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Used Toyota Tacoma

Mid-size · 25 listings · max towing 6,800 lb · max payload 1,620 lb

25Active listings
$15,345Avg price
6,800 lbMax towing
1,620 lbMax payload

The Toyota Tacoma on the used market

The 3rd-gen Tacoma (2016–2023) is the most popular mid-size pickup in the U.S. used market. Bulletproof reliability, off-road credibility (TRD Off-Road, TRD Pro), and unmatched residual values define the segment. The 2024 4th-gen redesign moves to a hybrid-available turbocharged i-Force MAX powertrain.

Tacomas hold their value harder than nearly any vehicle on the market. Expect to pay close to original MSRP for a clean low-mileage TRD Off-Road. Patience and willingness to travel are required to find a fair deal.

Available trims

SRSR5TRD SportTRD Off-RoadLimitedTRD ProTrailhunter

Browse by model year

Click into any year for engine specs, towing/payload, fuel economy, common issues, and the used market value range for that model year.

Engine options across model years

From model yearAvailable powertrains
2016+2.7L I4 (159 hp) · 3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
2024+2.4L Turbo I4 (228–278 hp) · i-Force MAX Hybrid I4 (326 hp / 465 lb-ft)

Common issues to inspect for

  • 3.5L V6 with Direct + Port Injection requires premium fuel for full power; lower-octane reduces output
  • Manual transmission rare and seal leaks on high-mile trucks
  • Lower control arm bushings at 100k+ miles
  • Frame rust recall on first-gen and early second-gen — verify never-affected status on older Tacomas

Where the inventory is

Featured Tacoma listings

Year & TrimBodyMilesPriceState
2023 Limited
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Crew Cab 46,640 mi $22,720 California
2016 TRD Off-Road
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Crew Cab 160,691 mi $7,800 Connecticut
2021 TRD Sport
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Crew Cab 80,577 mi $15,910 Massachusetts
2024 TRD Pro
2.4L Turbo I4 (228–278 hp)
Regular Cab 27,030 mi $25,575 Nevada
2023 TRD Sport
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Crew Cab 28,332 mi $25,862 New York
2017 TRD Sport
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Regular Cab 84,827 mi $10,952 Ohio
2020 TRD Pro
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Extended Cab 66,958 mi $16,603 Virginia
2019 Limited
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Crew Cab 100,685 mi $12,428 Wyoming
2023 TRD Pro
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Crew Cab 32,359 mi $24,170 Alabama
2014 TRD Sport
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Regular Cab 126,750 mi $7,800 Alabama
2022 Trailhunter
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Crew Cab 63,713 mi $21,410 Arkansas
2024 SR5
2.4L Turbo I4 (228–278 hp)
Regular Cab 27,805 mi $26,700 Indiana
2021 SR
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Regular Cab 47,147 mi $16,804 New York
2019 Limited
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Regular Cab 83,359 mi $14,940 Oregon
2017 TRD Pro
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Crew Cab 111,067 mi $8,801 Colorado
2014 Trailhunter
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Regular Cab 180,619 mi $7,800 Colorado
2016 SR
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Crew Cab 113,304 mi $8,073 Georgia
2014 SR5
3.5L V6 (278 hp / 265 lb-ft)
Extended Cab 98,193 mi $7,800 Minnesota
2016 TRD Sport
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Regular Cab 148,121 mi $7,800 Missouri
2023 TRD Sport
2.7L I4 (159 hp)
Crew Cab 37,738 mi $23,445 Idaho

Buying a used Toyota Tacoma — what to know

The Tacoma sits in the mid-size segment, where competition is fierce and used pricing varies widely by configuration, mileage, and region. The single biggest variable on used pricing is powertrain — diesel-engined trucks of any year typically command a 15–30% premium over equivalent gas trucks, even after accounting for the higher fuel cost per mile. Use the year-by-year breakdown above to confirm which powertrains were even available in the model year you are shopping.

Trim level matters next. The trim ladder for the Tacoma runs from work-spec base trims (vinyl seats, rubber floors, manual windows on older years) up through luxury-class top trims with leather, large infotainment, advanced driver assists, and air suspension. The depreciation curve on top trims is steeper than on mid-range trims, which makes 4–6 year old top-trim trucks an unusually strong used value. A 5-year-old top-trim Tacoma often costs less than a new mid-trim version with comparable mileage and far less equipment.

Mileage matters but mileage type matters more. A high-mileage Tacoma that lived a highway-commuter life is often a better long-term bet than a low-mileage truck that sat in city traffic and short trips its whole life. Ask the seller about usage patterns. Get the answer in writing if it influences your offer. And whatever the seller tells you, verify with a third-party pre-purchase inspection before signing.