Certified 2020 Subaru Outback for Sale Nationwide
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Used Subaru Outback By Year
Vehicle | Deals | Starting Price | Total Available |
---|---|---|---|
2021 Subaru Outback | 7 Great Deals | $24,845 | 16,494 listings |
2020 Subaru Outback | 51 Great Deals | $22,988 | 1,935 listings |
2019 Subaru Outback | 59 Great Deals | $15,995 | 1,704 listings |
2018 Subaru Outback | 102 Great Deals | $12,993 | 2,647 listings |
2017 Subaru Outback | 68 Great Deals | $8,795 | 1,777 listings |
2016 Subaru Outback | 19 Great Deals | $6,900 | 587 listings |
2015 Subaru Outback | 17 Great Deals | $5,995 | 538 listings |
2014 Subaru Outback | 22 Great Deals | $5,995 | 522 listings |
2013 Subaru Outback | 15 Great Deals | $4,499 | 542 listings |
2012 Subaru Outback | 17 Great Deals | $4,500 | 388 listings |
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Certified Used Subaru Outback By Year
2021 Subaru Outback
244 listings starting at $24,995
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2020 Subaru Outback
1,003 listings starting at $23,188
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2019 Subaru Outback
591 listings starting at $18,995
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New Subaru Outback By Year
2021 Subaru Outback
16,047 listings
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2020 Subaru Outback
237 listings
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2020 Subaru Outback Expert Score: 7.67/10

- Look and Feel
- Performance
- Form and Function
- Tech Level
- Safety
- Cost-Effectiveness
Subaru knew it had a winning formula with the Outback, and it wasn’t eager to do much messing with ingredients, especially since those ingredients include a wealth of utility, safety, and performance—not to mention a rather handsome profile. For 2020, the aim was incremental improvement. Of course “incremental” is a relative term. The sixth-gen Outback is underpinned by Subaru’s Global Platform, a chassis that provides a claimed 70% increase in structural rigidity. The base 2.5-liter engine, which at first glance looks to be the same base engine powering the 2019 Outback, actually has 90% new parts in its updated design. If you decide more power is your preference, Subaru has slotted the 2.4-liter turbocharged engine from the Ascent into higher trims.
Outside you’re going to have trouble noticing the differences between this and the last generation, but pay close attention to the head- and taillights and the changes will be more obvious. Still, most buyers will be more interested in the changes that happened inside. The 2020 Outback debuts with an 11.6-inch touchscreen for all but the base 2.5i trim level, which instead gets dual 7-inch screens.
There’s also an innovative bit of new tech that you usually see only from more luxury brands: DriverFocus. This uses an infrared monitor to detect and notify sleepy or distracted drivers before accidents occur. It also uses facial recognition to identify and adjust settings between drivers. Fancy. No more, “Is this my key or your key?” mysteries.
The Outback is offered in 7 trim levels—2.5i, Premium, Limited, Touring, Touring, Onyx Edition XT, Limited XT, and Touring XT—with the XT trims employing the turbo engine. Starting with an MSRP of $26,645, the Outback 2.5i delivers LED headlights, keyless entry, and automatic climate control. Android Auto and Apple CarPlay are on hand through the StarLink infotainment system. Otherwise, things can seem a little spartan at this trim level. Still, it’s a Subaru, so you can expect an abundance of safety features, even here. This includes wiper-linked automatic headlights, adaptive cruise control with forward-collision warning, automatic emergency braking, and lane-keep alert and assist.
The next step up puts customers in the Premium trim level, with an MSRP of $28,895. This is where the 11.6-inch touchscreen enters the picture, followed by dual-zone auto climate control, heated front seats, and a power-adjustable driver’s seat. This is also where you can start tacking on options like a power liftgate, navigation, and blind-spot monitoring, which oddly isn't standard.
If blind-spot monitoring and a power liftgate are something you want as standard, you’ll have to jump up to the $33,445 Limited trim, which also gets you a memory system for the driver, an upgraded Harman Kardon stereo, leather upholstery, and reverse auto braking. Navigation remains an option, but you can add the DriverFocus system, as well as a heated steering wheel—a popular option in the snowy climes where the Outback dominates.
The Touring trim represents a really attractive trim level for a lot of shoppers, with its upgraded leather, ventilated front seats, and sunroof. It's especially appealing considering the price climbs to only $37,345. But there’s a new trim this year as well—the Onyx Edition XT. This starts with the Premium’s features and adds the more powerful engine, heated rear seats, a front-view camera, and performance upgrades like hill-descent control and a more aggressive version of Subaru’s X-Mode, making the Onyx the most off-road capable Outback available. The Onyx also gets some unique exterior plastic cladding to set it apart from the rest of the pack, and with a $34,895 MSRP, I’m guessing it’s going to be a big hit.
From there the Limited XT and Touring XT follow the specs for their non-XT counterpart trims but add the turbocharged engine for respective MSRPs of $37,745 and $39,695. My week with the Outback was spent in a Touring XT with zero options for a walkaway price of $40,705, including the destination fee.
With 182 horsepower, the upgraded 2.5-liter engine represents a 7-hp increase over 2019, but the numbers aren’t the whole story. 90% of the components have been changed, direct injection has been added, and with 26 mpg city, 33 highway, this engine adds 1 mpg to both categories over last year’s base engine.
The 2.5-liter engine serves just fine for most situations, but if you plan to do a bit of towing or mountain climbing, or if you just prefer your highway passing to be a bit zippier, the 2.4-liter turbocharged engine that comes with XT trims will not disappoint. It produces 260 hp and 277 pound-feet of torque, meaning a turbo-equipped Outback will hit 60 in around 7 seconds.
Both engines are mated to a continuously variable transmission (CVT), and while I’d usually consider that a negative because of the CVT’s tendency to drone and provide a rubberbanding effect during acceleration, Subaru has tuned this particular CVT to act more like a traditional automatic transmission. It still provides moments of droning and rubberbanding, but for the most part, I don’t even notice it working away beneath me, and that is a very good thing.
But powertrain considerations aren’t the whole story with the Outback. If you’re not talking symmetrical all-wheel drive (AWD), you’re telling only half the tale. Because Subaru’s system is active all the time, you’re not going to feel a wheel slip followed by the system intervening, which can be distracting and even alarming right at the point you would rather not be distracted or alarmed. Additionally, you don’t have to wait for the system to activate, which can take precious milliseconds (and every millisecond is precious in a potential accident). Further, the design of the AWD system, paired with the boxer engine's low center of gravity, means less wear on components, less disruption of weight balance, and more consistent power delivery.
And that’s just for on-road performance. It might not look it, but the Outback can hold its own when you leave the pavement. With 8.7 inches of ground clearance, you’ll be able to glide over everything but the deepest snow. But don’t get delusions of grandeur here—this isn’t a Jeep. With an approach angle of 18.6 degrees, a departure angle of 21.7 degrees, and a breakover angle of 19.4 degrees, you might find yourself stuck on some rocks or doing a good impression of a teeter-totter on the edge of a descent. Barring those limitations, with the upgraded X-Mode on the Onyx XT coupled with hill-descent control, there’s not a lot the Outback can’t handle.
Go ahead, try and argue against the functional benefits of the station wagon. They offer plenty of room for passengers, plenty of room for cargo, a low load height for trunk and roof storage, and a lower center of gravity than an SUV for better braking and handling, as well as less chance of rollover. Why’d these vehicles ever go away?
Strictly by the numbers, the Outback offers 32.5 cubic feet of trunk space, and if you drop those rear seats (which can be done via two handy handles at the rear of the trunk) you’ll be blessed with a full 75.7 cubic feet. Subaru claims that represents a 1-cu-ft increase in passenger volume and a 2.4-cu-ft increase in overall volume, largely helped by an increase in width between the rear wheels. And before you go checking the numbers versus last year, Subaru changed how it measures cargo volume for 2020. Rest assured, it’s bigger inside.
In fact, it’s big enough that at 6’4”, I can keep the driver’s seat in my preferred position and still sit tandem behind the driver. If a shorter person were driving, the backseat legroom would be substantial. Headroom is great as well, which is especially impressive given the Outback’s ground clearance and short roofline. It definitely looks smaller from the outside, and in a world where every car seems to grow in proportion every year, that’s appreciated.
This attention paid to proportion has another benefit: visibility. Subaru has continually valued visibility and made sure to design its cars with this in mind. Nearly every car I test suffers from poor visibility past the hood, past the A-pillars, and to each of the rear quarters. The Outback offers great sightlines in nearly every direction, but the rear quarters still present a bit of a challenge with a blind spot large enough to hide anything Prius-size or smaller. This is a special shame given the redesign would’ve been the perfect time to address this issue, but keep your head on a swivel (or order the optional blind-spot monitoring) and you should be fine.
Subaru is betting on a tablet-style, 11.6-inch touchscreen to attract technophiles, and at first glance, I can see it succeeding. But a closer look and some time spent with the system may dissuade shoppers, sadly.
First, let’s get the good points out of the way. The screen is huge, gorgeous, easy to understand, and, for the most part, easy to navigate. Some of the climate-control functions are a bit buried for my liking—it took me a couple of days to even realize this car came with ventilated seats, for instance, as the button was buried a few screens deep—but for the most part, things are well laid out.
The issue is lag. It’s ridiculous we have to deal with something like lag when moving around the map in the navigation app, but that’s something many manufacturers struggle with currently. Still, I experienced lag with this system in nearly every screen and function. Swiping between pages, opening apps, even station changes on the radio can have actual seconds of lag. At one point, even the volume input was lagging both ways, leading to a rather comical few seconds of bouncing back and forth between mute and way too loud before the system caught up. That’s unacceptable, and it's something that should be addressed ASAP.
Likewise, the camera resolution feels way behind the times for 2019. Subaru has never had the crispest cameras on the market, but with this huge screen, the problem is only exacerbated. Let’s hope things get fixed quickly because there’s a lot of potential here.
Strange as it seems to say, safety is a bit of a mixed bag here as well. I say strange because Subaru has always had such a strong commitment to safety in its engineering, design, and marketing. Here, the standard safety suite does impress, especially for the price, and the standard AWD system is not going to leave you stranded. But DriverFocus is a big disappointment.
Before I get into the issues with DriverFocus, I want to put things in perspective. I’ve always had a bit of an issue with Subaru’s EyeSight system. While I applaud Subaru for making it a standard inclusion, the fact that it’s an optical system has its drawbacks. Anything that obstructs its view can make it turn itself off—snow, mud, fog, even direct sunlight. I tested the Outback during October in Northern California. There’s not a lot of inclement weather around here during October, and yet every time I drove the Outback, the system would turn off at least once for whatever reason. That’s not ideal, of course, but it’s a small issue.
With DriverFocus, the system is designed to give you a little alert in the form of a bell and a message on the screen in the middle of the gauge cluster telling you to, “Keep your eyes on the road.” It sounds like a great idea, right? The problem is, it just doesn’t work very well. During one trip with the Outback, I got a phone call and during that short, 10-minute conversation, the alert went off no less than 20 times. And not one of those times had my eyes left the road… except to look down and read a message that told me to keep my eyes on the road. This needs fixing. Until then, I just deactivated it.
Despite those bits of bad news, I can still recommend the Outback. With a pricing structure that spans between $27,000 and $40,000, there’s an Outback for nearly everyone, whether you’re looking for an affordable, off-road-capable family funster or a near-luxury distance cruiser (that can also handle itself very, very well off-road). I predict the new Onyx Edition XT will succeed this year, due to its looks and price point. That’s a lot of car for $34,000, and with the added appeal of its off-road chops, I see it tempting plenty of shoppers. Personally, I’d wait a year or two to see if Subaru plans to address any of the technical issues I mentioned, but even if you don’t, I can’t see you being disappointed with the Outback.
2020 Subaru Outback by Trim
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