2025 Jeep Compass Starts Under $28K; Prices Decrease
August 29, 2024The 2025 Jeep Compass is finding its way to U.S. dealerships, ready to set up camp for to-be buyers this fall with a starting price of $27,495 with destination, unchanged from last year.
The direction of the Compass hasn’t changed much for the new model year, as this compact utility drops the Latitude Lux trim in favor of a four-grade lineup. The $27K starting price is for the base Sport, followed by the Latitude, Limited and Trailhawk.
The Sport trim is the most modestly equipped, assembled with cloth, manual seats upfront and a 60/40 folding bench in the rear, bringing total occupancy to five. A Uconnect 5 8.4-inch touchscreen is mounted in all trims, supporting wireless smartphone integration; and all trims come with a number of safety features, such as forward collision warning with active braking, blind spot monitoring, active lane management and more.
An additional $2,270 will upgrade consumers to the Latitude trim ($29,765), representing a price decrease from last year’s $31,765. This trim reupholsters those seats with a mix of cloth and vinyl materials, along with a higher quality wrap on the steering wheel. Other Latitude upgrades include fog lamps, automatic high beams and keyless entry.
The Limited is somewhat unique from the last two trims thanks to larger 18-inch wheels and various two-tone paint options; the white body, black roof option adding nothing to the price. Inside, seating is once again enhanced, this time covered in leatherette surfaces and heated upfront. The onboard safety suite sees additional facets, adaptive cruise control, rain-sensing wipers and turn signal side mirror being chief among them. The infotainment also grows from the standard 8.4-inch unit to a 10-inch display. An available Elite Interior Group High Altitude package includes a memory driver’s seat, second row charging, a foot-activated rear liftgate, and a few other goodies. Buyers aiming for the Limited trim should expect a starting price of $33,840, another price decrease (from 2024’s $35,340), with the Elite package commanding an extra $2,375.
Even though the Compass lineup has shrunk, Jeep couldn’t leave out the Trailhawk off-road trim. With a starting price of $33,990 (yet another decrease, down from $35,490), this top-trim model comes with the same two-tone paint options as the Limited, as well as a monotone black lacquer. The Trailhawk rides on unique suspension, with its underside protected by four skid plates. And it wouldn’t be a Trailhawk without signature red tow hooks, matched by red accents and hood-applied graphics.
All trims share the same powertrain, a 2.0-liter turbo-four producing 200 horsepower and 221 lb-ft of torque, mated to an eight-speed automatic to deliver power to the all-wheel-drive system.
So while not a lot has changed for the next model year, consumers may be pleased by the updated pricing. The 2025 compass will be at U.S. Jeep dealerships this fall.