Compact SUV Crossover

Here’s What You Get on a Fully-Loaded 2026 Nissan Rogue

The 2025 Nissan Rogue in blue seen in profile

The Nissan Rogue is Nissan’s best-selling vehicle and a perennial entry on the list of the best-selling vehicles in America.

Our editors love its Zero Gravity seats — Nissan designed them with help from NASA research, and they’re consistently among the most comfortable seats in any car.

A unique 3-cylinder turbocharged engine delivers 201 horsepower, providing ample passing power, while also achieving 32 mpg in combined city/highway driving.

Nissan offers it in four trim levels: S, SV, Rock Creek, and Platinum. All get the same engine and continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT). Lower trims are offered in front-wheel drive (FWD) or all-wheel drive (AWD).

The top of the lineup is the Platinum edition. It comes standard with AWD and five selectable terrain modes — Auto, Eco, Sport, Snow, and Off-Road.

The Rogue Platinum has an MSRP of $38,990 and a $1,495 destination fee, for a total sticker price of $ 40,485.

It comes standard with almost every feature Nissan can build into a compact SUV. However, buyers can opt for a Tech Package that includes a 3D surround-view camera, rain-sensing windshield wipers, and Nissan’s ProPilot Assist 2.1 driver assistance system. Shoppers also have the option of a two-tone paint scheme with a handsome black roof for an added fee.

2026 Nissan Rogue Platinum ($40,485)

Other features you’ll find on the fully loaded 2026 Nissan Rogue Platinum include:

  • 1.5-liter turbocharged 3-cylinder engine making 201 hp and 225 lb-ft. of torque
  • AWD
  • 5-mode drive system with Auto, Eco, Sport, Snow, and Off-Road settings
  • Brake-actuated limited-slip differential
  • 19-inch aluminum alloy wheels
  • Full LED headlights
  • Quilted semi-aniline leather seating
  • Heated front and rear outboard seats
  • 8-way adjustable power driver’s seat with memory
  • Synthetic leatherette heated steering wheel
  • Dual-panel panoramic power moonroof with sunshade
  • 10-speaker Bose premium audio system
  • Tri-zone automatic climate control
  • Reclining, fold-down 60/40-split rear seatback
  • Wireless Apple CarPlay
  • Wireless Android Auto
  • Wireless phone charger
  • Four USB ports
  • Google Maps integrated navigation system
  • 12.3-inch vehicle information display
  • Push button start
  • Automatic emergency braking with Intersection Assist mitigation and left turn assist
  • Automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection
  • Rear automatic emergency braking mitigation
  • Predictive brake assist
  • High beam assist
  • Hill start assist
  • Intelligent blind-spot intervention
  • Active lane centering
  • Driver attention alert
  • Adaptive cruise control with traffic stop-go
  • Front, rear, and side parking sensors

Let’s explore a few of our favorite features.

2025 Nissan Rogue Platinum front seats
Image courtesy of Brian Roskelly

The Best Version of The Best Seats

According to the AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety’s latest survey, Americans spend more than an hour a day, on average, behind the wheel. That’s more than 365 hours a year when you can’t get up and change seats or even easily stretch your legs. Your car’s seat is likely the most important seat you own.

Nissan’s Zero Gravity seats are the best in the automotive business, utilizing 14 pressure points to keep the body in as neutral a position as possible.

In the Rogue Platinum, they come wrapped in quilted semi-aniline leather — the grade of hide you’d expect to find only in a luxury car — and are heated at all four outboard seating positions.

Built-in Google Everything

The 12.3-inch touchscreen in the Rogue Platinum gets Google built-in, including Google Automotive Services. You’re likely already familiar with Google Maps, Assistant, and Play Store, so you’ll understand how to control the Rogue’s infotainment system from minute one in your new car.

2025 Nissan Rogue Platinum dashboard
Image courtesy of Brian Roskelly

User-friendly interior design

We’re fans of how Nissan designers laid out the cabin of the Rogue. Many cars in the 2026 model year have their driver’s instrument screen and central touchscreen mounted as if they were one wide surface, but that setup means the steering wheel always blocks your view of part of the screen. Nissan designers paid attention to ergonomics and kept them apart, so the steering wheel is never in the way of anything important on the screen. Mounted high, the central touchscreen is also positioned so that you don’t have to look down from the roadway to see it.

More 2026 Nissan Rogue

Read our full review to learn more about the Rogue or see Rogue models for sale near you.