000–$23,500 | ~$22,500 |
| 2021 | Premium | $20,500–$23,000 | $20,000–$23,500 | ~$22,500 |
| 2021 | Limited | $22,500–$25,000 | $22,000–$25,500 | ~$24,500 |
Note: Denver-metro 2021 Outback average list price is $24,534 at ~64k miles per Edmunds' live inventory feed — so the budget ceiling of $25k puts Hannah at the thin edge of the 2021 market. The sweet spot for her budget + dog/gear use case is 2019 Limited or 2020 Premium at ~$19–21k.28
Rough single-number average for CO, NA trims, 2018–2021, 50–75k miles: ~$22,000. (reflected in frontmatter)
Cargo Fit (1 dog + field gear)
This is where the Outback shines for Hannah's use case.
- Behind row 2: 32.5 cu ft. With row 2 folded: 75.7 cu ft.2930
- Cargo-area liftover height: 28.4 inches (standard trims). This is dramatically lower than a typical SUV (Forester is ~30 in; CR-V ~27 in but with a much smaller opening). For aging dogs or dogs with joint issues, the low loading height is a real quality-of-life difference.29
- Opening width: 45.2 inches — easily fits large field gear totes, a folded shovel/jalon set, or 1 loose dog with plenty of room for gear alongside.30
- Wagon profile means usable cargo floor length extends further forward (twin mattress fits with seats folded — a common owner anecdote).30
- vs. Forester (same drivetrain family): Forester has more headroom and a taller cargo opening but a higher liftover and less longitudinal floor. For 1 dog + field gear, the Outback's lower load height + longer floor is the better ergonomic match; Forester wins only if Hannah wants to sit taller.
Real-world fit: 1 medium-large dog + a full pile of field gear fits behind row 2 without folding seats. If she ever needs to carry survey gear or sleeps-in-the-car on archaeology trips, folding row 2 yields a flat ~75 cu ft cavern.
EyeSight
EyeSight standard across all 2018–2021 Outback trims (same generation of the system as Forester). Day-to-day annoyance profile, cold-weather shutoff behavior, windshield/camera failure-mode costs, and the two active class-action settlements (Powell v. Subaru windshield + Jan 2026 EyeSight system-failure settlement) apply identically.
See: Forester page — EyeSight section for full breakdown. Outback-specific note: windshield replacement on the Outback typically runs slightly higher than Forester (~$1,015 Outback vs. ~$650–1,000 Forester, per Consumer Reports sample) due to the wider glass.
Verdict
🟡 Conditional yes — favor 2019 or 2021 over 2020, and skip 2018 unless price is compelling.
The Outback NA is a strong match for Hannah's profile on paper — wagon cargo ergonomics for dogs + field gear, symmetrical AWD that's genuinely good in CO snow, TSP+ safety across the range, FB25 + post-2018 CVT drivetrain that has aged gracefully. Relative to the Forester (same drivetrain, same safety story), the Outback's lower load height and longer cargo floor are meaningful wins for her dogs-plus-gear use case.
The problem is that the 2020 redesign brought real, documented first-year pain — Starlink infotainment freezing (active class action), DCM parasitic battery drain (separate class action), and a below-average CR reliability year. Those aren't rumors; they're systemic. 2019 Limited (late 5th-gen, refined CVT, optional EyeSight — verify it's equipped) at ~$18–20k or 2021 Premium/Limited (post-shakedown 6th-gen, still CPO-eligible until mid-2026) at ~$22–24.5k are the two sweet spots. Skip 2020 unless it's dramatically discounted with a documented infotainment + battery fix history. 2018 is okay but bleeding CPO eligibility and doesn't offer enough discount vs. 2019 to be worth it.
Biggest watchouts for Hannah: 1. Test-drive the infotainment for 20+ minutes on any 2020–2021 (let it cold-boot, run CarPlay, pair her phone — freezes show up in longer sessions). 2. Budget $800–1,000 for a windshield replacement within the ownership window. CO roads + EyeSight calibration = near-certain expense. 3. Run VIN through nhtsa.gov/recalls before any offer — especially for 2020 brake pedal bracket and 2018–2020 fuel pump campaigns. 4. Check oil consumption on test-drive of any example over ~60k miles.
Citations
See Also
- Hannah's shortlist
- Comparison matrix
- Sources
- Subaru Forester (sibling candidate)
- VehicleQuest
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Consumer Reports — Subaru Outback by year reliability pages. 2018–2019 flagged as less reliable than segment peers (infotainment/camera-driven); 2021+ rated among the better years. consumerreports.org/cars/subaru/outback/2018/reliability, 2019/reliability. ↩↩↩↩
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Auto Reliability Index — Subaru Outback Reliability by Year (NHTSA complaint-volume aggregation). 2019, 2020, 2017, 2018, 2011 listed as most problematic years; 2014, 2016, 2017, 2021+ flagged as best. autoreliabilityindex.com/subaru/outback. ↩↩
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Rohnert Park Transmission — "Subaru Outback CVT Problems: Model Year Guide" (2026). Identifies 2018 as one of the better 5th-gen CVT years; notes hardware/software improvements from 2018 onward. rohnertparktransmission.com/blog/subaru-outback-cvt-problems-guide. ↩↩
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CVT Expert — "Subaru Outback CVT Transmission Reliability: Key Facts." Calls 2019 "the most refined version" of the 5th-gen CVT; credits stronger chains, better cooling, smarter shift software post-2018. cvtexpert.com/subaru-outback-cvt-transmission-reliability-insights. ↩
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CarComplaints — "2020 Subaru Outback Infotainment System Failures." Documents freeze-at-boot, failed updates, warranty replacements. carcomplaints.com/Subaru/Outback/2020/accessories-interior/infotainment_system_failures.shtml. ↩
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Torque News — coverage of active class-action suit alleging 2019–2023 Starlink head units "freeze and malfunction because the head units fail, and updates offered by the automaker have allegedly failed to fix the systems." torquenews.com — Starlink frozen screen. ↩
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CarComplaints — 2020 Subaru Outback Electrical System / Dead Battery page. 282 electrical complaints logged; dead battery is top subcategory. carcomplaints.com/Subaru/Outback/2020/electrical/dead_battery.shtml. ↩
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MotorBiscuit / CarComplaints — "Subaru Dead Battery Problems Cause Lawsuit." Alleges 2016–2020 Outback and 2019–2020 Ascent drain batteries via DCM/CCM. carcomplaints.com/news/2020/subaru-dead-battery-problems-lawsuit.shtml. ↩
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Torque News — "The Subaru Engines, Models And Years That Burn Oil — Is The Problem Fixed?" Notes FB25 crisis era (2013–2015) substantially improved post-2018 but not eliminated. torquenews.com/1084/subaru-engines-models-and-years-burn-oil-problem-fixed. ↩
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Subaru Outback Forums / BobIsTheOilGuy — owner-reported consumption rates (~0.5–1 qt / 5–6k mi on 2018–2020 FB25 after 60k miles). Tier-3 community supplement to Tier-2 TrueDelta/Torque News data. subaruoutback.org — FB25B extended warranty thread. ↩
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Torque News — "The Real Cost To Replace Your New Subaru Windshield With EyeSight." Documents $650–$1,000+ replacement cost driven by EyeSight recalibration. torquenews.com — windshield cost. ↩
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The Auto Glass Experts / Safelite — "Subaru EyeSight & Windshield Replacement: 6 Key Facts." Confirms ADAS recalibration adds $200–$300 to any replacement; notes April 2024 class-action settlement over cracking. theautoglassexperts.com/subaru-windshield-replacement-6-things-to-know. ↩
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Center for Auto Safety — 2020 Subaru Outback Recalls, Complaints, Investigations. Includes Oct 2019 brake pedal bracket campaign and Feb 2021 windshield clearcoat campaign. autosafety.org/vehicle-safety-check/2020-subaru-outback. ↩↩
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Center for Auto Safety — 2018 Subaru Outback Recalls, Complaints, Investigations. Includes Denso fuel pump campaign. autosafety.org/vehicle-safety-check/2018-subaru-outback. ↩
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IIHS — 2019 Subaru Outback 4-door wagon ratings page. TSP+ with EyeSight + LED steering-responsive headlights. iihs.org/ratings/vehicle/subaru/outback-4-door-wagon/2019. ↩
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PR Newswire / Subaru of America — "Subaru Brand Leads The Industry With Seven 2019 IIHS TOP SAFETY PICK+ Awards." Confirms Outback among the seven TSP+ winners that year. prnewswire.com — 2019 IIHS TSP+. ↩
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NHTSA — 2018 Subaru Outback Vehicle Detail (NCAP 5-star overall). nhtsa.gov/vehicle/2018/SUBARU/OUTBACK. ↩
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Centennial Subaru — Subaru Safety Ratings summary. Notes Subaru has earned 5-Star Overall NHTSA ratings on nearly every vehicle since 2013, consistent with Outback 2018–2021. centennialsubaru.com/subaru-safety-ratings. ↩
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Subaru of America — Certified Pre-Owned program overview. 7-yr / 100k mi powertrain from original in-service date, 152-point inspection, ≤5 yrs / ≤80k mi eligibility. subaru.com/vehicle-info/certified-pre-owned.html. ↩
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AutoNation Subaru Arapahoe — Subaru CPO program overview (Denver). Confirms identical CPO terms for Denver-metro dealers. autonationsubaruarapahoe.com/research/certified-pre-owned.htm. ↩↩
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Flatirons Subaru (Boulder) — current CPO inventory listing (~23 CPO vehicles when checked). coloradosubaru.com/certified-inventory. ↩
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Groove Subaru (Denver) — used Outback inventory page (active 2018–2021 listings). groovesubaru.com/used-subaru-outback-denver-co. ↩
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CARFAX Denver Outback inventory — 169 total listings, 149 1-owner, 260 accident-free when sampled. carfax.com/Used-Subaru-Outback-Denver-CO. ↩
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Kelley Blue Book — 2018 Subaru Outback Price/Value page. Dealer ranges $14,050–$16,900; private party $12,600–$15,600. kbb.com/subaru/outback/2018. ↩
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Kelley Blue Book — 2021 Subaru Outback Price/Value page. Pricing starts at $17,900; Touring XT tops $21,900 baseline. kbb.com/subaru/outback/2021. ↩
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Edmunds — 2018 Subaru Outback Appraisal Value. Range $8,909–$19,695 depending on trim/mileage. edmunds.com/subaru/outback/2018/appraisal-value. ↩
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Edmunds — 2021 Subaru Outback Appraisal Value. Range $13,487–$24,808. edmunds.com/subaru/outback/2021/appraisal-value. ↩
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Edmunds — Used 2021 Subaru Outback for Sale in Denver, CO. Live market: avg list $24,534 at ~63,701 miles. edmunds.com/used-2021-subaru-outback-denver-co. ↩↩
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Subaru of America — 2022 Outback Specifications PDF (cargo + dimensions carried over from 2020 redesign). 32.5 / 75.7 cu ft, 28.4" liftover. subarumedia.iconicweb.com — 2022 Outback specs. ↩↩
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Ira Subaru Danvers / John Kennedy Subaru / McGrath Evanston Subaru — cargo-space dealer pages. 45.2" opening, twin-mattress-sized floor with seats folded. Tier-3 supplement confirming Tier-2 spec numbers. ↩↩↩