Browse over 9,000 car reviews

Nissan Serena Reviews

You'll find all our Nissan Serena reviews right here. Nissan Serena prices range from $2,640 for the Serena St to $4,290 for the Serena St.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Nissan dating back as far as 1992.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Nissan Serena, you'll find it all here.

Nissan Reviews and News

Nissan takes aim at Ford Ranger PHEV, BYD Shark 6 with all-new plug-in hybrid dual-cab ute - is this the Nissan Navara of the future?
By Chris Thompson · 23 Apr 2025
As Nissan confirms a next-gen ute to launch within the next 12 months and the brand’s North American executives discuss streamlining its global ute and pick-up range, Nissan has revealed a plug-in hybrid ute at Auto Shanghai 2025.The 2025 Nissan Frontier Pro ute is the first electrified 'pick-up' from the brand, with the plug-in hybrid (PHEV) ute seemingly based on the Yuanye Z9, built by Nissan’s joint venture partner in China, Dongfeng.The Frontier name comes from the American badge for Nissan’s mid-size ute, once the same as, and now a sibling to, the Nissan Navara.Importantly, Nissan says the Frontier Pro will be exported to other markets after its Chinese launch later this year, though which markets remains unconfirmed.The Frontier Pro boasts a 300kW/800Nm powertrain sending drive to all four wheels from its 1.5-litre turbocharged four-cylinder engine and transmission-mounted electric motor. Nissan says the Chinese market estimation for its EV-only range is 135km under New European Driving Cycle (NEDC) testing, which can be less accurate and more lenient than widely used WLTP test figures.Five-link rear suspension, an electromechanical rear differential lock, four drive modes ranging across 'Hybrid', 'Pure Electric', 'Performance' and 'Snow' plus chunky 265/65R18 tyres wrapped around serious-looking 18-inch alloys all suggest the Frontier Pro plug-in should have at least some capacity for off-roading.Further to the mechanicals, the PHEV ute wears a face inspired by the design of the D21 generation ‘Hardbody’ Navara, namely via three of its LED headlights spanning the top of the fascia, reminiscent of the bonnet intakes in the D21.Inside, the Frontier Pro isn’t harking back to the 1980s. A 10.0-inch driver display and a large 14.6-inch multimedia touchscreen are joined by a two-spoke steering wheel, though as one would hope for in a work ute there are still physical controls for at least the climate control.Similarly important is the Vehicle-to-Load (V2L) port for powering or charging appliances via a household-style plug.The reveal of the Frontier Pro comes just after Chief Planning Officer for Nissan Americas Ponz Pandikuthira told US outlet MotorTrend the best plan going forward would be to streamline Nissan’s global ute and pick-up offerings: “Ideally we’d like to have a global convergence solution.”Interestingly, Pandikuthira said a plug-in hybrid would make the most sense for a single, global Nissan ute model to achieve solutions in most use cases. Pandikuthira also added that sooner rather than later is the plan: “We need to have a solution by . Three years from now.”Nissan had in March this year already confirmed “an all-new one-ton pickup” would launch in Japan’s 2026 financial year, which means anytime between April 2026 and March 2027.The model discussed in that plan is set to take advantage of Nissan’s links with Mitsubishi, potentially building a Nissan-badged Navara on the new Triton’s platform.As previously reported by CarsGuide, Nissan’s Chairperson of the AMEIO Region Guillaume Cartier told Australian media a new Navara would be on Australian soil in 2026.But don’t expect an electrified ute just yet - he clarified diesel is still the main dish for now."We need to make sure that if we electrify, how we electrify. I think it will be a two-step approach, first with a PHEV solution, then later on with EV," he said."That's what we're looking at, but first it will be with a diesel approach.”"On the first one we are with Mitsubishi, but the next one we are looking at. Because there is also technology we have in-house, which is solid-state battery, but that will take time.”It’s possible the “next one” Cartier referred to is the Frontier Pro plug-in just revealed in Shanghai, but time will tell.
Read the article
Nissan Navara's revolutionary 'global truck' successor less than three years away with Toyota HiLux and Ford Ranger rival set to power up : reports
By Chris Thompson · 23 Apr 2025
A Nissan Americas executive has hinted at the future of the brand’s ute and pick-up family becoming much more streamlined.
Read the article
Too many ute options in Australia? From the Ford Ranger and BYD Shark to the upcoming MG U9 and Foton Tunland, how many pick-ups is too many? | Analysis
By Stephen Ottley · 19 Apr 2025
Can you have too much of a good thing? Australians love utes and in recent years we’ve seen more and more brands look to capitalise on that, but it may not be a case of the more the merrier.
Read the article
Two-speed 2026 Toyota HiLux strategy revealed as Australia's former best-seller is set to encircle Ford Ranger, BYD Shark 6, GWM Cannon Alpha and other hybrid utes
By Byron Mathioudakis · 19 Apr 2025
Is Toyota preparing two completely different utes to replace the ageing current HiLux in Australia from next year? The first is the widely-speculated but as-yet publicly unconfirmed facelift of today’s eight-generation HiLux, while the second is new-from-the-ground up production version of the EPU (Electric Pick-Up) dual-cab concept that debuted at the 2023 Tokyo motor show.
Read the article
Self-driving cars? They're dreaming | Opinion
By Laura Berry · 18 Apr 2025
It’s started again - the talk about how autonomous cars are just around the corner.But are self-driving cars really going to be with us any time soon? Because it feels as though carmakers have been promising autonomous vehicles for a long time now, yet it seems like we’re still no closer to owning a vehicle that can drive us home or to work.Despite this, many car brands think autonomous vehicles are on our doorstep. Is that true? And if so, do we really want to let them in?Volkswagen’s global CEO of Commercial Vehicles Professor Dr Carsten Intra believes they are indeed imminent. “You think that going from combustion to electrification is a big change?” Dr Carsten asked Australia’s auto media last week at the Volkswagen Multivan launch. “And it is, but going autonomous will change our business. This is coming, it's in front of the door. Not just in 10 or 15 years, it will be sometime tomorrow. We are going through the world and testing our fleets in different cities.”Dr Carsten is referring to the fleet of self-driving ID. Buzz electric vans being tested by Volkswagen through its special autonomous company MOIA.Fitted with autonomous tech for full-self driving (but with a human babysitter on board) VW is testing the ID. Buzzes in the United States and Europe. The fleet has just been to Oslo, Norway for winter testing in snow and ice. The self-driving ID. Buzz has a high level of autonomous ability, level 4 actually, a level down from the fully autonomous Level 5 which doesn’t need a human chaperon. This is the level Volkswagen hopes to reach by 2030. These levels from 1 to 5 are just increasingly sophisticated forms of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS). Most new cars are at Level 2 and have systems that can take over steering, braking and acceleration.But Level 5, which can handle any situation without driver input, is much more complicated. While it may work in theory or on a closed circuit, what about on the Pacific Highway in Sydney at 8:30am on a Monday?So with 2030 less than five years away and as a journalist who has written story after story as car company after car company has made promise after promise of autonomous vehicles, I can tell you that the chances of fully autonomous cars driving on Australian roads by 2030 are close to zero.Forgive me for being jaded, but the autonomous car dream is and probably will always remain a dream. I wasn’t always so pessimistic about this. Back in 2016 I was very excited to write a story for CarsGuide about Ford’s bold claim that it was so far advanced into mastering autonomous tech that they’d have self-driving cars everywhere by 2021.“Ford will be mass producing vehicles with full autonomy within five years and that means there will be no steering wheels, no gas pedals and no brake pedals - a driver is not going to be required," Ford’s then global chief Mark Fields announced.Well it’s 2025 and these pedal-less, steering wheel-less driverless cars are nowhere to be seen.Ford isn’t the only one. Most car companies in the past 10 years have said they are on the cusp of autonomous breakthroughs from Nissan, Mercedes-Benz and Audi to Volvo and Hyundai.Well they used to say that and many companies made bold claims, just like Ford’s, that they, too, would have autonomous cars in just a matter of years. But most of the car manufacturers have gone quiet on the topic of self-driving cars. All except Tesla with its so-called full self-driving function which is very likely just advanced driver assistance and not full self-driving. Actually in recent weeks Tesla has had to re-think what it calls its driving system due to regulatory issues in China.Tesla’s claims of having full-self driving modes 10 years ago probably caused the rest of the industry to suddenly work harder and faster on their own autonomous projects only for all of us to reach this point where we’ve discovered that you can absolutely teach a car to drive, but setting it loose on public roads is going to create a multitude of problems from safety and legal to ethical dilemmas. Besides, Volkswagen isn't the first to have fleets testing in cities. Ride-hailing companies such as Waymo have been working on autonomous tech for years only to run into operational difficulties with cars getting lost or even attacked.Until recently Waymo's fleet of autonomous taxis has operated in just the United States with San Francisco, Los Angeles and Austin being the main cities where the service can be found. Now Waymo is going further afield to Japan and is using Tokyo as its first location outsided the US to test the autonomous tech.Waymo will have been testing and operating its fleet of autonomous cars for 10 years in 2026. An achievement in itself and while the technology has come far it hasn't been without inicident. There have been cases where Waymo vehicles have malfunctioned or become confused. Two years ago in Phoenix 12 Waymos all turned up in the same street at the same time and caused a traffic jam, while last year in San Francisco a car park being used to hold dozens of Waymo vehicles erupted into chaos as the empty cars began honking at each other for no apparant reason.Hiccups aside it's truly amazing how well Waymo's fleet of electric Jaguar iPace SUVs can navigate through complicated terrain such as hilly San Francisco with its myriad of streets. Waymo has also recently signed a new deal with Chinese carmaker Zeekr to use its electric Mix people mover in 2025.Volkswagen's own testing with its ID. Buzz fleets will indeed add to the advancement of autonomous tech, too.Progress is slow, however, and for good reason - safety, regulations, ethics and the unpredicatability of other road users present huge challenges for a technology that's expected to be as good, if not better, than humans. Volvo is a safety tech pioneer in the auto industry and one of the first to start developing autonomous systems. But in 2023 Volvo Cars CEO and President Jim Rowan made a startling admission: self-driving cars won’t happen anytime soon.  "So first of all, this big myth that there's five different levels of autonomy is nonsense, in my opinion," he said. "You've got two levels of autonomy. One is your hands on the steering wheel. One is your hands off the steering wheel."Can we drive a car fully autonomous? Yes. Does regulation allow that? No. So I think regulation will be the barrier towards full adoption of full AD more than technology," he said.“Driving inside the city when there's schools and roadworks, and there's a lot of change every day, I think that's a long, long way off.”So if the boss of the company which was so far ahead in developing fully autonomous cars has declared the mission more or less over for now, what’s caused Volkswagen to make its autonomous claims? Well, we’ll have to wait and see but I think we’ll be waiting a lot longer before we start seeing.
Read the article
It's finally here! 2025 Nissan Patrol gets long-awaited upgrades as pricing and features are detailed for Toyota LandCruiser 300 Series, Land Rover Defender rival 
By Tim Nicholson · 15 Apr 2025
Nissan Australia has finally given its ageing Y62 Patrol the update fans have been asking for for years.The big V8-powered off-roader finally gains the interior update that was rolled out in its key market, the Middle East, back in 2021.Aussie buyers have been forced to wait four long years for this upgrade to land.Nissan did add a much-needed 10.1 inch touchscreen to the Patrol a year ago, but that was essentially a head unit replacement that Nissan developed with local company Directed Technologies to bring to the model.This latest interior upgrade will roll out to the regular Patrol Ti and Ti-L, as well as the hardcore Premcar-tuned Patrol Warrior.It’s likely to be the final major update before the arrival of the highly anticipated Y63 Patrol in late 2026.So what does the 2025 Nissan Patrol update usher in?The SUV gets a redesigned centre console and centre stack and the headline feature is a new 12.3-inch digital multimedia display that now sits at the top of the dash.This new screen includes wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto and you can access the menu via buttons on the steering wheel or controls near the screen itself.The new tech helps to modernise the interior of the Y62 Patrol which has been on sale globally since 2010, and Australia since early 2013.It also gains a wireless device charger, a new 7.0-inch digital driver display showing speed, efficiency and nav instructions as well as the Patrol’s 'Off-Road Monitor'.The trim has been given a refresh, too, with the option of a more minimalist black leather-accented layout, or what Nissan describes as a more premium chestnut treatment, featuring woodgrain flourishes on the dash and door and quilted leather-accented seats.Stepping up into the pricier Patrol Ti-L will net you a 13-speaker Bose audio system, a digital rear view mirror and a cooled centre console box.The Patrol Warrior gets all of the cabin updates and also gains black side steps.Nissan has trimmed down the colour palette for the 2025 Patrol but a new ‘Desert Red Metallic’ joins ‘Gun Metallic’, ‘Moonstone White’, ‘Brilliant Silver’ and ‘Black Obsidian’.Pricing has only increased marginally, with the Patrol Ti up by $1340 to $90,600, before on-road costs, while the Ti-L has only risen by $140 to $102,100.The off-road-focused Patrol Warrior is also only up by $140 to $105,660, BOC.In contrast, its Toyota LandCruiser 300 Series rival ranges in price from $96,991 all the way up to $145,791.The Patrol continues to be offered with Nissan’s big 298kW/560Nm Petrol V8 driving all four wheels via a seven-speed auto transmission. It’s also available with Nissan’s new 10-year/300,000km warranty which is conditional on the vehicle only being serviced by authorised Nissan dealers.Nissan is experiencing strong sales for Patrol towards the end of the current model’s life, with 1853 units finding homes to the end of March this year, which is ahead of the LandCruiser’s haul of 904 units.
Read the article
2026 Ford Ranger to evolve, expand: what's next for Australia's best-seller as it fends off the facelifted Toyota HiLux, Kia Tasman, next-gen Nissan Navara and MG U9 ute
By Byron Mathioudakis · 13 Apr 2025
The Ford Ranger is undergoing an evolution that will see Australia’s best-selling vehicle grow in size as well as scope, as it fends off the coming Toyota HiLux facelift and all-new rivals like the Kia Tasman, MG U9 and next-gen Nissan Navara. These are new niche programs and models that should shore up the current T6.2 architecture’s viability into the next decade for Australia.
Read the article
Nissan's next partner? Global tech giant with six new electric cars on standby wants to revive Nissan as it loses sales to Chinese EV brands BYD, XPeng and Geely: report
By Samuel Irvine · 11 Apr 2025
Just days after reports emerged that iPhone-maker Foxconn had secured a deal with Mitsubishi to supply its EVs for the Australian market, the Taiwanese electronics giant appears to be pitching itself to another ailing Japanese automaker.
Read the article