Marketed by Mazda as “Always Elegant. Never Ordinary,” Mazda’s CX-9 has been an attractive, elegant three-row crossover since it debuted in 2006
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Marketed by Mazda as “Always Elegant. Never Ordinary,” Mazda’s CX-9 has been an attractive, elegant three-row crossover since it debuted in 2006. Sculpted, rounded and carved, the midsize SUV has always stood out from its many boxy competitors. With each successive model year, the Mazda CX-9, now in the fourth year of its second generation, has benefited from refinements, technology updates and performance improvements, and that tradition continues for 2019.
New Equipment for 2019 includes: a retuned suspension for a smoother ride; new Apple CarPlay™ and Android Auto™ infotainment technologies; SiriusXM® 3-Year Traffic and Travel Link Subscription with information for Traffic, Weather, Sports Scores, Fuel Prices and Parking; a new reconfigurable 7.0-inch TFT gauge display, new 360-degree View Monitor and surround-view parking camera system, ventilated front seats, frameless rearview mirror, power-folding door mirrors, updated Santos Rosewood interior trim, new Signature trim level badge, and new uplevel packages.
CX-9 has earned accolades from media leaders as a “10 Best” winner in truck and SUV competition; A Top-Safety Vehicle; a Tops in Design Crossover; “North American Utility of the Year” finalist; “World Car of the Year and World Car Design of the Year” finalist; “10 Best Interiors” and “10 Best Engines” awards recipient. CX-9 also won Strategic Vision’s “Total Quality Impact” award, and for 2019, Mazda CX-9, continues to impress in safety, earning the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety’s highest recognition of “Top Safety Pick+” when equipped with Smart Brake Support and Adaptive Front-lighting System.
CX-9 also proudly embodies Mazda’s “Soul of Motion” design concept through its proportion -- a long hood, swept greenhouse, large wheels and short overhangs that convey stability and a contained sense of potential energy. A true midsize three-row crossover, CX-9 measures 199.4 inches long, 77.2 inches wide and 67.6 inches high, with a 40.5-inch front overhang and 115.3-inch wheelbase. Ground clearance is 8.8 inches and curb-to-curb turning circle radius is 19.4 feet. My test CX-9 Signature was in AWD configuration and came in with a curbweight of 4308 pounds.
My Signature trim also added a Signature Badge, LED grill and overhead accent lighting, 20-inch aluminum-alloy wheels, automatic power folding side mirrors and power sliding-glass moonroof with sunshade.
CX-9’s powertrain is the same as last year, with a 2.5-liter inline-4 turbo engine that delivers 227hp on regular (87-octane) unleaded fuel and 250hp with Premium (93-octane) gas. Torque is 310 lbs.-ft., and the EPA estimate is 20mpg/city, 26mpg/highway in AWD configuration (FWD is rated at 22/28). A week of mixed-use driving averaged 23.7mpg.
CX-9 delivers on the highway, with a driver’s feel and a pampering and alert ride. Road feel is good at speed and macadam ruts are smoothed out by its MacPherson strut independent front suspension with stabilizer bar and an independent multi-link rear with stabilizer bar. The power-assisted rack-and-pinion steering with engine-speed-sensing variable assist was attentive and accurate both at high speed and during autocross maneuvers, though some acceptable understeer took place during hairpins and S-Curves. Acceleration was dependable and solid in all ranges. My test CX-9 showed strong speed increase when asked and both passing at speed and overcoming long uphill grades were predictable and uncompromising. In track tests, my CX-9 finished off a zero-to-60mph sprint in 7.6 seconds during a steady 16-flat quarter-mile run.
The CX-9 cabin is elegant, intuitive, loaded and comfortable, but accommodations can be confining for drivers and passengers over 6-feet tall. Front headroom is 39.3 inches up front without a moonroof, 38.5 in row two and a child-friendly 35.4 inches in row three. Legroom is comfortable at 41.0 in front with 39.4 in row two and a confined 29.7 in row three, while shoulder room measures 57.9, 58.1 and 53.1.
The interior is saturated with high-tech and comfort amenities, infotainment, safety and navigational (option) amenities, a 7-inch LCD multi-information display, Bose® Centerpoint® Surround Sound System with AudioPilot® and 12 speakers, and my test Signature added Auburn Nappa leather seating and trim, heated second-row seats, genuine Santos Rosewood inlays and leather-wrapped steering wheel with unique stitching.
Safety is attended to well and includes such items as advanced dual front airbags, front side-impact airbags, side air curtains (front, rear and third row) with roll-over protection, Blind Spot Monitoring System, Rear Cross Traffic Alert, tire pressure monitoring system and more.
Available in four trim levels, FWD and AWD, the 2019 Mazda CX-9 starts at 33,325 for a front-wheel drive in the Sport trim – AWD starts at $34,080. Touring trim starts at $35,330 in FWD and 37,130 for AWD; the Grand Touring trim starts at $40,840 (FWD) and $42,640 (AWD) and the top-of-the-model-line Signature starts at $45,365 available only in AWD.
My test ride, a CX-9 Signature in Jet Black Mica Mica (a standard color), with Black Cloth interior, added a Power Driver’s Seat and I-Activsense Package for $1290 (power lumbar, heated front seats and side mirrors, Lane Keep Assist, Lane Departure Warning, Rain-sensing wipers, Smart Brake Support, and more); Rear Parking Sensors for $500; Frameless Auto-Dimming Mirror with Homelink for $325; LED Fog Light for $450; Navigation System for $400; and Front and rear Splash Guards for $100. With Destination charges of $1045, my 2019 Mazda CX-9 Signature as tested, stickered at $38,190.
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Mike Blake, former editor of KIT CAR magazine, joined Carlisle Events as senior automotive journalist in 2004. He's been a "car guy" since the 1960s and has been writing professionally for about 30 years. </I>