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2026 Mazda CX-5 brings fresher styling, familiar engine but no hybrid... yet

The new Mazda CX-5, due here in 2026, has less power and fewer buttons, but a more modern look inside and out.
William StopfordBy William Stopford
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2026 Mazda CX-5 brings fresher styling, familiar engine but no hybrid... yet

The new Mazda CX-5, due here in 2026, has less power and fewer buttons, but a more modern look inside and out.
William StopfordBy William Stopford

The third-generation Mazda CX-5 has been revealed and it’s coming to Australia in 2026, bringing a familiar yet more modern design inside and out, and a familiar engine under the bonnet.

CarExpert understands the new CX-5 will launch here during the second half of 2026.

It will launch here with a carryover naturally aspirated 2.5-litre four-cylinder engine producing 132kW of power and 242Nm of torque, the same engine that’ll be used in the North American market.

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It’s mated with a six-speed automatic transmission, with all-wheel drive standard… at least at first.

Sadly, the punchy 170kW/420Nm 2.5-litre turbo-petrol engine has been axed globally.

Mazda Australia has confirmed we’ll get the first hybrid CX-5, finally giving the Japanese brand a rival to the top-selling Toyota RAV4 Hybrid.

Timing for the CX-5 Hybrid, which is set to use Mazda’s new Skyactiv-Z engine and an in-house hybrid system, is yet to be announced as it will be revealed at a later date.

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Supplied Credit: CarExpert

However, Mazda in North America has confirmed it’ll launch there in 2027.

Mazda Australia uses words like “proven” and “reliable” to describe the carryover four-cylinder engine, which it says it has recalibrated for greater flexibility, more responsiveness, and a “more relaxed, quiet demeanour”.

However, it has lost 8kW and 10Nm in the process. Nevertheless, it’s more powerful than the 2.5-litre ‘eSkyactiv-G’ engine that’ll be offered in the European-market CX-5, which produces 104kW and 238Nm but features a 24V mild-hybrid system.

At 4690mm long, 1860mm wide and 1695mm tall, the new CX-5 is 115mm longer, 15mm wider than the outgoing model.

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Supplied Credit: CarExpert

It also rides on a wheelbase that’s 115mm longer at 2815mm, and continues to incorporate MacPherson strut front and multi-link rear suspension.

The door openings are larger for easier access, rear-seat passenger space is claimed to have been increased, and the cargo area is now almost 50mm longer with an 18mm lower load height.

The exterior styling makes the new-generation model instantly recognisable as a CX-5.

While the silhouette is familiar, there’s sharper detailing front and rear. Up front, there are still slim headlights and a crest-shaped grille, but Mazda says it has given the CX-5 a “more chiselled, wider-set look”.

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Supplied Credit: CarExpert

Down back, more angular tail-lights tie the CX-5 in with recently launched Mazda SUVs such as the CX-70 and CX-90.

The interior is arguably a greater departure from the outgoing car than the exterior.

There’s a hint of Mazda’s new electric 6e inside, with a huge landscape-oriented infotainment touchscreen. But the CX-5’s is even larger at 15.6 inches, making it Mazda’s largest yet and considerably more expansive than the outgoing model’s 10.25-inch unit.

The outgoing CX-5 already had quite a minimalist centre stack, but it still had physical climate controls. Those are now almost all gone – most appear to now be anchored at the bottom of the touchscreen, though physical switches remain for the demister.

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Supplied Credit: CarExpert

The infotainment screen also features a customisable home screen, allowing for quick access to frequently used features.

A fully digital instrument cluster – like that in Mazda’s larger SUVs – is visible in European-market imagery, while the new steering wheel has dropped Mazda’s logo for a wordmark instead.

Ambient lighting is available, while Mazda has shown off both tan and two-tone grey/black interior colourways and a panoramic sunroof that replaces the dated single-pane unit of the outgoing model.

Carryover interior elements appear to be limited to the gear shifter and the start button.

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Supplied Credit: CarExpert

Mazda has promised “several” new ADAS (advanced driver assistance system) features, though it hasn’t specified which. Imagery shows a driver attention monitoring system in the cabin, however.

Ahead of the new CX-5’s local launch, Mazda Australia has promised healthy supply of the existing model.

The first CX-5 entered production in 2012, and Mazda’s mid-size SUV has been a huge seller in Australia with over 316,000 delivered here since launch – and over 4.5 million globally across over 100 countries.

It was the best-selling SUV in Australia from 2013 to 2019, and in 2022 it reached a height of 27,062 sales.

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Supplied Credit: CarExpert

Though it has been overtaken by the Toyota RAV4 in sales, it has consistently remained one of the top three best-selling vehicles in its segment for 13 years.

The CX-5 has managed this without offering any form of electrification, at least in Australia, even as hybrid powertrains have rapidly proliferated throughout the mid-size SUV segment in recent years.

While the outgoing CX-5 (pictured below) has offered a mild-hybrid powertrain in Europe, it hasn’t come here, and Mazda hasn’t had a hybrid to match rivals like the RAV4 or a plug-in hybrid to match rivals like the Mitsubishi Outlander.

The new CX-5 will not only have to fend off rivals like a new-generation RAV4 (due next year), a new Subaru Forester (coming soon) and a refreshed Outlander (here now), but also in-house competition from the similarly sized CX-60.

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Supplied Credit: CarExpert
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Supplied Credit: CarExpert
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Supplied Credit: CarExpert

Mazda Australia is continuing to extend the CX-60 lineup downwards, adding a new base Pure trim this year and announcing the familiar naturally aspirated 2.5-litre four-cylinder engine as the new base engine.

The CX-60 2.5-litre is due here later this year, set to offer a base price below the $50,240 before on-roads sticker of the G40e Pure.

For context, the outgoing CX-5 range is priced from $36,740 before on-roads for the front-wheel drive 2.0-litre G20 Maxx, topping out at $55,150 before on-roads for the turbocharged all-wheel drive G35 Akera.

MORE: Explore the Mazda CX-5 showroom