2017 Toyota Tundra S
Independent review & score by Carivo
Independent review & score by Carivo
| Seating Capacity | 5 passengers |
|---|---|
| Body Style | Truck |
| Base Price | $36,307–$46,144 |
Source: EPA FuelEconomy.gov & manufacturer data. Figures reflect base trim; actual specs vary by trim level.
The 2017 Toyota Tundra S is a truck that earns a Carivo score of 7.5/10 — rated Recommended. Its strongest dimension is Reliability at 8.0/10, while Value at 6.5/10 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. The reliability picture is solid rather than spectacular: 8.0/10, which puts it comfortably above the class median. Safety lands at 7.8/10 — solid, though some rivals offer more advanced driver-assist features as standard. Confirm official results for your trim at nhtsa.gov/ratings.
With 7.8/10 for performance, this is a car tuned for daily driving rather than excitement — perfectly capable on the commute, unremarkable on a back road. At 7.3/10 for technology, the infotainment and driver-assist package does its job without setting benchmarks — check which features cost extra on lower trims.
Priced from $36,307–$46,144, 13 MPG, seating 5, the Toyota Tundra S sits in the mid-market bracket of the truck segment. The value score of 6.5/10 is a red flag — comparable alternatives offer meaningfully more for the same outlay. Shop the segment before deciding. At 9 years old, resale value, parts availability, and whether a successor model has improved on its weak points are all worth investigating before committing.
Verdict: Nothing about the 2017 Toyota Tundra S will scare a sensible buyer off. Keep an eye on value if those matter to you; otherwise it does what a good truck should — quietly and competently.
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 2017 Toyota Tundra S ranks #186 of 515 trucks in the Carivo database — better than 64% of the segment. Its 7.5/10 overall score is 0.1 points above the segment average of 7.4/10. Its $36,307 starting price sits close to the segment's median of $35,138.
Rankings are recalculated as new vehicles and scores are added. See the full Truck ranking →
Across the Tundra S model years we've scored, the 2017 holds its position — we didn't find an older year that delivers similar scores for meaningfully less money.
| Year | Score | Starting price (MSRP when new) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 8.0/10 | $47,337 | Read review → |
| 2024 | 7.9/10 | $45,959 | Read review → |
| 2023 | 7.8/10 | $44,580 | Read review → |
| 2022 | 7.8/10 | $43,202 | Read review → |
| 2021 | 7.8/10 | $41,823 | Read review → |
| 2020 | 7.8/10 | $40,444 | Read review → |
| 2019 | 7.6/10 | $39,065 | Read review → |
| 2018 | 7.5/10 | $37,686 | Read review → |
| 2017 (this review) | 7.5/10 | $36,307 | |
| 2016 | 7.5/10 | $34,928 | Read review → |
| 2015 | 7.4/10 | $33,550 | Read review → |
Explore the full lineup of Toyota models scored by Carivo — ranked by overall score across reliability, safety, value, performance, and technology.