Acura's sleek and sporty 2022 MDX gets luxury brand's SUV back on track

The 2022 Acura MDX offers a sportier look and a more enjoyable driving experience. Credit: Acura/MullenLowe
Acura’s off to a strong start in 2021 with a pair of appealing new vehicles. The sleek and competitively priced TLX sport sedan already breathed new life into the luxury brand’s struggling car business. A strong new version of Acura’s MDX three-row SUV builds on that, making it look like the brand’s latest reinvention may have staying power.
The new sedan and SUV share a family resemblance — particularly in their expressive and highly detailed grilles, long dash-to-axe ratio and modern, elegant interiors — that could set the stage for a resurgence by the oldest Japanese luxury brand.
After years when Acuras tended to look like either gussied up Hondas or overwrought attempts to stand out — who else remembers the brand-wide nose job that looked like a baby bird’s egg tooth? — Honda’s luxury brand may have found its niche: Offering style, interior materials and judiciously applied technology place it between mainstream brands like Toyota and Ford and elite brands.
The new MDX is longer, wider and lower than the old model, a combination that lends itself to sporty looks and enjoyable driving. Unlike the outgoing 2020 MDX, there’s no hybrid model, but the 2022 is better in every other way, well equipped to compete with lower-luxury family haulers like the Cadillac XT6, GMC Acadia, Infiniti QX60 and Lexus RX.
Driving impressions
The 2022 MDX is 2.2 inches longer, an inch wider and 0.3 inch less tall than the 2020 version. Combined with a long hood, sculpted sides and a roof that slopes downward at the rear, the result is a sporty body that looks smaller than its 198.4-inch overall length.
Like the TLX sedan that debuted late last year, the MDX uses a double wishbone front suspension. That’s a departure for Acura SUVs, and a return to the design that helped Honda earn the reputation for handling and steering back before the automaker launched Acura in 1986.
Power comes from the same 3.5L V6 engine the 2020 MDX used. It produces a fairly staid 290 horsepower and 267 pound-feet of torque. The MDX is about 210 pounds heavier than the 2020 version, but Honda’s quick, smooth 10-speed automatic transmission makes up for that, providing satisfying acceleration.
A really sporty MDX Type S with a 355-hp turbocharged 3.0L V6 goes on sale this summer.
Luxurious interior
The MDX seats seven or six, depending on whether you use the second row as a bench seat or remove its middle section to create a pair of bucket seats and a space to walk to the third row. You can also flip the middle section’s back down to create a console and armrest between the two outboard riders.
The second row has good leg and head room. The two-person rear bench has limited space. It’s best suited for small children.The front seat is roomy, and nicely trimmed with aluminum accents, open-pore wood, Milano leather and contrast stitching. The seats are comfortable.
Acura has improved its touch pad for navigation and other features, but I still find the touch pad — located in the center console — less intuitive and more distracting than a simple touch screen. The MDX offers Amazon’s Alexa digital assistant for spoken command for navigation, controlling connected devices at home and to play music, audiobooks, news and more. Alexa’s accuracy and speed is outstanding, better than Acura’s embedded voice recognition. You need an AT&T data connection and Amazon account to use Alexa.
2022 Acura MDX
Base price: $46,900-plus
Price as tested: $57,100
Engine: 3.5L V6
Transmission: 10-speed automatic
EPA fuel economy estimates: 19 mpg city, 25 highway
Bottom line: Sleek and sporty SUV
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