© 1999 - 2025Advanta-STAR Automotive Research, all rights reserved. This vehicle comparison and all of the content in it are provided only by license from Advanta-STAR Automotive Research Corporation of America (“Advanta-STAR”). If you are not a legally licensed user of this vehicle comparison, it is against federal law to access it, copy it, forward it, or use it in any manner whatsoever. Any unauthorized use of this vehicle comparison is a violation of U.S. and international law and is punishable criminally and civilly. Removal of this watermark/notification without prior written license and approval received from Advanta-STAR is an agreement, understanding, and/or stipulation by the person(s), entities, agents, attorneys, and any other persons involved in the removal of this watermark/notification (including but not limited to Search Optics, LLC and any and all parent entities, sister entities, and subsidiary entities of Search Optics, LLC and/or any other entity, agent, attorney, and persons related in any manner to Search Optics, LLC) to: 1) an agreed upon amount of liquidated monetary damages of a minimum of $1,250,000.00 US Dollars in favor of Advanta-STAR; 2) the jurisdiction and enforcement of any legal claims associated with this matter asserted by Advanta-STAR in the United States Federal District Court in Portand, Oregon; and 3) service of process of any legal claims asserted by Advanta-STAR associated with this matter may be accomplished by First-Class Postage by the United States Postal Service or comparable service. RTZSE-WYJ3X 2a06:98c0:3600::103 2025/01/08The Wrangler has standard front and rear stabilizer bars, which help keep the Wrangler flat and controlled during cornering. The Tacoma base model’s suspension doesn’t offer a rear stabilizer bar.
The front and rear suspension of the Wrangler uses coil springs for better ride, handling and control than the Tacoma, which uses leaf springs in the rear. Coil springs compress more progressively and offer more suspension travel for a smoother ride with less bottoming out.
The Wrangler has vehicle speed sensitive variable-assist power steering, for low-effort parking, better control at highway speeds and during hard cornering, and a better feel of the road. The Tacoma doesn’t offer variable-assist power steering.
The Wrangler’s front to rear weight distribution is more even (50.1% to 49.9%) than the Tacoma’s (56% to 44%). This gives the Wrangler more stable handling and braking.
For better maneuverability, the Wrangler 2-door’s turning circle is 9.5 feet tighter than the Tacoma XtraCab’s (32.7 feet vs. 42.2 feet). The Wrangler 4-door 4Xe’s turning circle is 9.3 feet tighter than the Tacoma 6-ft. bed Double Cab TRD Sport/Off-Road’s (38.9 feet vs. 48.2 feet).
For greater off-road capability the Wrangler Rubicon 4-door Xtreme 35 has a 1.4 inches greater minimum ground clearance than the Tacoma 5-ft. bed TRD Pro Double Cab (12.9 vs. 11.5 inches), allowing the Wrangler to travel over rougher terrain without being stopped or damaged.