Popular 4WD hit with sharp price rise: 2026 Nissan Patrol cops price increase as emissions standard start to bite for Toyota LandCruiser 300 Series, Tank 500 rival

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Tim Nicholson
Managing Editor
7 Aug 2025
3 min read

The Nissan Patrol has copped its second price increase in four months, with the company blaming Australia’s new emissions laws, among other factors.

Each grade of the Patrol has gone up by $5000, meaning the line-up now kicks off from $95,600 before on-road costs for the Ti, increasing to $107,100 for the Ti-L and topped by the tricked-out Warrior at $110,660.

The updated version of the Y62 Patrol went on sale in April this year with Nissan increasing the price marginally over the pre-update version. The entry grade Ti increased in price by $1340 with the other two grades only up by $140 apiece.

The Japanese carmaker has outlined the reasons for the price hike and one of the key factors is the Federal Government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES)

“There is a price increase across the Patrol range effective August 1st, 2025. A range of factors contribute to the pricing of a vehicle including cost of raw materials, logistics, foreign exchange rates, market dynamics and regulatory considerations such as NVES,” a company statement read.

NVES punishes carmakers $100 for every gram of CO2 emitted over a certain threshold for every vehicle sold. The threshold lowers every year until 2030. Carmakers can offset the penalties with sales of hybrids, plug-in hybrids and electric cars.

2025 Nissan Patrol Ti
2025 Nissan Patrol Ti

Nissan is an electric vehicle pioneer, but it does not currently offer an EV in its line-up. The long-running Leaf ended production last year and stock has since dried up.

However, the Ariya mid-size SUV is finally about to arrive in Australian dealerships in September after years of ‘will they or won’t they?’ from Nissan Australia.

2025 Nissan Patrol Ti
2025 Nissan Patrol Ti

The Ariya was revealed in production guise back in 2020 but the COVID pandemic pushed back its on-sale date in Japan to 2022.

The Patrol is one of Nissan’s best-selling models, with 4287 units shifted to the end of July this year. It’s only outsold by the X-Trail and Navara in Nissan’s line-up.

2025 Nissan Patrol Ti
2025 Nissan Patrol Ti

The massive seven-seat SUV rode a wave of interest in off-roaders with towing capability that reignited during the pandemic when people were forced to holiday at home due to border closures.

The V8-powered Patrol is one of the highest emitting vehicles on sale in Australia when it comes to CO2. The Federal Government’s Green Vehicle Guide says the Patrol has a combined emissions figure of 334g/km. Official fuel consumption on the combined cycle is 14.4 litres per 100km.

In comparison, the V6-powered Toyota LandCruiser 300 Series emits 235g/km - still deemed ‘worse than average’ by the government - and consumes 8.9L/100km.

The LandCrusier is still more expensive than the Patrol, kicking off from $97,990 for the GX and topping out at $146,910 for the Sahara ZX.

A new Patrol, the Y63, is set to arrive in Australia late in 2026 and it drops the V8 in favour of a more economical twin-turbo V6.

2026 Nissan Patrol pricing before on-road costs
 

GradeCost
Ti$95,600 (+$5000)
Ti-L$107,100 (+$5000)
Warrior$110,660 (+$5000)
Tim Nicholson
Managing Editor
Calling out the make and model of every single car he saw as a toddler might have challenged his parents’ patience, but it was clearly a starting point for Tim Nicholson’s journey into automotive journalism. Tim launched the program, Fender Bender, on community radio station JOY 94.9 during completion of his Master of Arts (Media and Communications). This led to an entry role at industry publication GoAuto, before eventually taking the role of Managing Editor. A stint as RACV’s Motoring Editor – including being an Australia’s Best Cars judge – provided a different perspective to automotive media, before leading him to CarsGuide where he started as a Contributing Journalist in September 2021, and transitioned to Senior Editor in April 2022, before becoming Managing Editor in December 2022.
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