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Jack Quick
1 Year Ago
The 2023 Mazda CX-9 is Mazda's largest and most expensive SUV. Currently in its second generation, the Mazda CX-9 competes with the likes of the Hyundai Palisade, Kia Sorento, and Toyota Kluger in the mainstream large SUV segment.
Seven seats are standard, with a six-seat layout available in the range-topping Azami LE. All models are powered by a 2.5-litre turbocharged four-cylinder petrol engine mated to a six-speed automatic transmission.
Front- and all-wheel drive are offered, as well as a range of model variants.
Configuration | Price From* |
---|---|
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded FWD 5d Suv | $67,900 |
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded 4x4 5d Suv | $71,900 |
Configuration | Price From* |
---|---|
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded FWD 5d Suv | $64,700 |
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded 4x4 5d Suv | $68,700 |
Configuration | Price From* |
---|---|
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded FWD 5d Suv | $65,200 |
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded 4x4 5d Suv | $69,200 |
Configuration | Price From* |
---|---|
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded FWD 5d Suv | $55,200 |
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded 4x4 5d Suv | $59,200 |
Configuration | Price From* |
---|---|
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded FWD 5d Suv | $47,600 |
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded 4x4 5d Suv | $51,600 |
Configuration | Price From* |
---|---|
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded 4x4 5d Suv | $74,400 |
The dimensions shown above are for the base model.
See all 2024 Mazda CX-9 DimensionsThe Mazda CX-9’s boot quotes 230L with all three rows up, and 810L when the third row is folded down.
CarExpert High Resolution Photos of the Mazda CX-9
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External styling across the CX-9 range is pretty consistent bar some minor details depending on the model you get.
Sport and Touring versions get smaller 18-inch alloys while the GT and up score 20-inch rims. Azami versions get a classier multi-spoke design over the GT and GT SP's five-arm look.
GT SP, Azami and Azami LE grades get a different front grille insert to lower versions, and the flagship Azami versions are the only CX-9 models to get LED daytime running lights as opposed to the halogen units used further down in the range.
While not the most modern cabin in what’s a fast-moving segment, the CX-9 design blends classic vibes with a reasonably contemporary look that has aged gracefully over the past few years.
Where it really shines is in the decent variety of tactile and good-looking materials – such as the GT SP's burgundy leather or the quilted Nappa leather options in the Azami and Azami LE.
The front seats are comfy and cosy, offering a huge degree of fully-electric adjustment. If there’s one markdown in general ergonomics, it’s that the door armrests and console lid are set quite high, demanding the driver’s seat be raised higher than expected to allow elbow clearance for those of us with long arms. No biggie.
You do feel as if you sink into the cabin rather than sit propped upright, but the soft-touch surfaces, much of which benefits from racy stitching in the GT SP, helps make the effect pleasing and welcoming.
As we’ve noted in CX-9 reviews past, it’s a sound approach to a design that incorporates neat premium frills clearly inspired by pricier European influences, such as the split centre console, and there’s ample stowage around the front row that’s properly-sized for adult needs.
Like its CX-8 sibling, the CX-9 does suffer from incredibly thick A-pillars that can, and do obscure your line of sight through corners. Outward visibility is quite good, rather than outstanding, which is the nature of a design that, on the plus side, brings a sense of surety being wrapped in a lot of metal, glass and rubber.
In typical Mazda fashion, the control layout is logical and intuitive, save for having to run USB cables into the console bin and across the transmission selector if you wish to tether your phone, which inevitably ends up in the console bin itself.
Somewhat annoying is the high-grade 10.25-inch infotainment system, which unlike the touchscreen design of the 9.0-inch system used lower down the range, features a display screen only with dedicated rotary dial and button control on the centre console rather than offering touch inputs.
The problem? Porting a touchscreen format used for Apple CarPlay into remote control is clumsy and distracting, particularly when attempting to switch between app functionality quickly – Spotify track selection to Apple Maps zooming, say – when offering a touchscreen alternative is far quicker and frankly safer including when on the move – where Mazda insists on locking out access even on its touchscreens.
Content, when you do access it, is great. The sound quality of the audio is excellent, the camera view is nice and crisp, and there’s neat simplicity to Mazda’s more contemporary operating system, even if it offers small stumbles (such as strange complexity of swapping between FM and DAB+ sources).
Row two roominess ranges from excellent to decent depending on where you adjust the sliding mechanism, and at the most rearward position it’s amply comfortable for taller adults. The seat base is set reasonably high, which is great for small kids’ outward visibility, and the tilting seatback allows a generous degree of tuneable comfort.
Speaking of which, the CX-9 brings plenty of creature comforts to those in the back, including the dedicated climate controls, plenty of device power, retractable sun blinds and brilliantly bright LED overhead lighting.
The one-touch access to row three, which tilts and slides the rear 60:40-split second-row pew, is as handy as it is suitably upmarket. It does put the narrower access kerb-side, though the annoyance is only minor.
Room ‘out back’ is decent enough and fairly typical of segment: spacious enough for kids and shorter adults at a pinch, but nothing like a proper MPV. The USB outlets are a handy inclusion though the lack of ventilation can make it a stuffier place to sit the further forward in the cabin.
The 230 litres of boot space as a seven-seater doesn’t look much on (virtual) paper, but there’s decent depth and length at the base and it only gets tight if you’re loading in bulky objects. Drop the third row and there’s generous 810 litres to work with, which is larger some of the competitive set. Converted to a two-seater, the load space is huge and offers a reasonably flat floor, too.
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The base model CX-9 Sport comes with a 7-inch touchscreen infotainment system that supports only Wired Apple CarPlay and Android Auto using a six-speaker sound system with DAB+ digital radio and built in Satellite navigation and a Head-up display.
Move up to the 2023 Mazda CX-9 GT and you'll get the larger 10.25-inch infotainment system with a Wireless phone charger and a far superior 12-speaker Bose sound system as well as USB ports in the third row.
The top-spec Azami adds a 7.0-inch information display in the instrument cluster in addition to a surround-view camera.
All versions of the CX-9 wear a five-star ANCAP safety rating based on tests conducted in 2016.
The CX-9 was assessed against older crash testing criteria, and scored a total of 35.87 points out of a possible 37. It also received Good ratings for whiplash and pedestrian protection.
Standard safety equipment includes:
The front-wheel drive Mazda CX-9 uses 8.4L/100km on the ADR combined city and highway cycle, while all-wheel drive models are rated at 9.0L/100km.
It will run on 91 RON regular unleaded.
Mazda CX-9 | Fuel Type | Combined |
---|---|---|
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded FWD 5d Suv | Unleaded | 8.4 L/100km |
2.5L, 6 sp automatic Unleaded 4x4 5d Suv | Unleaded | 9.0 L/100km |
What are the running and servicing costs of a Mazda CX-9?
The Mazda CX-9 requires servicing every 12 months or 10,000km, whichever comes first.
The first five services are cost the following:
Our expert take on Mazda CX-9 drivability.
In short, the CX-9 drives wonderfully. With its polished powertrain and accomplished ride, the big Mazda hits it out of the ballpark in what are arguably the two most important areas.
No perceivable turbo lag, impressive response, ample torque on board to rarely demand raising its pulse above 2000-2500rpm during urban driving, the 2.5L unit is a gem of an engine, proof positive that Mazda should invest more in spread turbocharging further throughout its range.
It’s an excellent six-speed automatic, too, that might appear slim in its ratio count compared with some competition offering up to eight speeds, but doesn’t really suffer because of it mostly because the engine it’s paired with is gutsy enough down low and, being petrol, has a high rpm ceiling if you ever feel the need to use it – and you rarely do.
It’s a quiet powertrain, too, but lean into it and there’s pleasingly raspy note and it’s even a touch sporty. There’s a choice of drive modes but, realistically, there’s enough pep in the reserves that there’s not much cause to go fiddling with the mode selector.
Premium, as in genuinely premium? You bet. Some big dollar Euro SUVs could benefit with the sort of classy refinement the Mazda offers at a mainstream budget.
It’s the very same story with the ride quality. Sure, it sits on large 20-inch wheels with a lot of mass those passive dampers need to contend with across bumps and lumps, but thanks to the deft tuning – aided no doubt by the thick 50-series tyres – the ride compliance is, as we’ve noted in reviews past, beautiful.
The suspension filters out the small road imperfections with ease, absorbs big hits gently, settling nicely and quickly in the wash-up. This is the sort of deft execution you expect from more thoroughbred adaptive damping and, on balance, the Mazda rides better than the fancier air-sprung designs common in much more upmarket offerings, many of which lack the natural and assertive body control the Mazda enjoys. Yes, it’s that good.
The CX-9 backs up its powertrain and suspension finery with excellent resistance to extraneous noise, with very little rumble from those broad 255mm tyres and a proper sense of bank vault surety between the cabin, the road and the environment. It can dial up a level of serenity that’s seriously impressive, the sort of ambience comfort you’d expect from bona-fide luxury motoring.
Between its manners on the move and the welcoming cabin space, the CX-9 makes for a superb open-road tourer and long hauler, the sort of machine that really has your back across the tyranny of distance. Thus tasked, the adaptive cruise works well and the active assistance systems aren’t too intrusive and bothersome.
It really does very little, if anything, poorly in the driving or passenger-ing experience, certifying itself as Mazda’s flagship in dignified execution moreso than anywhere else.
Like its CX-8 sibling, the larger CX-9 is a little tough to judge when parking, not for lack of visibility but just because it’s quite a large unit.
Otherwise gripes are very minor – the aforementioned A-pillar thickness that robs a bit of forward vision, a reversing camera with static rather than adaptive guidelines, and the lack of digital speed in the instrument cluster, though this last bit is countered logically with the speed readout in the head-up display.
It’s a class act. And a certifiably premium one at that.
What colours are available for the Mazda CX-9
For the 2022 model year, the CX-9 is available in the following finishes:
*Premium finishes cost $495
The Mazda CX-9 has a five-year, unlimited-kilometre warranty.
Mazda's been pushing upmarket of late, and the current-generation CX-9 was one of the earliest examples of this strategy.
Since its launch in 2016, the CX-9 has gone for a premium look and feel both in terms of design and quality, despite its US-market focus. If anything, the cabin design and quality is more in line with what you'd expect from Lexus, especially at the higher end of the range.
This is most apparent compared to rivals like the Toyota Kluger, which are more utilitarian in presentation even in the higher grades, and the CX-9's turbocharged four-cylinder powertrain is a unique selling point where most rivals offer naturally-aspirated V6 petrols and four-cylinder turbo-diesels.
Now in the latter stages of its lifecycle, the Mazda CX-9 is less techy and future-inspired than newer offerings like the Hyundai Santa Fe and Kia Sorento, while offering more space and a more upmarket cabin. The new Kluger is similarly-sized and offers a fuel-efficient hybrid option, but is arguably less plush in the cabin and doesn't necessarily make any other ground-breaking developments despite its young age.
Finally, the eight-seat Hyundai Palisade presents as a logical cross shop given its size and upmarket aspirations, but despite its freshness within the Australian marketplace it's nearly due for a mid-life update itself.
Is this the right car for you? Out experts buy or not guide.
Even several years on from launch, the Mazda CX-9 remains one of our top picks in the Large SUV segment.
While it's a little more old-school in terms of its design, the Mazda offers one of the nicest cabins this side of the premium marques, as well as more than enough space and practicality for a growing family.
The GT and GT SP are arguably the best value in terms of price and spec, and we'd recommend going for an AWD model given the 2.5L turbo petrol engine makes a diesel-like 420Nm.
The cheapest Mazda CX-9 is the SPORT (FWD) that starts from $44,100.
The most expensive Mazda CX-9 is the AZAMI (AWD) that starts from $62,400.
The best towing capacity of a Mazda CX-9 is 2000 kg offered by the following variants: SPORT (FWD), SPORT (AWD), TOURING (FWD), TOURING (AWD), GT (FWD), GT SP (FWD), GT (AWD), AZAMI (AWD) LE, GT SP (AWD), AZAMI (FWD) and AZAMI (AWD).
The largest Mazda CX-9 is the SPORT (FWD) which measures 1969mm wide, 5075mm in length and sits 1747mm tall.
The most powerful Mazda CX-9 is the SPORT (FWD) which has 170kW of power from its 2.5L TURBO DIRECT F/INJ engine.
The Mazda CX-9 is built in Japan and shipped to Australia.
The heaviest Mazda CX-9 is the SPORT (AWD) which weighs 2575 kg (kerb weight).
The Mazda CX-9 uses Unleaded Petrol.