2018 Toyota Camry S
Independent review & score by Carivo
Independent review & score by Carivo
| Seating Capacity | 5 passengers |
|---|---|
| Body Style | Sedan |
| Base Price | $27,210–$36,533 |
Source: EPA FuelEconomy.gov & manufacturer data. Figures reflect base trim; actual specs vary by trim level.
Our scoring places the 2018 Toyota Camry S at 7.9/10 overall, which translates to a Recommended rating for this sedan. Its strongest dimension is Reliability at 9.0/10, while Performance at 6.6/10 is where it trails the competition most noticeably. It's a solid all-rounder that delivers across most dimensions without obvious deal-breakers.
Reliability and safety are the two dimensions that matter most for long-term ownership costs. At 9.0/10, reliability is one of this sedan's best cards — few vehicles in our database score higher on this dimension. The safety score of 8.4/10 is solid mid-pack territory. If advanced driver aids matter to you, compare standard equipment carefully and verify ratings at nhtsa.gov.
Performance at 6.6/10 is a genuine liability and a score that should factor heavily into any buying decision. The powertrain and chassis dynamics trail class rivals by a meaningful margin — don't overlook it. Tech rates a reasonable 7.4/10: the essentials are covered and well executed, but rivals at the same price often include more as standard.
Priced from $27,210–$36,533, 26 MPG, seating 5, the Toyota Camry S sits in the mid-market bracket of the sedan segment. The 7.9/10 value score says the pricing is fair rather than generous; cross-shop the segment before signing anything. At 8 years old, resale value, parts availability, and whether a successor model has improved on its weak points are all worth investigating before committing.
Our take: The 2018 Toyota Camry S is a solid, well-rounded sedan that covers the essentials without obvious deal-breakers. The main caveat is performance — worth checking if those dimensions are priorities for you. For most buyers in this segment, it's a safe, dependable choice.
Carivo scores are our own editorial assessment, informed by NHTSA safety and recall records, EPA fuel-economy figures, and manufacturer-published specifications. Scores are reviewed periodically and updated when new data becomes available. See our full methodology →
The 2018 Toyota Camry S ranks #272 of 1310 sedans in the Carivo database — better than 79% of the segment. Its 7.9/10 overall score is 0.4 points above the segment average of 7.5/10. Its $27,210 starting price sits close to the segment's median of $27,664.
Rankings are recalculated as new vehicles and scores are added. See the full Sedan ranking → · Best Sedans under $35k →
Smart-money pick: the 2015 Toyota Camry S scores 7.9/10 — within striking distance of the 2018's 7.9 — and starts roughly $3,000 lower. If you don't need the newest model year, that's money better spent on a higher trim or kept in your pocket.
| Year | Score | Starting price (MSRP when new) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 8.4/10 | $34,178 | Read review → |
| 2024 | 8.3/10 | $33,183 | Read review → |
| 2023 | 8.2/10 | $32,187 | Read review → |
| 2022 | 8.2/10 | $31,191 | Read review → |
| 2021 | 8.1/10 | $30,196 | Read review → |
| 2020 | 8.1/10 | $29,200 | Read review → |
| 2019 | 8.1/10 | $28,204 | Read review → |
| 2018 (this review) | 7.9/10 | $27,210 | |
| 2017 | 7.9/10 | $26,214 | Read review → |
| 2016 | 7.9/10 | $25,218 | Read review → |
| 2015 | 7.9/10 | $24,223 | Read review → |
We rate the 2018 Toyota Camry S's reliability 9.0/10 — one of the stronger records in its class.
It scores 7.9/10 overall, ranking #272 of 1310 sedans in our database (better than 79% of the segment). A solid choice for most buyers — compare it against the segment leaders before deciding.
The 2018 Toyota Camry S starts at $27,210 and ranges up to $36,533 across trims (MSRP when new). At 26 MPG, expect roughly $2,019/year in fuel at 15,000 miles/year.
Other sedans at a similar price point, ranked by Carivo score.
Explore the full lineup of Toyota models scored by Carivo — ranked by overall score across reliability, safety, value, performance, and technology.