Yes, I had a sour experience with my GX470. Well, from 115-127k miles, before that it was a typical Toyota, needing only gas, oil, brake pads and tires.
Anyways, I would like something larger as my DD than the Golf R. Just to carry stuff, people and the dog, particularly when I go skiing. I have other fun cars/motorcycles I can drive and ride, so while the Golf R is a total hoot as a DD, I don't really need it. It's also a MT, which my wife refuses to learn how to drive and it would be useful having another car she and my daughter could occasionally drive.
Alright, so here's why I'm gravitating to the 200 series.
#1 Last of the breed, so will hold it's value even better than usual, which is amazing
#2 Love the rear tail gate. Very useful to sit on while going skiing, mtn biking etc
#3 Good sized back seat
The Cons:
#1 Abysmal gas mileage
#2 Incredibly high entry cost
#3 For what #2 is, it's not equipped properly. No apple car play for instance, there are much nicer SUV's available for the same price, if not less
#4 Used ones with ~100k miles on them are $50k. Ones with 25-40k miles on them are $85k. Not a value proposition to buy a used one.
Ok, I'm leaning towards trying to find a 2020-21 Heritage Edition 5 seater. I don't need the 3rd row and would rather have the storage. It's the last of the last and a special edition, which should mean it'll hold it's value even better. However, in todays market, it's selling for a decent amount over MSRP, even tho they're used.
I can depreciate it through my company and get a good amount back, so I'll be in the black (so to speak) on it for quite awhile. That said, I'm having issues justifying basically a 6 figure purchase price for one of these. I can't help but think I can buy so many other things for that amount. Or am I looking at this wrong? That after I depreciate it I can basically drive it for free for 3-5 years and then sell it for at least the same amount, if not more, than what I have in it?