2015 Toyota Tundra — Used Buying Guide
11 years old · used value range $8,016 – $12,127 · max towing 12,000 lb · max payload 1,940 lb
The 2015 Tundra at a glance
The 2015 Toyota Tundra is a 11-year-old used pickup that originally listed at approximately $54,000 for a base configuration. After 11 years of ownership-cycle depreciation, fair market value for typical-mileage examples lands between $8,016 and $12,127, with low-mileage clean-title trucks pushing toward the upper bound and higher-mileage or salvage-history trucks anchoring the lower bound.
The Tundra at this model year was built on the Toyota light-duty platform and offered in regular, extended, and crew cab body styles. Maximum trailer towing capability for this year is 12,000 lb when properly equipped (typically requires the optional max tow package and the right axle ratio); maximum payload is 1,940 lb in the lightest cab/bed/drivetrain combination.
Available engines for 2015
| Powertrain | 4.6L V8 (310 hp) |
| Powertrain | 5.7L i-Force V8 (381 hp / 401 lb-ft) |
Configuration options
| Cab options | Crew Cab · Extended Cab · Regular Cab |
| Bed options | 5'7" Short · 6'5" Standard · 8'0" Long |
| Available trims | SR, SR5, Limited, TRD Pro, Platinum, 1794 Edition, Capstone |
| Max towing capacity | 12,000 lb (properly equipped) |
| Max payload capacity | 1,940 lb |
EPA fuel economy ranges for this model year
| Powertrain class | City mpg | Highway mpg |
|---|---|---|
| Gasoline V6 | 17 | 24 |
| Gasoline V8 | 14 | 18 |
| Diesel | 24 | 32 |
Common issues for the 2015 Tundra
- 2nd-gen 5.7L: secondary air injection pump failures (common after 100k miles, expensive repair)
- 3rd-gen turbocharged V6: too new for long-term reliability data
- Cam tower oil leaks on early 3rd-gen builds (Toyota TSB available)
- i-Force MAX hybrid system serviceability remains evolving
Service history matters more on this model year than mileage alone. A 2015 Tundra with documented oil changes, transmission services performed at the recommended interval, and any open recalls completed is worth meaningfully more than an undocumented truck of the same mileage. Ask the seller for the maintenance binder; if it does not exist, ask the local Toyota dealership to pull the VIN history before you commit to a price.
2015 Tundra listings on TruckLot
| Trim & Body | Miles | Price | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Platinum Regular Cab |
117,074 mi | $10,380 | Los Angeles, California |
| TRD Pro Regular Cab |
176,486 mi | $9,661 | Winston-Salem, North Carolina |
| Limited Regular Cab |
145,164 mi | $10,997 | Raleigh, North Carolina |
| Limited Extended Cab |
115,540 mi | $11,613 | Nashua, New Hampshire |
| SR Regular Cab |
91,195 mi | $8,838 | Providence, Rhode Island |
Should you buy a 2015 Tundra right now?
The honest answer depends on three variables: how the truck was used, what powertrain it has, and what comparable competitors are listed for in your state. A 2015 Tundra with a clean service history, the volume powertrain (avoid first-year-of-production engines unless you have done your homework), and a price near the middle of the $8,016–$12,127 range is usually a sound buy.
If you are cross-shopping the same model year against competitors, our comparison guides work through the trade-offs with real numbers. Diesel premium, towing differences, payload differences, and depreciation curves are all spelled out so you can decide whether the $3,000–$8,000 difference between similar trucks is justified for your use case.