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Home » News & Trends

15 Vehicles Canadians May Want to Avoid Before May Long Weekend

Nate Brewer by Nate Brewer
May 19, 2026
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Canadian driving changes quickly once May Long Weekend arrives. Cottage routes get crowded, fuel budgets stretch, towing needs become more obvious, and insurance worries can feel sharper when vehicles sit overnight at trailheads, campgrounds, hotels, and public lots. Some models still make sense for the right buyer, but timing matters when prices, theft risk, recall history, fuel use, or real-world ownership costs are already raising flags.

Here are 16 vehicles Canadians may want to approach carefully before May Long Weekend, especially if a purchase is being rushed for spring trips, family travel, towing, or summer commuting.

Toyota RAV4

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The Toyota RAV4 is usually treated as one of Canada’s safest compact SUV choices, which is exactly why buyers may not slow down enough before May Long Weekend. Strong resale value and broad dealer support keep demand high, but that popularity also makes used prices stubborn. A lightly used RAV4 can sometimes sit close enough to new pricing that the savings do not feel meaningful once financing, insurance, taxes, and reconditioning fees are added.

The other concern is theft exposure. Recent Canadian theft rankings have repeatedly included the RAV4 among targeted SUVs, especially in provinces where organized theft rings focus on popular, easy-to-export models. For a family planning cottage weekends or overnight stops, the issue is not only whether the vehicle is reliable. It is whether the insurance quote, anti-theft requirements, parking situation, and replacement risk still make the deal feel comfortable.

Honda CR-V

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The Honda CR-V has long been a default answer for Canadians who want a practical SUV without drama. That reputation can be deserved, but it can also create blind spots. Used CR-V listings often command premium prices because families, commuters, and small-business owners all compete for the same clean examples. Before a long weekend purchase, the biggest risk is paying top dollar for an older unit with average tires, overdue brake work, or missing maintenance history.

The CR-V also appears prominently in Canadian theft data. That does not make every CR-V a bad purchase, but it changes the ownership math in cities and suburban areas where insurers may require extra anti-theft devices or charge higher premiums. A model that looks affordable on the lot can feel less affordable when the buyer factors in comprehensive coverage, a steering lock, tracking equipment, and secure parking.

Lexus RX

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The Lexus RX can look like a brilliant used luxury buy: quiet cabin, refined ride, Toyota-family reliability, and strong resale value. For Canadians preparing for May Long Weekend travel, though, the RX deserves extra scrutiny because its desirability does not end with legitimate buyers. Theft data has shown the RX as one of the most frequently targeted luxury SUVs, with some model years carrying especially high theft frequency.

The ownership issue is not just the chance of theft. It is the ripple effect: insurance costs, possible anti-theft mandates, and the stress of parking a high-demand luxury SUV at hotels, airport lots, cottage roads, or urban street spaces. A used RX with a tempting monthly payment may still be the wrong fit if the buyer lacks secure parking or has not priced insurance in advance. Luxury comfort matters less when the risk profile changes the budget.

Ram 1500

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The Ram 1500 is appealing before May Long Weekend because it promises towing power, cabin comfort, and the image of being ready for trailers, boats, landscaping runs, and cottage projects. The trouble is that many buyers overestimate how often they truly need a full-size pickup and underestimate how much fuel, tires, brakes, and insurance can cost once the truck becomes a daily driver.

Canadian theft rankings have also kept the Ram 1500 in the conversation, especially because full-size trucks remain attractive targets. A buyer focused only on towing capacity might miss the bigger picture: higher fuel bills on long highway trips, more expensive replacement tires, pricier bodywork, and potentially more complicated parking in crowded resort towns. For occasional weekend hauling, renting or choosing a smaller truck may be cheaper than owning a large pickup year-round.

Ford F-150

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The Ford F-150 is Canada’s familiar workhorse, and that familiarity can make it feel almost risk-free. Before May Long Weekend, however, buyers should be careful with used examples, especially trucks that have done real work. A clean wash, fresh tires, and a polished bedliner can hide years of towing, payload strain, rough access roads, salt exposure, or neglected maintenance.

The F-150 also appears in Canadian theft data, and full-size pickup insurance can vary widely by province, trim, engine, and use. Hybrid versions add another layer: they can be impressive tools, but reliability research has flagged electrified trucks and newer technology packages as areas where buyers should ask more questions. A truck meant for long-weekend freedom can become expensive quickly if the real need is only a few camping trips and occasional hardware-store runs.

Chevrolet Silverado 1500 / GMC Sierra 1500

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The Chevrolet Silverado 1500 and GMC Sierra 1500 often attract buyers who want traditional truck capability without paying luxury-truck money. Before the May rush, the caution is similar to other full-size pickups: advertised prices do not always reflect the cost of ownership. Fuel consumption, large tires, brake work, suspension wear, and insurance can outweigh the appeal of a discounted used truck.

These trucks have also appeared in Canadian theft rankings, particularly older generations that remain common and valuable for parts. A buyer looking at a bargain Silverado or Sierra should pay close attention to previous commercial use, accident history, corrosion, and towing equipment. Long weekend buyers often imagine kayaks, trailers, and home projects; the less romantic reality can involve parking hassles, high fuel stops, and repair bills that make a midsize SUV look much more sensible.

Toyota Highlander

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The Toyota Highlander is one of the most family-friendly three-row SUVs in Canada, which keeps demand strong and resale values high. That strength can become a problem for buyers trying to move quickly before May Long Weekend. Clean used Highlanders may carry prices that leave little room for upcoming maintenance, winter-tire replacement, insurance, or financing costs.

The Highlander has also been a major name in Canadian theft discussions. For families leaving the city for cottage country, sports tournaments, or hotel parking lots, that matters. A Highlander can still be a smart long-term choice, but the decision should include insurance quotes, anti-theft planning, and a careful comparison with less-targeted alternatives. Paying a premium for a vehicle and then paying another premium to protect it can make the “safe” choice feel more expensive than expected.

Jeep Wrangler

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The Jeep Wrangler sells a lifestyle better than almost anything else on the road. Before May Long Weekend, that lifestyle can feel irresistible: roof panels off, trails nearby, camping gear loaded, and summer ahead. The warning is that Wranglers often make the most sense for buyers who truly want off-road ability, not just the look. On pavement, the compromises are real: fuel use, wind noise, ride comfort, cargo practicality, and tire costs.

Wranglers have also appeared in Canadian theft rankings. Their resale strength helps owners, but it also keeps purchase prices high and makes used examples harder to judge. Many have been modified, lifted, off-roaded, or fitted with accessories that can affect reliability and insurance. A Wrangler bought for a single sunny weekend can become an expensive daily companion once the novelty wears off.

Jeep Grand Cherokee

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The Jeep Grand Cherokee sits in a tempting space: more upscale than many mainstream SUVs, more rugged-looking than a crossover, and often discounted on the used market compared with Japanese rivals. That price gap can be seductive before May Long Weekend, especially for buyers wanting space and towing ability without luxury-brand pricing. The caution is that lower entry prices can be offset by repair complexity and inconsistent long-term reliability perceptions.

Canadian theft data has also included the Grand Cherokee in past top-10 lists, and broader reliability rankings have not always been kind to Jeep as a brand. Buyers should be especially careful with higher trims, air suspension, large wheels, and heavily optioned models. A well-maintained Grand Cherokee can be comfortable and capable, but a rushed purchase can leave a family discovering expensive warning lights right as summer travel begins.

Land Rover Range Rover

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The Range Rover has obvious appeal: status, comfort, powerful engines, and a cabin that makes long highway drives feel special. Before May Long Weekend, it can also look surprisingly attainable on the used market because depreciation can pull older examples into the same price range as newer mainstream SUVs. That is where caution is needed. The purchase price is only the opening chapter.

Luxury repairs, specialized diagnostics, air suspension issues, large tires, and premium insurance can make ownership expensive. Theft data has also flagged Range Rover models as high-interest targets in some Canadian contexts, particularly among luxury SUVs. A buyer planning cottage roads, valet lots, or urban parking should think beyond the badge. A low advertised price does not turn a complex luxury SUV into a low-cost vehicle.

Kia Telluride

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The Kia Telluride has earned a strong reputation for style, space, and near-luxury comfort at a mainstream price. That popularity keeps used prices firm, and it can make shoppers overlook recall history or assume every model year is equally trouble-free. Before May Long Weekend, a buyer should pay close attention to open recalls and completed repairs, especially on family vehicles that may be loaded with passengers and cargo.

The Telluride has had notable recall attention in North America, including safety concerns serious enough in some cases for owners to be told to park outside until repairs were completed. That does not erase the Telluride’s strengths, but it changes the checklist. A clean cabin and attractive financing offer should not matter more than VIN verification, dealer repair documentation, and a realistic look at insurance and warranty coverage.

Tesla Model Y

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The Tesla Model Y can be very appealing before summer because it promises low home-charging costs, strong acceleration, useful cargo space, and access to a broad charging network. The caution for Canadians is that long weekend travel is different from commuting. Cold-weather range loss may be less of an issue by May, but crowded highway chargers, remote destinations, towing impact, and hotel charging availability can still complicate trips.

Reliability research has also shown electric vehicles improving but still reporting more problems than gasoline vehicles on average. Tesla’s software-centered ownership experience suits many drivers, but not everyone wants repairs, service appointments, or trip planning to feel different from a conventional vehicle. A Model Y may be ideal for the right household, but buyers should test the charging routine before assuming it will simplify summer travel.

Ford Mustang Mach-E

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The Ford Mustang Mach-E offers style, performance, and a more familiar dealer network than some EV rivals. Still, before May Long Weekend, it deserves a careful second look from Canadians who plan spontaneous road trips. EV ownership can be smooth when charging is predictable, but long weekends create peak demand along popular corridors, and detours to rural destinations can expose gaps in charging convenience.

The broader EV market also brings resale and reliability considerations. Research has shown EV reliability improving, but still behind gasoline vehicles on average, while used EV values can be more sensitive to incentives, battery concerns, and fast-moving technology. The Mach-E can be rewarding, but a buyer should verify real-world range, winter and highway efficiency, charging access, warranty details, and depreciation risk before treating it like a simple gas-SUV replacement.

Toyota 4Runner

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The Toyota 4Runner has a loyal Canadian following because it feels durable, simple, and adventure-ready. Before May Long Weekend, that image can push shoppers into paying a premium for capability they may barely use. Older 4Runners often hold value extremely well, which helps owners but hurts buyers who are trying to find a bargain. Newer versions are more modern, yet still not as fuel-efficient or car-like as many crossovers.

For road trips, the 4Runner’s ruggedness can be overkill if the actual itinerary is highways, campgrounds, and cottage roads. Fuel consumption, body-on-frame ride quality, tire costs, and parking size matter more in daily life than trail credibility. It remains a strong choice for real off-road use, but Canadians buying mainly for the long-weekend vibe should compare it against more efficient midsize SUVs before committing.

Chevrolet Tahoe / GMC Yukon

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The Chevrolet Tahoe and GMC Yukon make enormous sense for large families, towing, and road-trip cargo. They also make enormous bills. Before May Long Weekend, buyers may be drawn to the idea of one vehicle that can carry everyone, pull a trailer, and dominate highway travel. The reality is that full-size SUVs bring full-size costs: fuel, insurance, tires, brakes, and urban parking are all more demanding.

These GM SUVs have also appeared in Canadian theft-related rankings as part of the broader full-size SUV category. A buyer who only needs three rows a few times a year may find that a minivan or midsize three-row crossover costs far less to run. Tahoe and Yukon ownership can be justified, but it should be based on genuine towing and passenger needs, not just the appeal of stress-free packing before a holiday weekend.

22 Things Canadians Do to Their Cars in Spring That Mechanics Hate

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Spring brings relief to many Canadian drivers after months of snow, freezing temperatures, and icy roads that put serious strain on vehicles. As temperatures rise across the country, drivers begin washing cars, switching tires, and preparing vehicles for warmer weather and upcoming road trips. However, mechanics across Canada notice the same mistakes every spring when drivers attempt to recover from winter damage. Road salt, potholes, and harsh winter driving conditions often leave vehicles with hidden problems that drivers ignore. Some spring habits even create new mechanical issues that could have been avoided with proper maintenance. Here are 22 things Canadians do to their cars in spring that mechanics hate.

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