2025 Lincoln Nautilus

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There used to be luxury brands. Most of them have morphed into luxury-sport brands. The distinction is important – if you don’t especially want a “sporty” ride but do very much want a luxurious one.

In that case, you may like the Lincoln Nautilus.

What It Is

The mid-sized Nautilus is a mid-sized crossover with two rows of seats and like all of Lincoln’s models, the emphasis is on luxury rather than sport. It does not tout its high-speed cornering capabilities or its ability to lunge quickly from 0-60 like a muscle car. It touts such luxuries as an ultra-plush interior with available massaging seats, a 28 speaker Revel Ultima audio system, streaming audio and video services and mood-lighting with keyed-to-the-lighting scent diffuser designed to make a drive feel more like a trip to a spa. That’s what makes it very different from the luxury-sport crossovers in the same general all class.

There are three trims, beginning with the $53,940 Premier. It comes standard with a four-foot-wide (48 inch) curved digital dash that spans the length of the upper dashboard, a 10 speaker stereo, streaming audio and video, synthetic leather seats and BlueCruise hands-free self-driving tech.

The $63,180 Reserve adds an adaptive suspension, real leather seat covers, wood interior trim and an illuminated Lincoln star; you can opt for the 28 speaker Revel Ultima audio system and massaging seats, which are bundled as part of a Reserve II package.

The $77,130 Black Label comes standard with all of the above plus 22 inch wheels, a panorama sunroof, additional Lincoln badge illumination, copper grill accents, Venetian leather seat covers, heated rear sets and a bundle of concierge services such as pick up and delivery of the vehicle when service is required, complimentary car washes and rental car benefits through Avis.

All trims come standard with a 2.0 liter, turbocharged four cylinder engine, an eight speed automatic and all-wheel-drive and all trims can be ordered with an optional hybridized version of the 2.0 liter engine, paired with a battery pack and motors that bumps the combined output to 310 horsepower (from the standard 270) and increases overall fuel economy by about 6 MPG.

It’s a stand-alone option that adds $2,500 to the price of any Nautilus.

What’s New For 2025

Upgraded connectivity and entertainment features plus revised interior/exterior trim and color schemes constitute the major changes for this model year.

What’s Good

Extremely plush on the inside (and how it rides).

Numerous clever storage cubbies.

Hybrid drivetrain adds only slightly to the cost and you can get it in any trim.

What’s Not So Good

Streaming video (e.g., YouTube) feature only works in Park.

The massaging seats and Revel 28 speaker audio system are restricted to the much more expensive Reserve and Black Label trims.

Under The Hood

All Nautilus trims come standard with the same drivetrain, consisting of a 2.0 liter turbo-boosted four paired with a full-time AWD system and an eight speed automatic transmission. This combo touts 250 horsepower and 280 ft.-lbs. of torque and the ability to get the Nautilus to 60 MPH in about seven seconds.

More power – and quicker acceleration – are available. Along with better gas mileage. All trims can be equipped with an optional ($2,500) hybrid drivetrain that replaces the eight speed automatic with a CVT automatic plus a battery pack/electric motor to produce 310 horsepower and a roughly 6 MPG overall uptick in fuel economy. The hybrid also brings the 0-60 time down by about 1 second, enough to feel the difference. It is not, however, a plug-in hybrid so you have to drive it to charge its batteries and while it can creep short distances at low speed on battery power it cannot be driven at speeds faster than a slow creep on battery power. The system is designed to increase gas mileage nd reduce “emissions” of the gas – CO2 – that some claim is causing the “climate” to “change” by keeping the gas engine off as often and as ling as possible.

As with most hybrids, the hybrid side – the battery and electric motors (the Nautilus has two) – power the accessories when the engine isn’t running as well as power boost when maximum acceleration is wanted.

Lincoln says the Nautilus can tow up to 1,700 lbs.

On The Road

The Nautilus is a crossover – and there lots of them, including at least six in the same general class and price range. But the Nautilus is not the same as the rest because it isn’t trying to be. The object of this exercise is luxury and elegance rather than luxury and sport.

The distinction’s no small thing. It is the difference between a vehicle that is fun to drive and one that makes the drive exceptionally pleasant. There can be overlap but the point here is that most vehicles that are fun to drive aren’t as fun on long drives or the ones that seem to take forever because of the traffic. What good is a luxury-sport crossover than get accelerate from zero to 60 in less than five seconds if you can’t get to 60 because the traffic isn’t even doing 30?

It is in such circumstances that crushed suede massaging seats and a 28 speaker audio system make where you’re stuck feel like where you want to be. You can even pull off the road to wait out the traffic while watching a movie, which you can stream through the big screen. At night, with the mood lighting accompanying, it’s like driving a private theater like the really flush people have at home.

Once the traffic uncongeals, the trip home is what it ought to be in a luxury vehicle. You do not “feel the road.” The whole point of luxury as it pertains to driving is to not feel it. To float along serenely, even on pot-holed roads. You feel the comforting heft of the vehicle as it absorbs and dissipates the irregularities of the road.

Americans used to be the best at making such cars and Lincoln still is, Cadillac having gone all-in on the luxury-sport thing.

Even the steering wheel isn’t sporty. It is a flattened circle, which makes it easier to steer the Nautilus with less effort due to the leverage advantage. Of a piece, the tires – which are “M+S” rated – meaning sound and comfort (not Mud and Snow).

The turbo four is so quiet you could be persuaded this is an electric vehicle – just one with nearly 600 miles of highway driving range hand no ever having to worry about having forgotten to charge up. The hybrid’s driving range is even more and the slight cost – $2,500 – is such that you might even end up saving money overall. But the main tangible benefit is the more authoritative low-and-mid-range power and the feel of that as you accelerate.

At The Curb

Lincoln put a lot of detail work into making the Nautilus elegant – in the manner of classic Lincoln luxury cars. The door pulls are not the cliche’d copies of flush-mounted Tesla pulls that extend upon approach. They are formed as part of the the upper door panels. It’s a unique look and ergonomically natural; it feels right to open a car door this way. These pulls are also never going to fail to extend due to some electric glitch, locking you out of your vehicle.

The interior is more like a luxury suite; it reminds me of the first-class pods some of the better airlines offer that totally insulate you from the other passengers so that you can enjoy your flight in privacy and total comfort, with everything you need at hand as well as anything you could conceivably want shy of an attentive stewardess bringing you drinks and an extra soft pillow.

The main attraction here is the spectacular curved LCD main panel that extends the entire width of the dash. It does not have the aftermarket-tacky appearance of other in-car touchscreens, which look like they were just screwed into the place where the gauges used to be. The Lincoln’s display traces the natural lines of the upper cowl/windshield, such that it is part of the whole rather than something just mounted there. The look is bold yet not obnoxious. This is a good way to describe Lincolns generally – especially in relation to Cadillacs, which were (and still are) known for their showiness for its own sake.

As ultra-modern as the Lincoln’s interior is, it’s also retro in the sense that classic Lincoln design touches such as the push-button gear selector and brushed metal trim echoes the elegance of the Lincolns of the ’60s.

With the practicality that you didn’t get when you drove a ’60s Continental. The Nautilus – being a crossover – has a larger cargo storage area (36.4 cubic feet) than even a ’60s Connie had space for stuff in its trunk and the total storage capacity can be expanded to 71.3 cubic feet by lowering the rear seats.

Legroom back there (43.1 inches) is almost as generous as the legroom for the driver and front seat passenger (43.5 inches) and the higher trims include device chargers built into the seatbacks as well as individual controls for the available rear seat heaters.

The Rest

The Lincoln’s main weaknesses have less to do with style than with utility. The maximum tow rating – 1,700 lbs. – is less than that offered by others in the class, some of which tout being able to pull up to 3,500 lbs. This latter enables them to pull a small camper, which the Lincoln can’t.

The other thing is the price. Luxury – the real thing – is rarely a bargain. A top-of-the-line Nautilus Black Label with the massaging seats, 28 speaker Revel audio system and the ultra-cush interior appointments will sticker just shy of $80,000.

On the other hand, a Mercedes GLE starts at $61,850 and it doesn’t even offer some of the cush (and tech) that the Lincoln does. Neither do the others, which are doing their best to be sportier than the others, while the Lincoln contents itself with being the most luxurious of them all.

The Bottom Line

Why compete when you don’t have to?

. . .

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24 COMMENTS

  1. Eric- Was this thing diffusing “scent” when you test drove it? I kinda skipped through then read some comments then went back to re-read the piece and that’s what you said. WTF? Is that really a thing now? Fragrance chemicals are some really nasty shit. Not that I’m in the market for a Nautilus but that kind of thing is a serous red flag.

    • Hi Funk,

      It can – if you want it to. There are “mood” settings you can dial up that will (as an example) turn the entire main display to a waterfall scene and the ambient light/scent diffuser can be set to complement this. Take a gummy and turn on the massaging seats; put your favorite music one and take a nap! Seriously. I did it!

  2. Your review has made me decide to go test drive one. I now drive an mkz. I like a sedan, a car. If it is only made in China I will not buy it but I will make sure the salesperson knows that before I leave. I just test drove a Lexus e300h and I am leaning in that direction. American car makers have decided to exit the sedan market, I guess they don’t want our money. I like a hybrid sedan for the mileage and low cost of filling up, less concerned about performance but I want it there when needed. Comfort, smooth ride and quietness are what I enjoy, like the sixties, seventies and even eighties Cadillacs and Lincolns my dad and father in law drove.

  3. Too bad they don’t offer the F150 hybrid with the 30 amp inverter for towing your Airstream. That would redefine “glamping.”

  4. RE: “Those were the days, no TS A-holes to ruin the experience.”

    A.k.a. Roman Centurions?

    …Flying, really did, use to be Fun!

    …Back in, ‘The Before Times’.

    M.A.G.A., my ass.

    More like: fuck everything up worse than it was before.

    …I wish it were M.A.G.A.. If, only.

    • Morning, Helot!

      Yup. Trump knows how to play the crowd – and does just that. I have MAGA friends who equate what they think they hear with the action they thought they’d get. I point out how DOGE was just for show. That none of us got the “dividend” Trump dangled in front of us. That we did get the REAL ID. That we didn’t get anyone locked up except for a few irrelevant Me Gustans. Not Fauci or a single person on Epstein’s list. We got Israel uber alles rather than an America that’s great again. Never mind. Orange Man Good!

  5. Luxury brand Jaguar, LOL, I watched the woke Jaguar commercial, is corporate mad?

    Oli London
    @OliLondonTV
    Jaguar sales plunge 97.5% in Europe; after disastrous ‘Copy Nothing’ woke rebrand.

    The company sold just 49 cars in April 2025 throughout Europe, following backlash over the companies rebrand.

    Jaguar’s Europe sales plunged from 1,961 units in April 2024 to just 49 vehicles in April 2025.

    Source: European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA).

  6. I did a little research on the Ecoboost 2.0. Since 2022 it is only manufactured in China. It has a timing chain and “Dual injection (combine both port injection and direct injection)”. Dual injection helps prevent carbon buildup on the intake valves by also injecting some gasoline into the intake instead of only into the combustion chamber. That would likely mean that it has a lower pressure fuel pump as well as an ultra high pressure one. It also has GPF (gas particle filter) on top of EGR (exhaust gas recirculation) and Catalytic converter.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_EcoBoost_engine#2.0_L_EcoBoost_Engine_(2022–Present)

    It turns out that Ford and Lincoln of China have a joint venture with Changan which is government owned.

    With all the Trump tariffs and brewing cold war with China I would be afraid that Ford will end up having to abruptly change their strategy in case of a hot war in Europe, Middle east or Taiwan. There is also the continual “sanctions game” that the US and EU are so good at playing with enemies of the Noahide empire.

    I would bet even odds or even more that the for Changan “joint venture” ends up like the Ford/Jaguar, Ford/Mazda and Ford/Volvo ventures. The main difference here is that all those imported Nautilus’s and Cosars will end up being sidelined long before the automobiles they produced for the US are fully depreciated.

  7. OH MY GOD! Nope-I-lost features every gizmo and gadget you rail against. All the cost-adding nonsense that does nothing but “drain” your wallet. Mood lighting and…and…”fragrance EMISSIONS!” Call the EPA. But I knew the punch line was coming…”all come with a turbo 2 litre 4.” Enter Ralph Kramden for a bit of mood enhancement: “HAR-DEE-HAR-HAR!”

  8. The Nautilus will surface, Captain Nemo will make it to shore, at which time Captain Nemo will sue Ford for millions for stealing the Nautilus name.

    Nice looking automobile, needs four more cylinders though.

    For 55 grand, I’ll pretend to buy one and Ford can pretend to manufacture them.

    It’ll be a win win.

  9. 4cyl 2.0T only! what a shame. At least you can get a 3.0V6TT in the Explorer, which it shares the platform with. CVT on some models, no.
    I like the looks though.

  10. “The mid-sized Nautilus is Lincolns second largest crossover (just behind the full-sized Navigator)”

    Eric, the nautilus is Lincoln’s third largest crossover. The second largest is the Aviator. My brother bought a ’24 Nautilus, itz a beautiful car. I think this car is assembled in China. You can fact check it.

    Gas mileage is very, very good and itz got loads of power. Inside it looks very fancy. I would buy this instead of some European luxury brands.

    China is poised to overtake the USA in production. I just checked my Gym shoes and what the hell, they’re made in China. What isn’t made in China these days. WTF!

    • I checked wiki. The second generation is only assembled in “Hangzhou, Zhejiang (Changan Ford)”.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Nautilus

      Wiki doesn’t go into detail about the 2.0l 4 cyl engine. The 2025 Mustang uses the 2.3 liter Ecoboost turbo.

      So what we have here is a Chinese car with a mystery meat 2l 4 cyl engine.

      Will you still be able to find parts for that engine in 20-30 years?

      I would bet that the value of these cars stays flat for the first few years while it is still under warranty and still on the market. Once the warranty ends they will rapidly depreciate to zero. There are literally hundreds of manufacturers of Chinese cars that are more like gadgets that will prematurely will end up in the junk yard. That is Greta style feel good environmentalism for you.

      The question is if any car going into the future will still have parts available for 30 years and a “flora” of mechanics or handyman that know its quirks and foibles and can work on them.
      Apparently that is some useless dated concept from our distant past, like virginity.

      • I agree, Brosi –

        There is no long-term future for any modern car. They are all disposable appliances. To be fair, this has always been true to a certain extent. What’s changed is the much higher cost initially relative to the much shorter economically viable life. You spend $60k on a vehicle that after six years has lost 40 percent of its value, a huge sum to lose. Then, after about ten years, a critical part fails that is either not available or so expensive relative to the remaining value of the vehicle that the vehicle is not worth fixing.

        Contrast this with the older stuff that cost much less to buy, lasts much longer and can be fixed economically for even longer than that.

      • It would be nice if Ford/Lincoln would give us a choice as far as engines were concerned. Do you want the 2.3 four the 3.0 six twin turbo. Most things these days are packaged presumably to save us money. Most of the descriptions/ads don’t even mention horsepower/torque because most people don’t care as long as the car starts and runs. Only car nuts like us are concerned with engines and there aren’t that many of us around.

      • Wiki does a great job with all the different GM and GM-affiliated engines, especially the V8’s. They also do a good job with the AMC engines. Ford and Chrysler, not so much.

  11. Eric runs through all the idle frippery offered in models ranging from $54,000 to $77,000 — a four-foot-wide (48 inch) curved digital dash; mood-lighting with keyed-to-the-lighting scent diffuser designed to make a drive feel more like a trip to a spa [I especially like the ‘eau de used panties’ scent]; BlueCruise hands-free self-driving tech with an illuminated Lincoln star.

    Then he casually drops the total show-stopper: ‘All trims come standard with a 2.0 liter, turbocharged four-cylinder engine.’

    HA HA HA HA. I’ve got a 2-liter four in my 1997 RAV4. Though without the ‘eau de vulva’ diffusers in a mood-lit digital dash, I must confess.

    Did you know that the Lincoln Nautilus is named MotorTrend’s 2025 SUV of the Year? Neither did I: I stopped reading MotorTrend in sixth grade, the same year I gave up TeeVee.

    Something else I find aesthetically offensive: the steering wheel is not round. It’s a radiused rectangle; a ‘flattened circle’ in Eric’s parlance. Kind of like the illuminated Lincoln badge turned sideways. We get the stylistic reference — but we are not bloody amused.

    ‘The Nautilus – being a crossover – has a larger cargo storage area than even a ’60s Connie.’

    ‘Connie’ can mean Continental, but it also was a term of endearment for the Lockheed Constellation, a 1950s airliner powered by four 18-cylinder Wright R-3350 Duplex-Cyclone radial piston engines — and the vector of my first flight experience.

    On June 30, 1956, a TWA Connie collided with a United DC-7 at 21,000 feet over the Grand Canyon, killing all 128 people aboard both aircraft.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1956_Grand_Canyon_mid-air_collision

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