History/Overview
The Infiniti QX60 traces its lineage to the JX35 of 2013, which was renamed QX60 the following year as part of a new brand-wide naming strategy. The QX60 received a mid-cycle refresh in 2016.
What’s New/Key Changes From Last Year
After skipping the 2021 model year, the 2022 Infiniti QX60 has been completely redesigned and reengineered into its second generation.
Available Trims
Infiniti offers the QX60 in Pure, Luxe, Sensory, and Autograph trim levels. Shared by all is a powertrain comprising a 3.5L V6 engine, a nine-speed transmission, and AWD.
Standard Features
Pure trim comes with 18-inch alloy wheels, LED headlights, power-folding side mirrors, passive keyless entry, panoramic sunroof, leather upholstery, heated front seats and steering wheel, three-zone A/C, 12.3-inch touchscreen, nine-speaker audio, and an auto-dimming mirror. Every QX60 also includes rain-sensing wipers, forward collision intervention, pedestrian detection, blind spot monitoring, and rear cross-traffic alert with automatic braking.
Luxe adds 20-inch wheels, navigation, digital gauges, ProPilot assist, adaptive cruise control, power steering wheel adjustments, blind spot intervention, lane departure prevention, surround-view cameras, front parking sensors, and driver attention alert.
Sensory models gain adaptive headlights, auto-dimming side mirrors, hands-free tailgate, ventilated/massaging front seats, heated second-row seats, head-up display, digital rearview mirror, wireless phone charging, and front pre-crash seatbelts.
Autograph gains quilted leather upholstery, a front-seat central airbag, second-row captain’s chairs, and a second third-row USB port.
Fuel Economy
Infiniti’s fuel consumption ratings for the 2022 QX60 are 11.9/9.5 L/100 km (city/highway).
Competition
With the QX60, Infiniti competes against the Acura MDX, Lexus RX L, Audi Q7, Mercedes-Benz GLS, Lincoln Aviator, Cadillac XT6, and Volvo XC90.