2026 toyota prius LE vs SE

Discussion in 'Gen 5 Prius Main Forum' started by Gerald10, May 25, 2026 at 6:13 PM.

  1. Gerald10

    Gerald10 New Member

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    What’s the difference between the 2026 Toyota Prius LE and SE?
    • LE = regular hybrid
    • SE = plug-in hybrid with a bigger battery, but the MPG is a bit worse when the electric-only mode is off.
    Also, how much does it typically cost to replace the hybrid battery in the future for the LE vs. the SE? From what I have read, it seems more complex to replace the SE hybrid battery.

    Thanks,
    Gerald
     
  2. Hammersmith

    Hammersmith Senior Member

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    Location:
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    Vehicle:
    2023 Prius
    Model:
    Limited AWD-e
    Cosmetics:
    Slightly different interiors.
    Red stitching on the seat covers and steering wheel. Copper colored trim on dash instead of sliver. (both SE)
    Rear light bar red on LE, clear on SE.
    Light gray seats available on LE.

    Power train:
    Much larger HV batt in SE.
    220hp in SE, 196 in LE AWD, 194 in LE FWD.
    Air cooled HV batt in LE, refrigerant cooled in SE

    Other(SE):
    1500W 120V inverter (2 prong socket in center console, 3 prong grounded socket in cargo area)
    Capacitive touch steering wheel (means you don't have to move steering wheel in adaptive cruise)
    Front side radar sensors allow Front Cross Traffic Alert and Lane Change Assist.
    IR cameras on steering column allow Traffic Jam Assist.
    Heat pump allows heating the cabin without running the engine.
    Higher cargo floor means the cargo area is the same level as the rear seats when folded down(completely flat floor)

    Other(LE):
    Lower cargo floor means more cargo space(not a lot, but some)
    Ability to add compact spare tire



    As for HV battery replacement, the LE battery is much, much cheaper. Roughly $3k-$4k for an LE vs. around $10k for an SE.* But that's generally not something you need to worry about. Most will last well beyond 15 years/200k+ miles. And most fail due to user error. If air cooled, make sure to keep the HV batt cooling vent clear and the filter clean. If refrigerant cooled, make sure to keep the HVAC system working and don't drive if there's an A/C fault.

    It is harder to replace the HV battery in an SE, but it's not the end of the world. A trained tech can swap an LE battery in about an hour. Probably three or four hours for an SE, but the majority of that time is pulling the refrigerant from the heat pump(A/C) and then recharging it at the end of the job. You pull the batt on the LE from inside the cabin. You pull the batt on the SE by dropping it from below the car.


    I might have missed something, but I think that's a pretty thorough list.


    *those are the prices for the batteries and do not include labor, etc.



    edit: Forgot to mention the SE and LE AWD have slightly bigger front brakes. (because of the added weight)
     
    #2 Hammersmith, May 25, 2026 at 6:41 PM
    Last edited: May 25, 2026 at 6:51 PM
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  3. Gerald10

    Gerald10 New Member

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    regarding weight: SE is also heavier than LE - because of the bigger battery.

    what about MPG comparisons?
     
  4. PriusCamper

    PriusCamper Senior Member

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    I suspect that SE and LE w/all-wheel drive gets less MPG and LE with front-wheel drive will get the highest MPG because there's way less weight via a super simple drivetrain and less battery cells.
     
  5. mva

    mva Member

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    SE
    I was curious too:

    LE 57 mpg Combined rating
    LE AWD 54 mpg Combined rating
    SE Phev 52 mpg Combined rating
     
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  6. Hammersmith

    Hammersmith Senior Member

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    Completely depends on your driving habits. If you plug in all the time and the majority of your driving is 40mph or less, and less than 40 miles a day, you'll get insanely good effective mpg in the SE because the engine will rarely run. If almost all of your driving is 65mph* or greater and/or you never plug in your SE, you'll probably get something like 4-6mpg worse than an LE.

    I'm of the camp that says hardly anyone should get a PHEV. There are people where a PHEV is the correct choice, but I think a lot of people buy them that would be better served with either a HEV or BEV.

    Only get the SE if:
    - You can plug in at home or work for cheap/free electricity.
    - You have a daily round trip commute of 20-40mi(80mi or less if you can plug in at both home AND work).
    - You commute at least four days a week. (100mi+/week)
    - Most of your driving is NOT long trips at highway speeds(>40mi, >55mph)
    - You don't have long cold winters(the heat pump can only heat the cabin down to 20-30F; colder than that and the engine will start regardless).

    I think most people that get the Prius PHEV should either get a Prius HEV or a C-HR/bZ. (I wish there was a perfect Toyota BEV counterpart to the Prius, but the C-HR and bZ are currently the closest options. One's a little smaller, and the other's a little bigger.)


    *The Prius PHEV can go over 65mph in EV mode, but you'll drain the HV battery very quickly. I think the roughly 40mi EV range is calculated from a 30-40mph speed. If you're driving 70-80mph, I think you'll be lucky to get 25-30mi of EV range. But SE owners can chime in if I'm wrong.
     
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