Just spoke to an alignment guy who told me that the Prius has no caster/camber adjustment for the tires. Makes me feel like buying a toe alignment kit from Amazon and just watch how my tires wear.
There is some "play", so extreme minor adjustments are possible. And there are special bolts you can buy to make camber adjustment. The toe in/out and caster are the most important ones. Mine has always had a slight drift to the right. Which tells me the alignment is set for a perfectly level road. In Florida there is a 2 degree ( I think it's 2) slant to allow the water to drain. The outer edge of the RF tire, and inner edge of the LF tires wear a little more. Rotating them front to back, then swopping left to right to left evens them out.
Edit: I'm an idiot, the below was for the Gen2 Prius; I'm in the wrong forum. .. There are bolts Toyota supplies to adjust camber on the front tires -- see the XW20 service manual, page SP-4, section "7. ADJUST CAMBER". One example bolt P/N is 90105-15017. Edit: ha, hahaha. I totally knew you were talking about the Prius V, because I totally noticed I was in the Prius V / Gen3 Prius forum. Ha. Hahaha.
Specialty manufacturing makes crash bolts with your camera adjusting bolts that go where the big 19 mm bolts go that holds your knuckle to the strut I have on a few toyoda's but not Prius so far. Generally a toe adjustment . You just want at least a few times in the car's life while you have it the car to be thrust w heads on wheels to be sure you're in the green . This isn't a vehicle where we need to negate camber and all that stuff you're going to drive like that get a Rolla xre or such
I don't know what that kit is. Does it attach to the front and rear wheels and use a string so you can measure the distance from the 3 and 9 o'clock positions of the front wheels? Actually, the rims. The tires won't be even. That should get you close enough. Then watch the wear on the outer edges of the tires. If the outer edges are wearing more, you have too much toe in. If it's the inner edges, it's toed out too much. Any adjustments to the tie rods should be evenly.