2025 Jeep Wrangler Rental

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Apr 22, 2018
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Location
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I was just out in Denver for 5 days and rented a 2025 Jeep Wrangler from National with 4 miles on it. I was excited since I've never driven a Wrangler and in Colorado it seemed like a cool vehicle to drive. The Wrangler had cloth interior, the larger infotainment, and the 2.0 Turbo 4 with the 8-speed. On as side note, my wife, a few friends and I caught Sting at Red Rocks and it was awesome!

The Bad - MUCH smaller than I thought it would be and at 6'5" I had to really contort my head/neck getting into and out of the driver's seat. The overhead crossbar did not allow me to sit in a comfortable position because it hit me squarely in the back of the head, even with the drivers seat as low as it would go. Also weirdly, the driver's side side mirror would not rotate outwards enough for me to see even with the very upright seat position that was needed for me to not hit my head on the crossbar. Had I been able to put the drivers back more to be comfortable, the view of the side mirror would've been even worse.

The 2.0 turbo is a hot mess. Push the accelerator and there is terrible turbo lag where nothing happens and without changing foot position at all, it violently surges with power.

The steering is also a hot mess. No on-center feel and impossible to not have to constantly move your hands back and forth and even then you end up ping ponging back and forth in the lane. It's also really easy to unsettle the chassis going over bumps around a corner - felt like it would hop several inches sideways.


The Good - Brakes felt great. 8-speed was smooth and always in the right gear. I also really liked infotainment system - it was big, clear, no lag, and did what is was supposed to do well.

The neutral - Never got to talk the top off/panels off but I'm sure it's a great experience.

Overall - I couldn't live with the size limitations, the steering, and 2.0 turbo lag.
 
I'm currently in one as well, the one I am driving had 900 miles on it when I picked it up. It's a fun lifestyle vehicle that makes a lot of compromises. I popped the front roof panels off today and it was very pleasant driving around with them off on a nice day. I haven't noticed any issues with the 2.0T, plenty of low end torque and throttle response has been predictable. Steering at city speeds is fine, but at highway speeds it does require more correction and has less on center feel than modern cars, but this is the compromise you make for having a vehicle with a solid front axle that you can take rock crawling. There really isn't anything else on the road you can compare them to except for maybe the Bronco. You either get what Jeep is doing here or you don't.

I see why people buy them and I like them a lot. It's fun to drive, relatively comfortable (for what it is) and is much more civilized than previous CJ's and Wranglers. Love the giant Pentastar on the strut for the rear glass.

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Its a Jeep with all the bad they are known for without many positives other than they are a lifestyle vehicle.
 
For those that don’t understand the steering - recirculating ball systems have always drifted. Put IFS and rack and pinion in a Wrangler and it’s lost the abilities to articulate and actually rock crawl and more …
 
Did you actually pick and want one as rental. They are punishment on roads but epic off road for stock vehicle when I visited Utah.
 
Did you actually pick and want one as rental. They are punishment on roads but epic off road for stock vehicle when I visited Utah.
I did pick it. I had never driven one but was always curious and it seemed theme appropriate for Colorado. I certainly don't regret renting it, I just wouldn't own one as my daily.
 
As I've noted elsewhere, when given a choice, if the Wrangler's off road abilities aren't needed I'd rather drive my C43 or Club Sport- but I certainly don't consider my JLU Sahara 4xe to be a penalty box. It ticks all the boxes for me; I prefer driving it to 95% of new vehicles under $50,000. Exceptions would include the BRZ, Elantra N, GTI, Type R and WRX.
 
Did you actually pick and want one as rental. They are punishment on roads but epic off road for stock vehicle when I visited Utah.
I wanted to pick a Wrangler last month when I was in Las Vegas but they were in a different pricing tier, substantially higher than the "standard SUV" category my Hyundai Santa Fe came from. It was something like double the price. I think popularity and demand drive the rates to a large extent.

It would have been perfect for the ghost town roads I was headed to. The Hyundai was fine also.
 
I feel bad for tall guys because even the dash is hard to see. The angle is just wrong and the steering wheel's in the way.

I'm not convinced Jeep checks much for alignment when sending them out the door. My '19 tracks well with very good return to center, even lifted on 37's. But I gave it a bunch of caster.

Crosswinds are a substantial issue, even at stock height. It's a cube.

The Sunrider is the only practical way to regularly open the top over the front seats. Takes about two seconds to open and three seconds to close
 
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