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Toyota Hilux
Series of pickup trucks
Series of pickup trucks
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | 2016 Toyota HiLux Invincible D-4D 4WD 2.4 Front.jpg |
| caption | 2016 Toyota Hilux Invincible (GUN125) |
| name | Toyota Hilux |
| manufacturer | Toyota |
| aka | Toyota Pickup (United States, 1972–1995) |
| production | March 1968 – present |
| class | {{unbulleted list |
| chassis | Body-on-frame |
| predecessor | {{unbulleted list |
| Hino/Toyota Briska<ref name | "Hino55" |
| Compact pickup truck (1968–2004) | Mid-size pickup truck (2004–present) | Toyopet Light/Stout | Hino/Toyota Briska | Toyota Kijang (F60) (Indonesia, for AN10/AN20/AN30 model)
The Toyota Hilux (; ), stylised as HiLux and historically as Hi-Lux, is a series of pickup trucks produced and marketed by the Japanese automobile manufacturer Toyota. The majority of these vehicles are sold as a pickup truck or cab chassis, although they could be configured in a variety of body styles.
The pickup truck was sold with the Hilux name in most markets, but in North America, the Hilux name was retired in 1976 in favor of Truck, Pickup Truck, or Compact Truck. In North America, the popular option package, the SR5 (Sport Runabout 5-Speed), was colloquially used as a model name for the truck, even though the option package was also used on other Toyota models, like the 1972 to 1979 Corolla. In 1984, the Trekker, the wagon version of the Hilux, was renamed the 4Runner in Venezuela, Australia, and North America, and the Hilux Surf in Japan. In 1992, Toyota introduced a newer pickup model, the full-size T100 in North America, necessitating distinct names for each vehicle other than Truck and Pickup Truck. Since 1995, the 4Runner is a standalone SUV, while in the same year Toyota introduced the Tacoma to replace the Hilux pickup in North America.
Since the seventh-generation model released in 2004, the Hilux shares the same ladder frame chassis platform called the IMV with the Fortuner SUV and the Innova minivan. Cumulative global sales in 2017 reached 17.7 million units.
{{anchor|N10}} First generation (N10; 1968)
| Japan: Hamura, Tokyo (Hino) | United States: Long Beach, California (Atlas Fabricators, final assembly: 1971–1972) | South Africa: Durban (Motor Assemblies Ltd.: from 1969) | Petrol: |1.5 L 2R I4 |1.6 L 12R I4 |1.9 L 8R I4 |1.9 L 3R I4 |2.0 L 18R I4
The Hilux started production in March 1968 as the RN10 in short-wheelbase form with a 1.5 L inline-four engine, generating a maximum power output of 77 PS in Japanese market specification. The vehicle was conceived by Toyota, and was developed and manufactured by Hino Motors at its Hamura Plant. In Japan, it was available at the Toyota Japan dealership retail chains called Toyota Store and Toyopet Store. The modification to the engine was enough for a claimed top speed of 130 km/h. The 1.5-litre engine was upgraded to a 1.6 L inline-four in February 1971.
In April 1969, a long-wheelbase version was added to the range. The short-wheelbase version also continued in production for many more years. The long-wheelbase version was not sold in the North American market until 1972, allowing the Datsun Truck to maintain a strong market presence. The Hilux was offered alongside the Toyota Crown, Toyota Corona, and Toyota Corona Mark II based pickup trucks in Japan until 1972, when the Crown, Corona, and Corona Mark II were repositioned as passenger sedans.
In spite of the name "Hilux", it was a luxury vehicle only when compared to the Stout. The Hilux was engineered and assembled by Hino Motors to replace the earlier vehicle that the Hilux was derived from, called the Briska in the niche beneath the larger and older Stout – it replaced the Stout fully in some markets. For the North American market, the only body style was a regular cab short bed and all were rear-wheel drive. It used a typical truck setup of A-arms and coil springs in front and a live axle with leaf springs in back. A four-speed manual transmission was standard.
Starting in November 1971, final assembly of trucks for the US market was completed by Atlas Fabricators in Long Beach, California, later renamed Toyota Auto Body California. Trucks were shipped from the factory in Japan as a chassis cab (the entire truck, less the truck bed). When the trucks arrived in the United States, a truck bed would be locally built and attached to the chassis before being sent to dealers. The arrangement was a form of tariff engineering, allowing Toyota to circumvent the chicken tax, a 25 percent tariff on imported light trucks. By only importing a chassis cab, Toyota only had to pay a 4% tariff.
Engines
Global markets:
- 1968–1971: 1.5 L (1,490 cc) 2R I4
- 1971–1972: 1.6 L (1,587 cc) 12R I4
North American markets:
- 1969: 1.9 L (1,897 cc) 3R I4, 85 hp
- 1970–1972: 1.9 L (1,858 cc) 8R SOHC I4, 97 hp
- 1972: 2.0 L (1,968 cc) 18R SOHC I4, 108 hp
{{anchor|N20}} Second generation (N20; 1972)
| Japan: Hamura, Tokyo (Hino) | Indonesia: North Jakarta (PT. Multi Astra) | South Africa: Durban (Motor Assemblies Ltd.) | Philippines: Parañaque (Delta Motors Corporation) | Thailand: Samut Prakan | United States: Long Beach, California (Long Beach Fabricators: final assembly) | New Zealand: Christchurch (Steel’s Motor Assemblies: SKD under contract) |Petrol: |1.6 L 12R I4 (RN20/25) |2.0 L 18R I4 (RN22/27) |2.2 L 20R I4 |4275 mm (N20/22) |4680 mm (N25/27) |3-speed automatic |4-speed manual |5-speed manual | 2580 mm (N20) | 2795 mm (N25)
In May 1972, the 1973 model year Hilux was introduced, designated the RN20. Nicknamed the "RokeHi" (ロケハイ), a portmanteau of "Rocket Hilux", it has a more comfortable interior along with exterior updates. A 2.25 m "long bed" was an option for the first time in North American markets, although such a version had been available worldwide since April 1969. This received the "RN25" chassis code. The 2.0 litre 18R engine was available in Japan as well, with a three-speed automatic transmission available as an option. The 2.0-litre automatic model managed a "gentle" 136.1 km/h top speed in a period road test conducted in South Africa, in spite of a claimed 89 kW.
The Hilux was radically redesigned in 1975 to be larger and with increased standard equipment. In North America, the new version also meant the introduction of the larger (2.2 L) 20R engine and the SR5 upscale trim package. A five-speed manual transmission became optional. In North America, the Hilux name was fully phased out in favour of "Truck" by that year, having been dropped from brochures and advertising campaigns, starting in 1973. Some North American motor-coach manufacturers began building Toyota motor-homes from the Hilux.
File:1977 Toyota Hilux 2200 rear (2).jpg|Toyota Hilux (rear view)
Wolverine 4x4
Starting in 1975 “Off Road Marketing” in Garden Grove, California in the United States developed a 4 wheel drive system for these trucks and marketed it as the Wolverine 4x4. Toyota never offered a factory four wheel drive system for this generation of Hilux, Off Road Marketing outfitted two wheel drive trucks with all the components necessary for four wheel drive. While they did manufacture many of the components themselves most of the major components such as the front axle, leaf springs, and transfer case were ‘off the shelf’ and found on the Jeep CJ and other four wheel drive vehicles. The front axle is a Dana 30 (the rear axle remains Toyota), the transfer case is a Dana 20, and the leaf springs are made by Cambria Spring Co. The engine offered is the 2.2L 20R paired to a 5 speed manual transmission. These trucks were available to be purchased at US Toyota dealerships throughout the country between 1975-1979. The Wolverine ceased production when Toyota began offering a factory 4x4 option with in the 3rd generation Hilux.
Global markets:
- 1972–1978: 1.6 L (1587 cc) 12R I4, 83 PS (SAE gross, Japan), 67 PS (SAE net, general export)
- 1973–1978: 2.0 L (1968 cc) 18R I4, 105 PS (SAE gross, Japan)
North American markets:
- 1973–1974: 2.0 L (1968 cc) 18R SOHC I4, 108 hp
- 1975–1978: 2.2 L (2189 cc) 20R SOHC I4, 96 hp
{{anchor|N30|N40}} Third generation (N30, N40; 1978)
- N30
- N40 | Japan: Toyota, Aichi (Tahara plant); Hamura, Tokyo (Hino) | South Africa: Durban (Motor Assemblies Ltd.: 1979–1981) | South Africa: Durban (TSAM: 1981–1984) | Philippines: Parañaque (Delta Motors Corporation) | Thailand: Samut Prakan | United States: Long Beach, California (TMM: final assembly) | 2-door pickup truck | 4-door pickup truck | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive | Front-engine, four-wheel-drive | Toyota Trekker | Toyota Stout |Petrol: |1.6 L 12R I4 |1.8 L I4 |2.0 L 18R I4 |2.2 L 20R I4 |2.4 L 22R I4 |Diesel: |2.2 L L I4 |4-speed manual |5-speed manual |3-speed automatic | 2585 mm (N30) | 2800 mm (N40) | 1180 kg (2WD) | 1320 kg (4WD)
The redesigned Hilux was introduced in August 1978, with a 4WD variant introduced in January 1979. The newer model was of similar dimensions to its predecessor, but both front and rear tracks were wider. Another change was the front suspension was changed from coil springs to a torsion bar design, still with a double wishbone layout. The 4WD variant – not offered with any engines smaller than the two-litre "18R" – featured some common technology with the larger Toyota Land Cruiser. Its front axle was a live, leaf-sprung design unlike the more car-like type used on rear-wheel drive Hiluxes. Production of the four-wheel drive models stopped in July 1983, but some 2WD variations continued production in parallel with the next generation models. The L series diesel engine was offered on the 2WD variants from September 1979 and also on the 4WD variants beginning in March 1983. In Japan, the Hilux was joined with the all new Toyota MasterAce, sharing load carrying duties which was sold at Toyota Store locations alongside the Hilux.
The Australian market originally received the 1.6-litre 12R engine in rear-wheel drive models, while 4WD models have the 2-litre 18R-C engine with 63 kW. These were all built on the longer wheelbase, with either pickup or cab-chassis bodywork. Top speed of the Australian Hilux 4WD was 130 km/h.
In North American markets, the Hilux (known as the Pickup) saw the use of four-wheel drive. It had a solid front axle and leaf suspension. The body saw a redesign that included single round headlights and a less complex body. This new 4WD setup featured a gear driven RF1A transfer case. This transfer case is unique in that its low-range reduction portion can be replicated, using what some refer to as a dual or triple transfer case. This results in a much lower overall gear ratio. It was the first Hilux available with an automatic transmission in that market.
In 1981, a vehicle development agreement was established between Toyota, Winnebago Industries and two other aftermarket customisers. This was to allow Toyota to enter the SUV market in North America. The vehicles which resulted from this collaboration were the Trekker (Winnebago), Wolverine, and the Trailblazer (Griffith). All three used the Hilux 4×4 RV cab and chassis, and an all-fiberglass rear section (the Trailblazer had a steel bed with a fibreglass top). Research and development work on the Trekker led to the development of the 4Runner/Hilux Surf, which was introduced in 1984.
Toward the end of the SR5's production run (1983 model year), Toyota introduced the luxury Mojave trim for the US market as a limited-production (3,500 units) model with options not available on any other Toyota pickup. With a list price of , it had bucket seats, two-speaker multiplex radio, chrome front and rear bumpers, and deleted Toyota logos on either the grille or the tailgate. Cruise control, power steering, and air conditioning were optional. It was powered by the SR5's standard 2.4 L inline-four engine.
In Thailand, this model was sold as the Toyota Hilux Super Star.
File:1982 Toyota Pickup SR-5 4WD in white, front left (cropped).jpg|Toyota Hilux 4WD (US) File:Toyota Pickup (5443354986) (2).jpg|Toyota Hilux 4WD (US) (rear view)
Engines
- 1978–1983: 1.6 L (1,587 cc) 12R SOHC I4, 80 PS at 5,200 rpm and 12.5 kgm of torque at 3,000 rpm (RN30/40, Japan), 51 kW at 5,200 rpm (Europe)
- 1981–1983: 1.8 L preflow, 4-speed manual (Australia),
- 1978–1983: 2.0 L (1,968 cc) 18R SOHC I4, 89 PS at 5,000 rpm and 14.8 kgm of torque at 3,600 rpm (1983 European specifications)
- 1978–1980: 2.2 L (2,189 cc) 20R SOHC I4, 67 kW at 4,800 rpm and 122 lb·ft of torque at 2,400 rpm
- 1981–1983: 2.4 L (2,366 cc) 22R SOHC I4, 72 kW at 4,800 rpm and 129 lb·ft of torque at 2,800 rpm
- 1979–1983: 2.2 L diesel I4, 46 kW at 4,200 rpm and 93 lb·ft of torque (SR5 long bed only in the US), LN30/40
{{anchor|N50|N60|N70}} Fourth generation (N50, N60, N70; 1983)
- N50
- N60
- N70 | Toyota Pickup (N.America) | Toyota 1 ton (N.America) | August 1983 – August 1988 | 1984–1997 (South Africa) | Japan: Toyota, Aichi (Tahara plant); Hamura, Tokyo (Hino) | Thailand: Samut Prakan (Samrong Plant) | United States: Long Beach, California (TMM: final assembly) | Uruguay: Montevideo | 2-door pickup truck | 4-door pickup truck | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive | Front-engine, four-wheel-drive | Toyota 4Runner/Hilux Surf (N60) | Toyota Kijang (F40/F50) |Petrol: |1.6 L 1Y I4 |2.0 L 3Y I4 |2.2 L 4Y I4 |2.4 L 22R/22R-E I4 |2.4 L 22R-TE turbo I4 |3.0 L 3VZ-E V6 |Diesel: |2.2 L L I4 |2.4 L 2L I4 |2.4 L 2L-T turbo I4 |4-speed manual |5-speed manual |3-speed automatic |4-speed automatic |Regular Cab (Short Bed): 102.5–103.0 in |Regular Cab (Long Bed): 111.8–112.2 in |Xtracab (Short Bed): 112.2 in |Xtracab (Long Bed): 121.5 in |Crew Cab: 111.8–112.2 in |Regular Cab (Short Bed): 174.6 in |Regular Cab (Long Bed): 184.6–190.1 in |Regular Cab (SR5): 191.9 in |Xtracab (Short Bed): 190.1 in |Xtracab (Long Bed): 195.5 in |Xtracab (SR5): 184.1 in |Regular Cab (4WD): 174.6–186.2 in |Crew Cab: 184.6 in |Regular Cab: 63.8 in |Xtracab (Short Bed): 63.8 in |Xtracab (Long Bed): 66.1 in |Xtracab (4WD): 66.5 in |Regular Cab (4WD): 66.5 in |Crew Cab: 63.8 in |Crew Cab (4WD): 66.5 in |Regular Cab Short Bed (2WD): 60.8–62.0 in |Regular Cab (Long Bed): 60.4–62.0 in |Xtracab (Short Bed): 63.9 in |Xtracab (Long Bed): 60.3 in |1 ton Regular Cab (Long Bed 2WD): 61.5 in |Regular Cab (4WD): 67.3–69.5 in |SR5 Turbo Xtracab: 60.2 in |Xtracab (4WD): 67.1 in |Crew Cab (2WD): 63.0 in |Crew Cab (4WD): 71.1 in
The August 1983 redesign (sold as model year 1984 vehicles in North America) introduced the Xtracab extended cab option, with six inches of space behind the seat for in-cab storage. These models carried over the carbureted 22R engine while model year 1984 also saw the introduction of the fuel injected 22R-E engine. Two diesel engines were also offered, the 2L and the turbocharged 2L-T. The engines were discontinued in the US after the 1986 model year. This was due to higher performance expectations from customers and the wide availability of inexpensive petrol. The next year saw the introduction of a turbocharged option, the 22R-TE, perhaps due to increasing competition from Nissan who already offered a V6 truck at this time. The solid front axle was replaced with an independent front suspension/torsion bar setup in the 4×4 model in 1986, and optional automatic differential disconnect for the front differential (an alternative to automatic locking hubs). 1985 was the last year of the solid front axle in most markets. The solid front axle would remain in the 5th generation 4×4 LN106 model until 1997. Solid front axles had been present in all 4×4 Toyota models until 1986.
In late 1986 for the 1987 model year, the truck went through a minor interior and exterior redesign, that included a new grille, a new 1 piece front bumper, an updated interior with full high door panels with faux leather stitching on the base and DLX models, the gauge cluster surround was more rounded and featured faux leather stitching on it, the dash pad featured a shorter tray than earlier models, the steering wheels were changed from black to grey, red, brown, or blue depending on the interior colour, the radio bezel was also colour matched to the rest of the interior, the SR-5 tach gauge clusters had the pattern on the face changed from a grid pattern to horizontal lines, the outside door mirrors were also changed to have a more stream lined appearance, the faceplate for the heater controls was also redesigned. A V6 engine was introduced in 1988. The Hilux-based 4Runner which made its entry in Australia, North America and the United Kingdom was based on this generation of the Hilux; in some other markets, such as Japan, it was called the Hilux Surf. In North America, the automatic shifter on 2WD models was relocated to the column.
Toyota introduced a new generation of the Hilux in most markets in late 1988 but the fourth generation remained in production until 1997 in South Africa. This was due to South African "content laws" which made it cheaper to continue the production of the fourth generation of the Hilux, rather than to retool the plant for the fifth generation model.
In Thailand, this generation was sold as the Toyota Hilux Hercules/Hero.
File:1983-1988 Toyota Hilux (YN58R) 4-door utility 01.jpg|Toyota Hilux double-cab (rear view) File:Toyota Pickup 4x4 (Hilux).jpg|Toyota Pickup 4×4 (US)
Engines
| Calendar years | capacity | code | features | power | torque | comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983– | 1626 cc | 1Y | I4 | |||
| 1983– | 1998 cc | 3Y | I4 | |||
| 1983–1984 | 2366 cc | 22R | SOHC I4 | 72 kW at 4,800 rpm | 174 N.m at 2,800 rpm | |
| 1983–1988 | 2366 cc | 22R-E | SOHC fuel injected I4 | 78 kW at 4,800 rpm | 185 N.m at 2,800 rpm | |
| 1983–1985 | 2188 cc | L | I4 Diesel | 46 kW at 4,200 rpm | 126 N.m at 2,200 rpm | (SR5 long bed only in the US) |
| 1983–1988 | 2446 cc | 2L | I4 Diesel | 62 kW at 4,200 rpm | 122 lb·ft at 2,200 rpm | |
| 1984–1987 | 2366 cc | 22R | SOHC I4 (2nd gen 22R engine) | 81 kW at 5,000 rpm | 187 N.m at 3,400 rpm | revised engine design for 1985 MY |
| 1985– | 2237 cc | 4Y | OHV I4 | 70 kW at 4,400 rpm | 182 N.m at 3,000 rpm | |
| 1985–1986 | 2366 cc | 22R-TE | SOHC turbocharged fuel injected I4 | 101 kW at 4,800 rpm | 234 N.m at 2,800 rpm | |
| 1986–1988 | 2446 cc | 2L-T | turbocharged fuel injected I4 Diesel | 69 kW at 4,000 rpm | 159 lb·ft at 2,400 rpm | |
| 1987–1988 | 2958 cc | 3VZ-E | fuel injected V6 | 112 kW at 4,800 rpm | 180 lb·ft at 2,400 rpm |
{{anchor|N80|N90|N100|N110}} Fifth generation (N80, N90, N100, N110; 1988)
- N80
- N90
- N100
- N110 |Toyota Pickup |Volkswagen Taro | Japan: Toyota, Aichi (Tahara plant); Hamura, Tokyo (Hino) | Argentina: Zárate | Colombia: Envigado (Sofasa) | Germany: Hanover (Volkswagen AG: Volkswagen Taro) | Thailand: Samrong Tai (Samrong plant) | United States: Fremont, California (NUMMI: 1990–1995); Long Beach, California (TABC, final assembly: 1988–1995) | 2-door pickup truck | 4-door pickup truck | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive | Front-engine, four-wheel-drive | Toyota 4Runner/Hilux Surf (N120/N130) | Toyota Classic | Toyota Kijang (F40/F50) | Volkswagen Taro |Petrol: |1.8 L 2Y-U I4 |2.2 L 4Y I4 |2.4 L 22R, 22R-E I4 |3.0 L 3VZ-E V6 |Diesel: |2.4 L 2L I4 |2.8 L 3L I4 |4-speed manual |5-speed manual |4-speed automatic |Regular cab: 103.0 in |Regular cab (long bed): 112.2 in |Xtracab: 121.5 in |Xtracab V6: 121.9 in |Regular cab: 174.6 in |Regular cab (long bed): 186.0 in |Xtracab: 193.1 in |DLX regular cab (long bed 4WD): 185.8 in |DLX regular cab (4WD): 174.4 in |1988–91 regular cab: 60.8 in |1988–91 regular cab (long bed): 60.6 in |1988–91 Xtracab (2WD): 61.0 in |1988–91 regular cab (long bed 4WD): 67.1 in |1988–91 Xtracab (4WD): 67.3 in |1991–97 regular cab: 62.6 in |1991–97 regular cab: 62.8 in |1991–97 Xtracab (4WD): 69.1 in |1991–97 regular cab (4WD): 68.9 in
The next redesign, in 1988, introduced a longer-wheelbase option, 122 in rather than 103 in for the regular wheelbase. Its one-piece cargo-box walls eliminated the rust-prone seams that were found in earlier models. The V6 Xtracab SR5 earned Motor Trend magazine's Truck of the Year award that year. The Xtra Cabs now featured more room behind the front seats than the last generation which allowed optional jump-seats for rear passengers, a feature more in line with competitors of the time.
Volkswagen built and marketed the Hilux under the Volkswagen Taro name from February 1989 to March 1997. It was also sold in Thailand as the Toyota Hilux Mighty-X.
The Hilux received a minor facelift in 1991 (for the 1992 model year), which was a grille change incorporating the new Toyota emblem that had been recently adopted.
In 1991, North American production began at the NUMMI plant in Fremont, California. It was during this generation that Toyota discontinued the Hilux line in North America (where it was marketed as the "Toyota Pickup"), replacing it with the new Tacoma for the 1995 model year.
File:1995 Toyota HiLux 4X4 Diesel 2.5 Front.jpg|1991 facelift Front view File:1995 Toyota HiLux 4X4 Diesel 2.5 Rear.jpg|1991 facelift Rear view File:1994-1997 Toyota Hilux (RN110R) SR5 Xtra Cab 2-door utility (2011-06-15) 02.jpg|1991 facelift Rear view (Xtracab 2-door 4x4) File:VW Taro 1987-1991 frontleft 2008-03-29 A.jpg|Volkswagen Taro regular cab 2-door File:How clean?! (27069199242).jpg|Interior
Engines
- 1988–1995: 1812 cc 2Y-U I4, 58 kW at 5,000rpm 140 N.m at 3,200rpm
- 1988–1995: 1812 cc 2Y I4, 61 kW at 4,800rpm 140 N.m at 2,800rpm (export markets){{citation
- 1989–1997: 2366 cc 22R SOHC I4, 81 kW at 5,000 rpm and 187 N.m at 3,400 rpm
- 1989–1997: 2366 cc 22R-E SOHC EFI I4, 84 kW at 4,600 rpm and 192 N.m at 3,400 rpm
- 1989–1995: 2958 cc 3VZ-E V6, 112 kW at 4,800 rpm
- 1989–1997: 2446 cc 2L-II diesel I4, 66 kW at 4,200 rpm and 167 N.m at 2,400 rpm
- 2779 cc 3L diesel I4, 67 kW at 4,000 rpm and 188 N.m at 2,400 rpm
Sales in South America
- Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela: the Hilux was produced in Colombia from 1994 to 1997 by the Sofasa company equipped with the 22R-E 2.4 L petrol engine. For these markets the model number for the 4WD double cabin was RN106 -instead of the standard number LN106-.
- For sales in Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay, the Hilux was produced in Argentina from 1997 through 2005 (Zárate Plant – both petrol and diesel engines).
- For sales in Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and Peru, the Hilux was imported from factories in Japan from 1989 to 1997 (petrol and diesel engines).
The available options for these markets were:
- single cab chassis (2WD, 4WD, petrol engines) (Colombia and Ecuador)
- single cab long bed (2WD, 4WD, petrol and diesel engines - all South American markets; diesel engine not available in Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela)
- Xtracab (2WD, 4WD, petrol - only Bolivia)
- crew cab (2WD, 4WD, petrol and diesel engines - all South American markets; Diesel engine not available in Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela)
North America
In North America, the Hilux continued to be sold simply as the "Toyota Pickup". A wide range of models were available (excluding the Crew Cab model available internationally), mixing four- and six-cylinder engines, long and short beds, regular and Xtracabs, manual and automatic transmissions, and two- or four-wheel drive. The cargo capacity was typically 1640 lb for two-wheel drives and 1400 lb for four-wheel drive models. GVWRs ranged from 2565 to. however some trucks sold in the United States during the 1991 through 1995 model years were still manufactured in Japan as not all versions were built in California. The VIN on NUMMI-made trucks began with '4T' while Japanese-made ones started with 'JT'.
While the fifth generation Hilux continued to be sold elsewhere in the world until 1997, in North America it was replaced by the new Tacoma after an abbreviated 1995 model year.
File:ToyotaTacoma.jpg|Toyota Pickup regular cab 2-door (US) (facelift) File:1992-1995 Toyota Pickup RN80 (US) rear.jpg|Toyota Pickup regular cab 2-door (US) (facelift; rear) File:1990 Toyota Pickup 08-22-2019.jpg|Toyota Pickup regular cab 2-door 4x4 (US) File:Toyota Pickup Xtracab 4x4.jpg|Toyota Pickup Xtracab 2-door 4x4 (US) File:Toyota Pickup V6 -- 01-17-2012.jpg|Toyota Pickup Xtracab 2-door 4x4 (US) (facelift) File:1995 Toyota Pickup SR5.jpg|Toyota Pickup Xtracab 2-door 4x4 (US) (facelift; rear)
{{anchor|N140|N150|N160|N170}} Sixth generation (N140, N150, N160, N170; 1997)
- N140
- N150
- N160
- N170 | Japan: Hamura, Tokyo (Hino) | Malaysia: Shah Alam | Thailand: Samut Prakan | South Africa: Prospecton (TSAM) | Colombia: Envigado (Sofasa) | Venezuela: Cumaná | Pakistan: Karachi (IMC) | 2-door pickup truck | 4-door pickup truck | 5-door SUV | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive | Front-engine, four-wheel-drive | Toyota Tacoma (N140/N150/N160/N170/N190) | Toyota 4Runner/Hilux Surf (N180) | Toyota Kijang (F60/F70/F80) |Petrol: |2.0 L 1RZ-E I4 |2.4 L 2RZ-FE I4 |2.7 L 3RZ-FE I4 |3.4 L 5VZ-FE V6 |Diesel: |2.5 L 2KD-FTV turbocharged I4 |3.0 L 1KD-FTV turbocharged I4 |2.4 L 2L-T turbocharged I4 |2.8 L 3L I4 |3.0 L 5L I4 |3.0 L 1KZ-TE turbocharged I4 |5-speed manual R151F |5-speed manual W56 |5-speed manual G58 |4-speed automatic A340F |Regular Cab: 2850 mm |Extended Cab: 2860-3090 mm |Crew Cab: 2855-2860 mm |Hilux Sport Rider: 2860 mm |Regular Cab: 4690 mm |Extended Cab: 4920-5035 mm |Crew Cab: 4790-4920 mm |Hilux Sport Rider: 4590-4985 mm |Regular Cab and all 2WD models: 1665-1700 mm |Crew Cab and Extended Cab: 1790 mm |Hilux Sport Rider: 1740-1775 mm |Regular Cab/Extended Cab (4WD): 1775-1795 mm |Crew Cab (4WD): 1795-1805 mm |Regular Cab (2WD): 1600-1650 mm |Extended and Crew Cab (2WD): 1625-1695 mm |Hilux Sport Rider: 1775-1795 mm
The Hilux received a minor design update in late 1997 and the addition of a few more engine options. The Hilux was then facelifted in 2001 for the 2002 model year.
In 2005, Toyota ceased production of the Hilux truck for the Japanese market. This was the last generation of the Hilux to be built in Japan.
File:Toyota Hilux N170 002.JPG|Toyota Hilux 4x4 Extra-cab File:1997-2001 Toyota Hilux (RZN149R) 2-door utility (2011-07-17) 02.jpg|1997–2001 Toyota Hilux 2-door utility (RZN149R) File:Toyota Hilux N160 007.JPG|Toyota Hilux 4x4 double-cab (facelift) File:Toyota Hilux N160 010.JPG|Toyota Hilux 4x4 double-cab (facelift; rear)
Engines
- 1998–2001 1998 cc 1RZ-E 8-valve SOHC I4 (Hilux 'Workmate' models in Australia) (4×2)
- 1998–1999 2986 cc 5L diesel I4, 72 kW (4×2, 4×4)
- 1995–2004 2438 cc 2RZ-FE 16-valve DOHC I4, 106 kW (4×2, 4×4)
- 1995–2004 2693 cc 3RZ-FE 16-valve DOHC I4, 112 kW (4×2, 4×4)
- 1995–2004 3378 cc 5VZ-FE 24-valve DOHC V6, 142 kW
- 1998–2001 2446 cc 2L-T UK Spec - Turbo Diesel single valve 8-valve I4 83/62 hp/kW at 4,000 rpm, 16.8/165 kg⋅m/N⋅m at 2,200 rpm (4×4)
- 1998–2004 2779 cc 3L diesel I4, 65 kW (89 PS; 88 hp) (4×4) (Philippines, Malaysia, SAE Net, UN Spec)
;South American markets The Hilux was produced in Colombia for sales in Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador from 1998 to 2005 by the SOFASA company (with only petrol engines 2.7 L). In Venezuela and Ecuador, the single-cab 2WD chassis/long bed is called the Stout II. For sales in Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Peru, it was imported from Japan from 1998 through 2004 (petrol engined 2.7 L, and diesel engined 2.8 L). This model was not sold in Argentina or Brazil because the fifth-generation Hilux had received a redesign and upgrade. Options for South American markets included:
- Single cab chassis (2WD, 4WD, petrol engines) (for sales in Colombia and Ecuador)
- Single cab long bed (2WD, 4WD, petrol and diesel engines) (all South American countries)
- Xtracab (4WD, petrol and diesel engines) (in Bolivia only)
- Crew cab (2WD, 4WD, petrol and diesel engines) (all South American countries, named the Hilux Millennium from 2002 through to the present)
;Thailand market Toyota shifted production from the Hilux Mighty-X (fifth generation) to the Hilux Tiger (sixth generation) in the late 1990s and made it the global export hub. The Thailand-made Hilux Tiger went through the following versions:
- 1998–1999: Hilux Tiger with the 3.0 L 5L engine
- 2000–2001: Hilux Tiger with the 3.0 L 5L-E EFI engine
- 2001: Hilux Tiger with 1KZ engine (short-lived and immediately replaced by D4D engine)
- Late 2001 – late 2004: Hilux Tiger SportCruiser with D4D engine
Sport Rider
Toyota introduced a mid-size SUV variant of the Hilux in 1998. Called the Sport Rider, this variant was sold only in Thailand, where it was also built. In style and execution, the Sport Rider is similar to the Toyota 4Runner. The Sport Rider frame and suspension system are derived from the Hilux, including the Hilux's independent front suspension and leaf-sprung rear suspension. The vehicles began as four-door pickup trucks and were then modified into wagons on arrival in Thailand by Thai Auto Works Co (a majority Thai-owned company in which Toyota has a 20 percent stake).
Engine options for the Sport Rider included the 5L engine for the PreRunner (2WD), while the 5L or 5L-E engines were available for the 4WD model. Toyota introduced the first facelift in 2001, upgrading to the 1KZ-TE engine and with foglamps integrated with the front bumper. Toyota introduced a second facelift in 2002 with the 1KD-FTV engine for 4WD and the 2KD-FTV engine for the PreRunner (2WD) and 4WD models, a new front bumper, new projector-style headlights, and new rear lamps. Toyota discontinued the Sport Rider in 2004 and replaced it with the Toyota Fortuner in 2005.
File:Toyota HiLux Sport Rider in Thailand 01.jpg|Hilux Sport Rider 3.0D PreRunner File:Toyota HiLux Sport Rider in Thailand 02.jpg|Hilux Sport Rider 3.0D PreRunner File:Toyota HiLux Sport Rider in Thailand 05.jpg|Hilux Sport Rider SR5 Limited 4WD File:Toyota HiLux Sport Rider in Thailand 06.jpg|Hilux Sport Rider SR5 Limited 4WD
Engines
- 1998–2002: 2986 cc 5L-E I4 SOHC EFI, 77 kW at 4,000 rpm 200 N.m at 2,600 rpm
- 1998–2002: 2986 cc 5L I4, 72 kW at 4,000 rpm 192 N.m at 2,400 rpm (Prerunner)
- 2001–2002: 2982 cc 1KZ-TE I4 SOHC, 92 kW at 3,600 rpm and 315 N.m at 2,000 rpm
- 2002–2004: 2982 cc 1KD-FTV I4 DOHC, 93 kW at 4,800 rpm and 315 N.m at 1,800–2,600 rpm
- 2002–2004: 2494 cc 2KD-FTV I4 DOHC, 75 kW at 3,600 rpm and 260 N.m at 1,400–3,400 rpm
{{anchor|AN10|AN20|AN30}} Seventh generation (AN10, AN20, AN30; 2004)
- AN10
- AN20
- AN30 | Argentina: Zárate, Buenos Aires (TASA) | Malaysia: Shah Alam | Pakistan: Karachi (IMC) | South Africa: Prospecton (TSAM) | Thailand: Ban Pho; Samrong Tai (TMT) | Venezuela: Cumaná | 2-door pickup truck | 4-door pickup truck | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive | Front-engine, four-wheel-drive | Toyota Fortuner (AN50/AN60) | Toyota Innova (AN40) |Petrol: | 2.0 L 1TR-FE VVT-i I4 | 2.7 L 2TR-FE VVT-i I4 | 4.0 L 1GR-FE VVT-i V6 | 4.0 L 1GR-FE supercharged VVT-i V6 |Petrol/CNG: | 2.7 L 2TR-FE VVT-i I4 |Diesel: | 2.4 L 2L-T/2L-TE | 2.5 L 2KD-FTV D-4D Turbodiesel I4 (102 hp: non-intercooler, 120 hp: intercooler) | 2.5 L 2KD-FTV D-4D VN-Turbo I4 | 3.0 L 1KD-FTV D-4D turbocharged I4 | 5-speed manual | 4-speed automatic | 5-speed A750F automatic | 3085 mm | Single Cab: 4980 mm | Xtra Cab: 5135-5260 mm | Double Cab: 4980-5260 mm | Single Cab: 1760 mm | Xtra and Double Cab: 1885 mm | Single Cab (2WD): 1795 mm | Single Cab (4WD): 1810 mm | Xtra and Double Cab (2WD): 1695 mm | Xtra and Double Cab (4WD): 1810 mm
The seventh-generation Hilux (designated the AN10/AN20/AN30), part of the IMV program led by chief engineer Kaoru Hosokawa, started production in Thailand during August 2004. Three pickup truck body variants were initially produced: a two-door Single Cab (referred to by Toyota as IMV1), a two-door Xtra Cab (IMV2), and four-door Double Cab (IMV3). In September 2008, Toyota introduced the Smart Cab, a four-door cab with hidden rear clamshell doors. The IMV program also spawned the Toyota Innova (AN40) minivan (IMV4) and Toyota Fortuner (AN50/AN60) SUV (IMV5).
Mainly developed in Thailand, this seventh-generation Hilux was the first to not be produced in Japan. Hilux models sold in Asian, European, Middle Eastern and Oceanian markets were initially built and assembled in Thailand with targeted annual production of 280,000 units, with 140,000 allocated for exports. Later, production was delegated to Malaysia and Southeast Asia in order to increase sales in those regions. In Thailand, the vehicle is called the Hilux Vigo. For other European markets and South Africa, the Hilux was built in Durban, South Africa. Hiluxes sold in Argentina and Brazil were built in Argentina, as with the previous generation Hilux.
The ladder frame chassis used by the seventh-generation Hilux is 45 percent stiffer compared to its predecessor. Combined with a reduction in the number of welded joints with the use of a unified inner frame, it has a higher torsional stiffness while the vertical rigidity is improved by stronger crossmembers. The model also used a new double wishbone front suspension which was said to improve stability and ride comfort.
The model is also considerably larger than the previous generation Hilux. For the double cab variant, the 2005 model is 400 mm longer and 45 mm wider. The deck is 165 mm longer and both wider and taller by 50 mm. The increased size was achieved without a significant increase in the kerb weight. Drag coefficient is rated 0.36 (0.39 with over fenders), which was claimed to be "class-leading" during the time of its introduction.
In Singapore, the Hilux was available as a single cab with the 2.5 L engine or a double cab with the 3.0 L engine.
This generation of the Hilux was introduced for Argentina on 2 March 2005 in Buenos Aires with a market launch in April.
This generation of the Hilux was also sold in Finland as the TruckMasters OX by Truck Masters Finland. Because of a modified rear suspension, the truck is registered in Finland as a light truck. The OX was only available with a 3.0-litre D-4D diesel engine.
File:2005 Toyota Hilux Vigo D-4D 3.0 Rear.jpg|2005 pre-facelift Rear view File:2006 Toyota Hilux (GGN25R MY05) SR5 4-door utility (2011-04-22).jpg|Interior
Engines
- 2005 2.0 L petrol VVT-i DOHC I4 (South Africa, Indonesia and Middle East)
- 2005 2.5 L diesel D-4D DOHC I4, Turbo-diesel 76 kW – 107 kW (Asia, Europe, South Africa, South America)
- 2005 2.7 L petrol VVT-i DOHC I4, 119 kW (Australia, Arabian Peninsula, Philippines, South Africa, Venezuela)
- 2005 3.0 L diesel D-4D DOHC I4, Turbo-diesel, common rail 16-valve direct injection, 121 kW (Asia, South Africa, South America, Australia, Europe). This version is made at Toyota's facility in Zárate, Argentina.
- 2005 4.0 L petrol VVT-i DOHC V6, 170 - (Australia, South Africa, Venezuela, China)
- 2008 4.0 L Supercharged DOHC V6 225 kW (Australia only, TRD Hilux 4000S & 4000SL)
2008 facelift
A facelifted version of the Hilux was unveiled by Toyota's Malaysian distributors, UMW Toyota Motor, in August 2008. Toyota has introduced a left hand drive Hilux Vigo in August 2008 while a right hand drive facelifted model was introduced in September 2008. These facelifted models were introduced in the Philippines in October 2008.
Toyota also introduced a four-door extended cab called "Smart Cab" to replace all Xtra Cab models in E and G grade. The Smart Cab models were developed in Thailand and were only sold in the Thai market.
File:2010 Toyota Hilux (GGN25R) SR 4-door utility (2011-11-30) 01.jpg|First facelift (front) File:2010 Toyota Hilux (GGN25R) SR 4-door utility (2011-11-30) 02.jpg|First facelift (rear)
2011 facelift
On 13 July 2011, Toyota announced that the Hilux would receive a facelift, including a redesigned front end (front grille similar to IMV-based Innova and Fortuner) and other external styling changes, changes to the interior and a new turbocharged diesel engine rated at 144 hp and 253 lbft of torque, as well as lower fuel consumption compared to the previous model. This update was initially launched in Thailand and later in Australia called as Toyota IMV Project.
File:2013 Toyota HiLux (KUN26R MY12) SR5 4-door utility (2015-08-07) 01.jpg|Second facelift (front) File:2013 Toyota HiLux (KUN26R MY12) SR5 4-door utility (2015-08-07) 02.jpg|Second facelift (rear)
Hilux Vigo Champ
The Hilux Vigo Champ was introduced in Thailand in August 2012 as a significant "minor change" with a new front design and a revamped interior to reinforce perceived luxury. The front was redesigned from the A pillar forwards. With the exception of the doors, roof and tailgate, everything else was new: new guards, new headlights, new bumper, new bonnet, new three-bar grille, new taillights, a new rear bumper and new badges. There were also new mirrors and new alloy wheel designs. The interior features a new upper dashboard design with a new horizontal centre instrument cluster. Perceived quality was improved through the adoption of uniformly darker finishes with greater colour consistency throughout the interior. The high-end Double Cab version now came with a DVD player, rear camera and Bluetooth functionality.
This minor update upgraded the emission standard to Euro 4, updated the four-speed automatic transmission to five-speed, upgraded power rating of the 3.0-litre model from 122 to, increased torque from 343 to for the five-speed automatic transmission, and the Smart Cab Prerunner 4×2 was introduced with automatic transmission. Other changes included a more efficient fuel injection system and the addition of a centre headrest on the rear double cab seat.
The Vigo Champ CNG included the 2.7-litre 2TR-FE bi-fuel engine that could run on compressed natural gas (CNG).
Safety
{{anchor|AN110|AN120|AN130}} Eighth generation (AN110, AN120, AN130; 2015)
- AN110
- AN120
- AN130 | Thailand: Ban Pho; Samrong Tai (TMT) | South Africa: Prospecton (TSAM) | Argentina: Zárate, Buenos Aires (TASA) | Malaysia: Shah Alam (UMW) | Pakistan: Karachi (IMC){{Cite web|title=OEM Plant Details:Indus Motor Company Ltd. (IMC) | India: Bidadi (TKM) | Myanmar: Thilawa (Toyota Myanmar){{cite news|url= https://www.autodeal.com.ph/articles/car-news-philippines/toyota-begins-hilux-production-in-myanmar-following-delays | Cambodia: Phnom Penh (TTMC) | Ryota Naka, Yukihiro Koide, Takuya Watabe, Eishi Suzuki and Yusuke Fukushima | Peter Anthony Elliott (2020 facelift) | 2-door pickup truck | 4-door pickup truck | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive | Front-engine, four-wheel-drive | Toyota Hilux Champ | Toyota Fortuner (AN150/AN160) | Toyota Land Cruiser FJ | Toyota Innova (AN140) | Petrol: | 2.0 L 1TR-FE I4 | 2.7 L 2TR-FE I4 | 4.0 L 1GR-FE V6 | Diesel: | 2.4 L 2GD-FTV turbo I4 | 2.5 L 2KD-FTV turbo I4 | 2.5 L 2KD-FTV turbo-intercooled I4 | 2.8 L 1GD-FTV turbo I4 | 3.0 L 1KD-FTV turbo I4 | 3.0 L 5L-E I4 | 5-speed R151 manual | 6-speed RC60/RC61 manual / iMT manual | 5-speed A750F automatic | 6-speed AC60 Super Intelligent ECT automatic | 2750 mm (short-wheelbase) | 3085 mm (long-wheelbase) | Crew Cab: 5320 - | Single Cab: 4935 – | Smart Cab: 5320 mm | Crew Cab: 1750 – | Single Cab: 1690 – | Smart Cab: 1695 – | 0.5 kWh, 48V (MHEV) | 0.207 kWh, 48V (MHEV) | 0.2064 kWh, 48V, 13 cells (MHEV), charges 12V battery via DC/DC converter | 10 kW electric motor (MHEV) | 12kW, 65Nm (MHEV) | 8.4kW, 65Nm (MHEV)
The eighth-generation Hilux was introduced simultaneously on 21 May 2015 in Bangkok, Thailand and Sydney, Australia. It was the first of the Toyota IMV family to receive a new generation, with the related Fortuner and Innova receiving new generations in July and November, respectively. In some Asian markets such as Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, and Pakistan, the model also adopted a new moniker, Hilux Revo.
The model was subsequently introduced in the Philippines in July 2015, Mexico and GCC countries in August 2015, and Argentina and Brazil in November 2015, while in Europe specifications were unveiled in September 2015 for a mid-2016 market introduction. Introductions of the model in more markets started in 2016. In March 2016, the model was released in South Africa, where it is also produced. In Malaysia, it was launched in May 2016, while in Pakistan it was launched in September 2016. In September 2017, Toyota released the Hilux in Japan for the first time since 2004.
The eighth-generation Hilux features the "Keen Look" design language with a slimmer headlight shape (with optional projector headlights and LED daytime running lights). This design continues into the interior with similar AC vents and centre fascia design, which has been described as more "car-like". First for a Hilux, this generation is available with an optional autonomous emergency braking system (AEB).
File:2016 Toyota HiLux Invincible D-4D 4WD 2.4 Rear.jpg|2016 Hilux Invincible (GUN125; pre-facelift) File:2018 Toyota HiLux Invincible X facelift Interior.jpg|Interior
Development
Development of the vehicle was led by Hiroki Nakajima as chief engineer, who visited 120 countries during its development. It was reported that in 2011, Toyota started over on the new Hilux just six months into development due to the release of the Volkswagen Amarok and Ford Ranger, which reset Toyota's benchmark for "car-like driving". Toyota President and CEO Akio Toyoda personally intervened to set the Hilux on a new development path.
Toyota stated the eighth-generation Hilux received larger cabin space in the front and rear with 19 mm extra shoulder room, 8 mm extra head room, 15 mm higher seat height and 35 mm larger rear knee room. It also featured a broader seat adjustment range and a larger 80 L fuel tank. It is also equipped with rear air vents as an option, making it one of the few pickups in its segment with rear air vents at the time of its launch.
The front bumper has a bigger bulge to meet new pedestrian safety regulations, while the lower section of the front bumper has been shaped to ensure the Hilux is more agile than its predecessor in off-road conditions. In the Middle East, the Hilux received an optional steel front bumper. The approach angle is 31 degrees and the departure angle is 26 degrees, compared to the previous 30 and 23, respectively.
The new ladder-frame chassis gives the vehicle a 20-percent increase in torsional rigidity compared to the previous generation model. The stronger FIRM (Frame with Integrated Rigidity Mechanism) makes use of high-tensile strength steel and more spot welds. The improved body structure is said to yield lower noise, vibration and harshness levels. It is also equipped with a newly developed Dynamic Control Suspension system and Body Control with Torque Demand.
Three different suspension setups are available for the Hilux for different markets. Vehicles destined for Australia, South Africa, Russia and South America receive an Australian-developed heavy-duty suspension setup that offers improved off-road performance, better vibration suppression and improved roll stiffness. Vehicles sold in Thailand receive a comfort-biased setup due to the large market of pickup trucks for personal use. The third suspension setup is a general setup that is "suited to all road conditions the world over." The suspension setups consist of front double wishbone with a thicker front stabiliser bar and rear leaf spring configuration. It is aimed to give the Hilux a more "car-like" driving experience.
Markets
Argentina
As of 2016, the Argentine version has about 40% of locally and 60% of regionally made parts.
Australia
During its introduction in Australia, the eighth-generation Hilux was offered with 31 variants, eight more than its predecessor, with 4×2 and 4×4 single, extra and double cabin styles, and WorkMate, SR and SR5 grade levels. Toyota has also added Hi-Rider variants for SR and SR5 models, with added ride height, heavy-duty suspensions, larger front ventilated disc brakes and larger rear drum brakes.
Four engine options are offered in the market, ranging from the 2.4-litre turbo-diesel, 2.8-litre turbo-diesel (with different outputs for both 4×2 and 4×4), 2.7-litre petrol and 4.0-litre V6 petrol, and continues to be imported from Thailand.
The Australian specification Hilux offers an upgraded 3500 kg towing capacity (for diesel manual) or 3200 kg for diesel automatic model, while it also offers a payload of up to 1240 kg. It comes equipped with a standard reversing camera, up to seven airbags, electronic stability control, trailer sway control and rear parking sensors.
In March 2017, the TRD appearance package became available. In January 2018, Toyota introduced the Hilux Rugged X, Rogue and Rugged variants which were fully designed, developed and engineered in Australia. Based on the double-cab 4×4 Hilux, the three variants are targeted towards "urban adventurers" with off-road related changes and additions. The 2020 facelift was presented in August, which also introduced upgraded diesel engines and Toyota Safety Sense.
In September 2022, the Hilux Rogue received upgrades such as wider tracks and fenders, larger 18-inch wheels, rear disc brakes replacing drum brakes and larger front brake discs. It also gained extended front suspension arms, a lengthened rear axle, revised rear dampers, and a rear anti-roll bar, which are claimed to increase the vehicle's roll rigidity by 20 percent.
In January 2023, the GR Sport model became available in Australia with a different styling compared to the Hilux GR Sport in other markets, by sharing many elements with the Hilux Rogue. Powered with the 2.8-litre diesel engine, it received engine upgrades, heavy-duty suspension, wider fenders and wider track.
Cambodia
The eighth‑generation Hilux was officially introduced to the Cambodian market back in 2016, with local assembly for the Cambodian market began in May 2024 at the Phnom Penh Special Economic Zone by TTMC. The locally assembled Hilux Revo is offered in V Edition and Rally trims, both powered by a 2.8‑litre diesel engine paired with a six‑speed automatic transmission and four‑wheel drive. Standard equipment includes wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, Bi‑LED headlamps, and advanced safety features.
Europe
The eighth-generation Hilux entered European markets such as the UK in April 2016 with customer deliveries in July. It was available in Active, Icon, Invincible and Invincible X grade levels and single, extra and double cab body styles. The sole powertrain option is the 2.4-litre diesel engine. The 2020 facelift model received an optional 2.8-litre diesel engine, and a GR Sport variant since 2022.
Like the previous generation, this generation has also been sold as the TruckMasters OX in Finland by Truck Masters Finland since 2017. The modified suspension means that the truck is registered as a light truck in Finland, leading to lower taxes.
India
In India, the Hilux was unveiled in January 2022 and went on sale in late March 2022. Mainly marketed as a "lifestyle utility vehicle", it is offered in Low and High trim levels. Models sold in India are assembled at Toyota Kirloskar Motor's plant in Bidadi, Karnataka, and 30 percent of its components are sourced locally.
Japan
The Hilux was reintroduced in Japan on 12 September 2017, after 13 years of hiatus. Initial orders for the vehicle exceeded 2,000 in the first month of sales. For the Japanese market, the Hilux is imported from Thailand, with only double-cab 4WD configuration available in two trim levels, "X" and "Z", both equipped with a 2.4-litre 2GD-FTV engine and a 6-speed automatic transmission.
Pakistan
Indus Motor Company launched the eighth-generation Hilux in early 2017 under the Hilux Revo brand name, with eight variants, all powered by the 3.0-litre 1KD-FTV engine. There was a choice of a 6-speed manual transmission (RC60/RC61) or a 5-speed automatic transmission (A750F).
In February 2018, the 3.0-litre diesel engine and 5-speed automatic transmission were discontinued and replaced by the 2.8-litre 1GD-FTV engine and 6-speed automatic transmission (AC60). The 2018 Hilux was offered with multiple trim levels, beginning with the entry-level "E" model, followed by the mid-grade "G" and the highest trim level "V" variant, which was equipped with push start, keyless entry, a touchscreen infotainment system and downhill assist control, among other advanced features.
In July 2021, the facelift version was introduced, followed by the introduction of a new trim level called Rocco in February 2022, which featured a more aggressive design with fender flares, matte black accents and an updated front bumper. The launch of the Hilux Revo Rocco also brought parking sensors and dual-zone climate control. In March 2023, the Hilux GR-S model was launched, bringing Apple CarPlay and Android Auto support, a new front bumper and radiator grille, red accents in the interior, piano black trim pieces, glossy black alloy wheels and GR badges on the front and rear.
Philippines
The eighth-generation Hilux was launched in the Philippines in July 2015. It was initially offered in 2.4 Cab & Chassis (manual only), 2.4 FX (manual only), 2.4 J (manual only), 2.4 E (manual only), 2.4 G 4×2 (manual and automatic) and 2.8 G 4×4 (manual and automatic) grades.
In September 2020, the Hilux received a facelift and is offered in 2.4 Cab & Chassis (manual only), 2.4 Cargo (manual only), 2.4 FX (manual only), 2.4 J (available either in 4×2 or 4×4, manual only), 2.4 E 4×2 (manual only), 2.4 G 4×2 (manual and automatic), 2.4 Conquest 4×2 (manual and automatic) and 2.8 Conquest 4×4 (manual and automatic) grades. In August 2022, the Hilux gained a feature list upgrade.
In September 2023, the Hilux GR-S was updated similar to the Australian market.
South Africa

, Toyota South Africa Motors (TSAM) would export more than 55,000 Hilux and Fortuner units to 74 countries, including Africa (43 markets), Europe (28 markets) and Latin America (three markets). Hilux vehicles sold in South Africa are marketed as 2.4 and 2.8 GD-6 respectively which signifies engine displacement, the GD engine series and the 6 speed transmission. Exports included right-hand-drive and left-hand-drive variants, and would consist of more than 50 percent of TSAM’s total 2016 Hilux and Fortuner production.
Thailand
Thailand is the major export hub for the Hilux, with 60 percent of local production allocated for exports . Initial plans were to export 186,000 units to over 130 countries with a focus on major markets such as Australia, New Zealand, the Middle East, South America, and UK.
The domestic market model is marketed as the Hilux Revo, which consists of single, extra cab (Smart Cab) and double cabin (Double Cab) body styles, with both Smart Cab and Double Cab model receiving an optional high-riding Prerunner model.
In March 2016, the TRD Sportivo appearance package became available. In November 2017, Hilux Revo Rocco also introduced as the highest grade level. The Rocco features a grey rear bumper bar, 18-inch alloy wheels with all-terrain tyres, a black sports bar with bed liner, Rocco insignia, gloss black grille, black metallic trim on the interior along with a redesigned instrument cluster. The engine and safety features for the Rocco remain unchanged. Since September 2018, the Hilux Revo Rocco is also available with the 2.4-litre diesel engine. In August 2021, the Hilux Revo received GR Sport variants for low-riding and high-riding models.
2017 facelift
A minor redesign of the Hilux was unveiled in November 2017 in Thailand. It features a different front grille styling similar to the North American market Tacoma and a different front bumper with LED fog lights. In Thailand, the redesigned front fascia is only applied to the 4×4 and high-riding 4×2 Prerunner variants, while the entry-level, low-riding 4×2 versions was largely unchanged with minor revisions. In Australia, it was released in August 2018 with the changes restricted to the higher grade levels, SR and SR5, while the basic WorkMate models are unchanged. The rest of the exterior is identical to the initial model. A range-topping Hilux Revo Rocco was also introduced in Thailand, which features exterior accessories.
The Rocco was introduced in Malaysia as Hilux L-Edition in 2018. In the Philippines, the Rocco was introduced in February 2018 as the Conquest. In the UK, this styling was only available for the 'Invincible X' variant, which was launched at the Commercial Vehicle Show on 24 April 2018. In Japan, this model was sold as the Z "Black Rally Edition", which was announced on 12 November 2018 and released on 17 December 2018 to commemorate the 50th anniversary since the launch of the first generation Hilux.
File:2018 Toyota HiLux (GUN126R MY19) SR5 4x4 Double Cab (2018-10-19) 01.jpg|alt=2018 Hilux SR5 4WD (GUN126)|2018 Hilux SR5 4WD (GUN126; 2017 facelift) File:2018 Toyota HiLux (GUN126R MY19) SR5 4x4 Double Cab (2018-10-19) 02.jpg|alt=2018 Hilux SR5 4WD (GUN126)|2018 Hilux SR5 4WD (GUN126; 2017 facelift)
2020 facelift
In June 2020, Toyota unveiled the second facelift of the AN110/120/130 series Hilux for Asia, Europe and South America. The second facelift model received revised front and rear with LED headlamps and tail-lamps and front LED indicators, a first for the Hilux, and redesigned 18-inch alloy wheels. Revisions inside the interior include a new design for the instrument cluster and the 4.2-inch multi-info display. A more rugged-styled Hilux with larger front grille surface and black fender flares was introduced with different names, such as the Rocco in Thailand and Pakistan, Rogue in Australia and Malaysia, Conquest in the Philippines and South America, Adventure in the UAE, and Invincible X in Europe.
The power and torque figures for 2.8-litre 1GD-FTV diesel engine has been upgraded to 204 PS and 500 Nm (with automatic transmission), while its 2.4-litre counterpart, the 2GD-FTV diesel engine received a higher-pressure common-rail fuel injection system, along with optimised pistons, piston rings and an uprated alternator to better handle heavier workloads.
Dampers on the 4×4 and 4×2 high-riding versions of the 2020 facelift Hilux have been revised for improved ride comfort with less vibration, particularly with less payload. Leaf spring bushings have been updated for better comfort on rough roads, as well as steering response during cornering and lane changes. A self-lubricating rubber for the rear shackle bush is also added for better ride comfort.
For some Southeast Asian markets, the Hilux became available with Toyota Safety Sense. This facelift of the Hilux was introduced in Japan in August 2020 and is offered in base X and Z trim levels.
File:2021 Toyota Hilux Invincible D-4D 4WD 2.4.jpg|Hilux Invincible (Europe; 2020 facelift) File:Toyota Hilux Rogue 2nd facelift 2020 front.jpg|Hilux Rogue (Australia; 2020 facelift) File:Toyota Hilux Rogue 2nd facelift 2020 rear.jpg|Hilux Rogue (Australia; 2020 facelift)
2024 facelift
On 1 February 2024, the third facelift of the AN110/120/130 series Hilux was introduced in Australia and Indonesia. The facelifted Hilux Revo was also launched in Thailand at the 45th Bangkok International Motor Show on 25 March 2024. South Africa also received the same facelift for the Raider double-cab and extra-cab models.
File:2024 Toyota Hilux 2.4 V 4x4 Crew Cab (Indonesia) front view.jpg|2024 facelift
GR Sport
The GR Sport version of the Hilux was first released in São Paulo, Brazil in November 2018. It is based on the flagship SRX variant available in South America with additional stiffer front springs, monotube dampers, Gazoo Racing exterior graphics, a new design honeycomb grille insert with 'Toyota' badging, matte black wheel arch extensions, a black bonnet and roof, side steps, 17-inch alloy wheels with all-terrain tyres, and GR badging, without performance upgrades.
The GR Sport version based on the 2020 facelift model was released in Thailand on 25 August 2021, in Japan on 8 October 2021, in the Philippines in October 2021, in Europe in January 2022, in Indonesia in December 2022 and in Pakistan in March 2023. The model was also released in South Africa in September 2022, with the 1GD-FTV engine further upgraded to produce 224 PS and 550 Nm.
In January 2023, a specialised GR Sport model for the Australian market was released. It received a different styling compared to the Hilux GR Sport in other markets, with more off-road-focused upgrades such as extended wheel-arch fender flares, wider track, heavy-duty suspension, and heavy-duty 'rock sliders' instead of side-steps. Powered with the 2.8-litre diesel engine, it is upgraded to produce 224 PS and 550 Nm.
To commemorate Toyota Gazoo’s 9th Safari Rally victory in 2021, the Hilux GR Safari Rally limited edition was released in Kenya by CFAO Motors Toyota, available in automatic and manual with GR's racing colours (black, red, and white).
File:2019 Toyota Hilux GR Sport (Japan).jpg|Hilux GR Sport (2017 facelift) File:2021 Toyota Hilux Revo GR Sport Double-Cab 2.8 4x4.jpg|Hilux GR Sport (2020 facelift) File:Toyota HiLux GR Sport 1X7A7281.jpg|Hilux GR Sport (2020 facelift, Europe) File:Toyota Hilux 2.8 GR Sport 4x4 2024 (1).jpg|Hilux GR Sport (2023 facelift, Philippines)
Hilux Revo BEV Concept
The Hilux Revo BEV Concept is an EV conversion prototype based on the eighth-generation Hilux (Hilux Revo in Thailand) single cab that was presented on 14 December 2022 at the 60th anniversary event of Toyota Motor Thailand.
File:2022_Toyota_Hilux_Revo_BEV_Concept.jpg|Hilux Revo BEV Concept (Thailand)
Hilux FCEV concept

The Hilux FCEV concept is a hydrogen powered fuel cell electric vehicle (FCEV) prototype based on the eighth-generation Hilux two-wheel drive space-cab. It was unveiled in September 2023 and was developed in the UK at Toyota Manufacturing UK's Burnaston car plant with funding provided by the UK government. The prototype uses the same powertrain as Toyota's full production FCEV the Mirai and has three high-pressure fuel tanks with an expected range of more than 365 miles. Toyota said it would produce ten prototypes for testing by the end of 2023.
Powertrain
The model is available with the newly developed 2.4-litre and 2.8-litre GD series diesel engines, combined with a 6-speed manual transmission or a 6-speed automatic transmission with sequential shift technology. The manual model, touted as an "intelligent" manual helps eliminate shift shock by matching engine revs to the transmission speed. The 2.8-litre GD engine was introduced in May 2015 at the 36th International Vienna Motor Symposium. The GD engines are equipped common-rail direct-injection, variable-nozzle turbos, exhaust gas recirculation and an optional stop/start system. It is claimed to use 10 percent less fuel than the older KD engines.
The older KD series 2.5-litre along with 3.0-litre diesel engines was offered in several market alongside the newer GD series engines. The 2.0-litre, 2.7-litre and 4.0-litre petrol engines from the previous generation returned with a Dual VVT-i update for increased power and torque. , the 5L-E engine option is marketed by Toyota Gibraltar Stockholdings along with other distributors in Africa such as French West Africa, and for institutional purchase by governmental entities and NGOs accredited by the UN, only with a 5-speed manual transmission, four-wheel drive and left-hand drive only.
| Model | Engine | Transmission | Power | Torque |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.0 | 2.0 L *1TR-FE* inline-4 fuel-injected petrol with Dual VVT-i | 6-speed manual | 104 kW at 5,500 rpm | 185 Nm at 3,800 rpm |
| 6-speed AC60E/AC60F automatic | ||||
| 2.4 | 2.4 L *2GD-FTV* inline-4 common rail diesel with VNT | 5-speed R151 manual | 150 hp at 3,400 rpm | 343 Nm at 1,400–2,800 rpm |
| 6-speed RC60/RC60F manual | 400 Nm at 1,600–2,000 rpm | |||
| 6-speed AC60E/AC60F automatic | ||||
| 2.5 | 2.5 L *2KD-FTV* inline-4 common rail diesel without intercooler | 5-speed R151 manual | 102 hp at 3,600 rpm | 200 Nm at 1,600–3,600 rpm |
| 6-speed RC61 manual | 260 Nm at 1,600–2,400 rpm | |||
| 2.5 | 2.5 L *2KD-FTV* inline-4 common rail diesel with VNT | 6-speed manual | 144 hp at 3,400 rpm | 343 Nm at 1,800–3,400 rpm |
| 5-speed A750F automatic | ||||
| 2.7 | 2.7 L *2TR-FE* inline-4 fuel-injected petrol with Dual VVT-i | 6-speed manual | 120 kW at 5,500 rpm | 246 Nm at 3,800 rpm |
| 6-speed AC60E/AC60F automatic | ||||
| 2.8 | 2.8 L *1GD-FTV* inline-4 common rail diesel with VNT | 5-speed R151 manual | 170 hp | 343 Nm at 1,200–3,400 rpm |
| 6-speed RC61 manual / RC61F iMT (Intelligent Manual Transmission) manual (Thailand) | 177 hp at 3,400 rpm | |||
| 2nd facelift: 201 hp at 3,400 rpm | ||||
| GR Sport (South Africa/Australia): 221 hp at 3,400 rpm | 420 Nm at 1,400–2,600 rpm | |||
| 2nd facelift: 420 Nm at 1,400–3,400 rpm | ||||
| 6-speed AC60E/AC60F automatic | 450 Nm at 1,600–2,400 rpm | |||
| 2nd facelift: 500 Nm at 1,600–2,800 rpm | ||||
| GR Sport (South Africa/Australia): 550 Nm at 1,600–2,800 rpm | ||||
| 3.0 | 3.0 L *5L-E* inline-4 | |||
| naturally aspirated diesel | 5-speed manual | 95 hp at 4,000 rpm | 197 Nm at 2,200 rpm | |
| 3.0 | 3.0 L *1KD-FTV* inline-4 | |||
| common rail diesel with VNT | 6-speed RC61 manual | 163 hp at 3,400 rpm | 343 Nm at 1,600–3,400 rpm | |
| 5-speed A750F automatic | 360 Nm at 1,800–3,400 rpm | |||
| 4.0 | 4.0 L *1GR-FE* V6 fuel-injected petrol with VVT-i | 6-speed RC61 manual | 175 kW at 5,200 rpm | 376 Nm at 3,700 rpm |
| 6-speed AC60E/AC60F automatic |
Safety
The updated Hilux in its most basic Latin American market configuration with 7 airbags received 5 stars for both adult occupants and 5 stars for infants from Latin NCAP 2.0 in 2019.
{{anchor|AN220|AN230}} Ninth generation (AN220, AN230; 2025)
- AN220
- AN230 | Thailand: Ban Pho; Samrong Tai (TMT) | 2-door pickup truck | 4-door pickup truck | Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive | Front-engine, four-wheel-drive | Dual-motor, all-wheel-drive (BEV/Travo-e) | Toyota Hilux Champ | Toyota Land Cruiser FJ | Petrol: | 2.7 L 2TR-FE I4 | Diesel: | 2.8 L 1GD-FTV turbo I4 | 120 kW (2.7 L 2TR-FE petrol) | 150 kW (2.8 L 1GD-FTV diesel) | 144 kW (BEV/Travo-e) | 6-speed RC60/RC61 manual | 6-speed AC60 "Super Intelligent ECT" automatic | 240 km (BEV/Travo-e, WLTP) | 300 km (BEV/Travo-e, NEDC) | 3085 mm (long-wheelbase) | 5320 mm (long-wheelbase) | 1815 mm | 1800 mm (BEV/Travo-e)
The ninth-generation Hilux was introduced on 10 November 2025 simultaneously in Thailand, Europe and Australia. The exterior was designed by Toyota Australia.
Toyota announced BEV and FCEV variants to be launched in 2026 and 2028 respectively.
File:2025 Toyota Hilux Travo Overland Double-Cab 2.8 Plus 4TREX (Rear).jpg|Rear view (Overland) File:2025 Toyota Hilux Travo Prerunner Double-Cab 2.8 Premium.jpg|2025 Hilux Travo Prerunner File:2025 Toyota Hilux Travo Prerunner Double-Cab 2.8 Premium (Rear).jpg|Rear view (Prerunner) File:2025 Toyota Hilux Travo Single-Cab 2.8 4TREX.jpg|2025 Hilux Travo single cab
Battery electric
A battery electric version (model code XPN225), marketed as the Hilux BEV in Europe and as the Hilux Travo-e in Thailand is available, powered by dual-motor all-wheel drive layout.
File:2025 Toyota Hilux Travo-e Double-Cab 4TREX.jpg|2025 Hilux Travo-e File:2025 Toyota Hilux Travo-e Double-Cab 4TREX (Rear).jpg|Rear view (Travo-e)
Markets
Oceania
Australia
The Hilux went on sale in Australia on 9 December 2025, with five grades: WorkMate, SR, SR5, Rogue and Rugged X. In Australia, the Hilux is available in Single Cab, Extra Cab and Double Cab body configurations. The Single Cab is available solely in the WorkMate grade, with 4TREX four-wheel drive optional. The Extra Cab is available solely in the SR grade, equipped with 4TREX four-wheel drive as standard. The Double Cab is available with WorkMate, SR, SR5, Rogue and Rugged X grades, equipped with 4TREX four-wheel drive as standard but optional on the former two trims. For engines, all variants are powered by the 1GD-FTV 2.8-litre turbocharged diesel engine, which is also available with the mild-hybrid 48V system.
New Zealand
The Hilux went on sale in New Zealand on 13 November 2025, with four grades: SR, SR5, SR5 Limited and Adventure. In New Zealand, the Hilux is available in Single Cab, Extra Cab and Double Cab body configurations. The Single Cab is available solely in the SR trim, equipped with 4TREX four-wheel drive as standard. The Extra Cab is available solely in the SR trim, equipped with 4TREX four-wheel drive as standard. The Double Cab is available with SR, SR5, SR5 Limited and Adventure grades, equipped with 4TREX four-wheel drive as standard but optional on the SR grade. For engines, all variants are powered by the 1GD-FTV 2.8-litre turbocharged diesel engine, which is also available with the mild-hybrid 48V system.
Thailand
In Thailand, the Hilux Travo is available in Standard Cab, Smart Cab and Double Cab body configurations. The Standard Cab is available in the sole unnamed trim, equipped with 4TREX four-wheel drive as standard. The Smart Cab is available with Smart and Premium trims, with 4TREX four-wheel-drive optional on the latter trim. The Double Cab is available with Smart, Premium, Overland and Overland Plus trims, with 4TREX four-wheel drive optional on the latter three trims.
The battery electric Hilux Travo-e comes in the Double Cab configuration and available in the sole variant.
Powertrain
The 2.8-litre 1GD-FTV turbo-diesel producing 150 kW is standard on all models. It produces 500 Nm of torque for automatic variants and 420 Nm for manual variants. The 2.7-litre petrol four from the previous generation remains available.
Safety
Hilux Champ (2023)
Main article: Toyota Hilux Champ

The Toyota Hilux Champ is a two-door pickup truck or chassis cab positioned below the Hilux, and based on the IMV platform and chassis shared with the Hilux. It was first previewed as the IMV 0 concept in December 2022, and went on sale as the Hilux Champ in Thailand in November 2023.
Production and sales
Worldwide production
| Year | url=https://global.toyota/en/mobility/toyota-brand/features/hilux50th/history/numbers.html | title=Hilux by the Numbers | publisher=Toyota | access-date=8 July 2021 }} |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1968 | 33,708 | |||
| 1969 | 48,041 | |||
| 1970 | 69,787 | |||
| 1971 | 77,865 | |||
| 1972 | 79,523 | |||
| 1973 | 75,541 | |||
| 1974 | 78,727 | |||
| 1975 | 115,466 | |||
| 1976 | 137,101 | |||
| 1977 | 215,696 | |||
| 1978 | 224,113 | |||
| 1979 | 237,309 | |||
| 1980 | 306,063 | |||
| 1981 | 302,580 | |||
| 1982 | 333,103 | |||
| 1983 | 345,117 | |||
| 1984 | 432,871 | |||
| 1985 | 461,253 | |||
| 1986 | 440,905 | |||
| 1987 | 383,688 | |||
| 1988 | 394,468 | |||
| 1989 | 374,387 | |||
| 1990 | 362,147 | |||
| 1991 | 344,501 | |||
| 1992 | 387,279 | |||
| 1993 | 405,752 | |||
| 1994 | 425,999 | |||
| 1995 | 384,571 | |||
| 1996 | 387,571 | |||
| 1997 | 351,417 | |||
| 1998 | 353,340 | |||
| 1999 | 358,793 | |||
| 2000 | 343,646 | |||
| 2001 | 363,354 | |||
| 2002 | 396,013 | |||
| 2003 | 276,172 | |||
| 2004 | 323,625 | |||
| 2005 | 370,191 | |||
| 2006 | 428,616 | |||
| 2007 | 508,132 | |||
| 2008 | 491,702 | |||
| 2009 | 438,812 | |||
| 2010 | 548,889 | |||
| 2011 | 518,274 | |||
| 2012 | 745,303 | |||
| 2013 | 732,661 | |||
| 2014 | 648,930 | |||
| 2015 | 597,899 | |||
| 2016 | 537,474 | |||
| 2017 | 520,742 |
In 2017, Toyota reported the Hilux sold around 521,000 units in 190 countries, with production in 6 countries. 167,000 units were sold in Asia, 116,000 in South America, 65,000 in the Middle East, 55,000 in Africa, 51,000 in Oceania, 41,000 in Europe, 19,000 in North America, and around 1,000 in Japan. In the same year, 310,500 units were produced in Thailand, 103,000 produced in Argentina, 76,500 produced in South Africa, 18,200 produced in Malaysia, 6,500 produced in Pakistan, and 600 produced in Venezuela.
Sales
| Year | Thailand | Australia | New Zealand | Indonesia | Philippines | Malaysia | South Africa | Brazil | Argentina | Mexico | Saudi Arabia | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | 3,647 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2001 | 3,052 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2002 | 3,255 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2003 | 6,819 | 5,606 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2004 | 7,303 | 6,711 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2005 | 9,435 | 13,845 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2006 | url=http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-pick-up-2018-toyota-hilux-revo-champion/ | title=Sales Report : ยอดขายกระบะ Pick-up ปี 2018 / 2561 : Toyota Hilux Revo ครองแชมป์อันดับ 1 | trans-title=Sales Report: Pick-up pickup sales for 2018/2018: Toyota Hilux Revo occupies the # 1 spot | work=Headlight Magazine | location=Thailand | language=th | date=22 January 2019 | access-date=22 January 2019 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190123010135/http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-pick-up-2018-toyota-hilux-revo-champion/ | archive-date=23 January 2019 | url-status=live }} | last=Hassall | first=David | title=News - VFACTS | url=https://www.goauto.com.au/news/vfacts/winners-and-losers-of-2007/2008-01-07/22106.html | access-date=2020-02-10 | website=GoAuto | language=en}} | 300 | 11,404 | 17,385 | ||||||
| 2007 | 158,348 | 42,009 | 3,055 | 11,019 | 19,342 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2008 | 127,028 | 42,956 | 6,980 | 12,500 | 21,731 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2009 | 102,026 | 38,457 | 4,746 | 14,574 | 30,994 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2010 | 144,190 | 39,896 | 7,687 | 18,514 | 33,656 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2011 | 121,887 | title=Australia top selling car data (2012) shows shift to Japanese brands | url=https://www.acaresearch.com.au/australian-market-research-blog/bid/282052/Australia-top-selling-car-data-2012-shows-shift-to-Japanese-brands | access-date=2020-02-10 | website=www.acaresearch.com.au | language=en-au}} | 8,301 | 21,480 | 33,260 | ||||||||||||||||||
| 2012 | 233,293 | 40,646 | 12,556 | 28,566 | 38,889 | 5,499 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| 2013 | 206,939 | 39,931 | 14,129 | 27,155 | 42,627 | 9,120 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| 2014 | url=http://www.headlightmag.com/salesreport_total2014/ | title=Thailand cars sales report 2014 | work=Headlight Magazine | date=February 2015 | location=Thailand | language=th | access-date=24 October 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181024152535/http://www.headlightmag.com/salesreport_total2014/ | archive-date=24 October 2018 | url-status=live }} | last=Davis | first=Brett | date=2016-01-06 | title=Top 10 best-selling vehicles in Australia during 2015 | url=https://performancedrive.com.au/top-10-best-selling-vehicles-in-australia-during-2015-0611/ | access-date=2020-02-10 | website=PerformanceDrive | language=en-AU}} | 9,206 | 25,715 | 43,310 | 8,783 | |||||
| 2015 | url=http://www.headlightmag.com/salesreport_total2015/ | title=Thailand cars sales report 2015 | work=Headlight Magazine | date=10 June 2016 | location=Thailand | language=th | access-date=24 October 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181024152631/http://www.headlightmag.com/salesreport_total2015/ | archive-date=24 October 2018 | url-status=live }} | 35,161 | 5,623 | 10,757 | 27,158 | 35,684 | 32,684 | 10,504 | ||||||||||
| 2016 | url=http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-december-2016/ | title=Thailand cars sales report 2016 | work=Headlight Magazine | date=26 January 2017 | location=Thailand | language=th | access-date=24 October 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181024192040/http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-december-2016/ | archive-date=24 October 2018 | url-status=live }} | last=Davis | first=Brett | date=2018-01-03 | title=Top 10 best-selling cars in Australia during 2017 | url=https://performancedrive.com.au/top-10-best-selling-cars-australia-2017-0410/ | access-date=2020-02-10 | website=PerformanceDrive | language=en-AU}} | 6,187 | 4,996 | 12,405 | 18,477 | 35,428 | 34,031 | 13,644 | ||
| 2017 | url=http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-december-2017/ | title=Thailand cars sales report 2017 | work=Headlight Magazine | date=29 January 2018 | location=Thailand | language=th | access-date=24 October 2018 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181024152658/http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-december-2017/ | archive-date=24 October 2018 | url-status=live }} | 47,093 | 8,106 | 7,661 | 14,688 | 17,927 | 36,422 | 34,378 | 33,914 | 19,132 | ||||||||
| 2018 | 150,928 | 51,705 | 8,086 | 9,126 | 18,237 | 19,734 | 40,022 | 39,313 | 33,439 | 18,943 | |||||||||||||||||
| 2019 | url=http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-compact-pick-up-2019-thailand/ | title=Thailand pick-up sales report 2019 | work=HeadlightMag.com | date=25 February 2020 | location=Thailand | language=th | access-date=25 Feb 2020}} | 47,759 | 7,126 | 8,369 | 20,846 | 15,796 | 40,934 | 40,408 | 25,087 | 17,654 | 24,046 | ||||||||||
| 2020 | url=http://www.headlightmag.com/sales-report-pick-up-truck-2020/ | title=Thailand pick-up sales report 2020 | work=HeadlightMag.com | date=25 January 2021 | location=Thailand | language=th | access-date=26 Jan 2021}} | 45,176 | 5,796 | 5,651 | 10,642 | 14,204 | 31,263 | 32,395 | 19,064 | 13,666 | 21,838 | ||||||||||
| 2021 | 127,669 | 52,801 | 8,430 | 7,737 | 18,969 | 18,150 | 36,085 | title=Carros mais vendidos do Brasil em 2021 | url=https://www.autoo.com.br/emplacamentos/veiculos-mais-vendidos/2021/ | access-date=2022-01-11 | website=AUTOO | date=3 January 2021 | language=pt-BR}} | 27,072 | last=García | first=Gerardo | date=2022-01-08 | title=Los 379 autos más vendidos de México en 2021: la lista completa del ranking de ventas | url=https://www.motorpasion.com.mx/industria/autos-vendidos-mexico-2021 | access-date=2022-01-11 | website=Motorpasión México | language=es}} | 16,993 | ||||
| 2022 | 148,101 | 64,391 | 9,787 | 16,555 | 24,537 | 26,899 | 32,203 | 48,565 | 24,628 | 20,842 | |||||||||||||||||
| 2023 | 106,601 | 61,111 | 8,054 | 20,195 | 25,958 | 27,276 | 37,382 | 46,206 | 30,694 | 18,117 | |||||||||||||||||
| 2024 | 66,244 | 53,499 | 7,296 | 15,484 | 26,643 | 26,738 | 32,656 | 50,011 | 28,988 | 21,370 | |||||||||||||||||
| 2025 | 51,947 | 16,678 | url=https://topauto.co.za/news/139255/toyota-achieves-best-sales-in-18-years-in-south-africa/ | title=Toyota achieves best sales in 18 years in South Africa | first=Michael | last=Taylor | publisher= TopAuto | location=South Africa | date=9 January 2026 | access-date=11 January 2026 }} | 49,732 | 30,714 |
Reputation
The Hilux has often been described as having a high level of durability and reliability during sustained heavy use or even abuse.
This reputation was highlighted in several episodes of the BBC motoring show Top Gear. In series 3, episodes 5 and 6, a 1988 diesel N50 Hilux with 190000 miles on the odometer was subjected to considerable abuse, including being left on a beach for the incoming tide, left on top of a building as it was demolished, and being set on fire. The Hilux suffered severe structural damage, but was still running after being repaired with only the typical tools that would be found in a truck's toolbox (with the exception of a replaced windscreen for the driver's safety). In later series, this Hilux became one of the background decorations in the Top Gear studio, and is now on display in the "World of Top Gear" exhibit at the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu. In the later series 8, episode 3, a Hilux was chosen by Jeremy Clarkson as his platform for creating an amphibious vehicle (though by the end of that episode the Hilux failed to start), and in the Top Gear: Polar Special Clarkson and James May raced a specially modified 2007 model Hilux to the magnetic north pole from Northern Canada – making that truck the first motor vehicle to have made that journey. The camera crew's vehicle from this episode was later modified and driven to near the summit of the Eyjafjallajökull erupting Icelandic volcano by James May, in Series 15, Episode 1.
In 1999, the Hilux appeared in a series of "Bugger" television advertisements in New Zealand and Australia, exaggerating its power and durability for comic effect. The adverts were banned in New Zealand after receiving 120 complaints, but later reinstated.
A world record was achieved by the support crew for the participants in the 2008/2009 Amundsen Omega 3 South Pole Race. The crew traveled in specially adapted Toyota Hiluxes modified by Arctic Trucks, completing a trip of over 5000 km from Novo, a Russian Scientific Station in Antarctica to the Geographic South Pole and back again, making them the first 4×4s to reach the South Pole. The return journey of 2500 km from the South Pole to Novo Station was completed in a record 8 days and 17 hours.
Racing
Two Hilux pickups entered the Dakar Rally in 2012, prepared by the Imperial Toyota team of South Africa. Driver Giniel de Villiers achieved third place in the 2012, second place overall in the 2013, 4th in the 2014, and again second place in the 2015. These however, were heavily modified non-production versions built around a custom racing-only tubular chassis and using a larger capacity Toyota V8 engine. Since 2016, the Dakar Rally Hilux has been prepared by Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT. Giniel achieved third place with it in 2016, 5th in 2017, 3rd in 2018 and 9th in 2019. Nasser Al-Attiyah won the 2019 Dakar Rally, earning the first ever Toyota victory in the Dakar Rally, he also came in second in 2018 and 2021. In the 2020 Dakar Rally, six Hilux cars were entered prepared by Gazoo Racing, and another nine by Overdrive Racing. A new, wider, heavier, featuring larger wheels Toyota GR DKR Hilux T1+ was built by Gazoo Racing for 2022 Dakar Rally, equipped with 3.5-L twin-turbo V6 engine, based on Toyota Land Cruiser 300 GR Sport.{{cite web|url=https://toyotagazooracing.com/dakar/release/2021/1117-01/
Non-Standard Tactical Vehicles

While not standard issue, various countries including the US military, particularly Special Operations forces, have used Toyota Hilux vehicles for various purposes. They are often acquired as technical vehicle or Non-Standard Tactical Vehicles (NSTVs) and modified for specific missions. These vehicles are favoured for their reliability, ease of maintenance, and ability to operate in diverse environments.
Use by militant groups
Due to its durability and reliability, the Toyota Hilux, along with the larger Toyota Land Cruiser (J70), has become popular among paramilitary groups in war-torn regions as a technical. According to terrorism analyst Andrew Exum, the Hilux is "the vehicular equivalent of the AK-47. It's ubiquitous to insurgent warfare." In 2015, US counter-terror officials inquired with Toyota how the Salafi jihadist extremist group Islamic State had apparently acquired large numbers of Toyota Hiluxes and Land Cruisers. Mark Wallace, the CEO of the Counter Extremism Project said, "Regrettably, the Toyota Land Cruiser and Hilux have effectively become almost part of the ISIS brand."
The Toyota War between Libya and Chad in 1986 and 1987 was named as such because of the heavy, successful use of Hilux and Land Cruiser trucks for technicals.
Notes
References
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