2026 Honda Accord vs Nissan Altima: Hybrid MPG or AWD Gas Sedan?
The Accord has the stronger fuel-economy story on published specs; the Altima’s provided data makes the case for all-wheel drive.
By IFMG Editorial
The quick cross-shop read
The Accord lineup gives buyers two directions: a 1.5L turbocharged 4-cylinder gas setup in LX and SE trims, or a Two-Motor Hybrid-Electric powertrain in Sport, EX-L, Sport-L, and Touring trims. Every Accord trim in the provided data is front-wheel drive.
The Nissan Altima data supplied here points in a different direction. It lists all-wheel drive, a 2.5L I-4 gas engine, 182 hp, 178 lb-ft of torque, and a CVT (Xtronic). That makes the Altima the more relevant pick for shoppers who place drivetrain layout ahead of hybrid efficiency.
Pricing is one-sided in the available data. Accord MSRPs are published from LX through Touring, but no Altima price is included. That means this comparison can judge the Accord’s internal value ladder, but it cannot make a verified dollar-for-dollar claim against the Nissan.
Powertrain choice: Accord gives you hybrid, Altima data gives you AWD
The Accord’s biggest advantage on paper is powertrain variety. The gas LX and SE use a 1.5L turbocharged 4-cylinder with a continuously variable transmission. The hybrid trims use a Two-Motor Hybrid-Electric powertrain with an Electronic CVT.
The Altima specs provided are narrower but specific: gasoline fuel type, a 2.5L I-4 engine, 182 hp, 178 lb-ft of torque, all-wheel drive, and CVT (Xtronic). Honda horsepower and torque figures are not included in the supplied Accord data, so a verified output comparison is not possible here.
For a buyer choosing by mechanical layout, the decision is practical. Pick Accord if hybrid availability matters. Put Altima on the list if all-wheel drive is a must-have based on the provided spec set.
Fuel economy: Accord hybrids have the clear published advantage
The Accord hybrid numbers are the strongest fuel-economy figures in this comparison. The Accord EX-L is rated at 51 city MPG, 44 highway MPG, and 48 combined MPG. The Sport, Sport-L, and Touring hybrids are rated at 46 city MPG, 41 highway MPG, and 44 combined MPG.
The gas Accord LX is rated at 29 city MPG, 37 highway MPG, and 32 combined MPG. The SE is rated at 28 city MPG, 36 highway MPG, and 31 combined MPG.
The Altima figures provided are 25 city MPG, 34 highway MPG, and 28 combined MPG. On the published numbers available here, every Accord trim listed has a higher combined MPG rating than the supplied Altima spec, and the hybrid Accord trims create the largest gap.
For shoppers asking which Accord gets the best MPG, the answer is the EX-L hybrid with 48 combined MPG. For a deeper Accord-only breakdown, our related guide, 2026 Honda Accord Hybrid vs Gas: The Value Pick Depends on How You Spend, focuses on that internal decision.
Price and trim logic inside the Accord lineup
The cheapest Accord trim is the LX at $28,395. The most expensive Accord trim is the Touring at $39,495. The Accord lineup spans $11,100, from the LX to the Touring.
The cheapest hybrid Accord is the Sport at $33,795. The hybrid premium is $5,400, measured as the Sport over the cheapest gas LX. That matters because the Sport hybrid is the entry point to the hybrid powertrain, but it is not the most efficient Accord hybrid by the published EPA ratings.
The EX-L costs $1,300 more than the Sport and returns the strongest MPG figures in the Accord lineup. The Sport-L costs $400 more than the EX-L, while Touring costs $4,400 more than the EX-L. Without feature-level differences beyond the supplied data, the EX-L is the cleanest efficiency pick on published specifications.
If the goal is the best 2026 Honda Accord trim for a low transaction starting point, LX is the logical answer from the available numbers. If the goal is maximum Accord fuel economy, EX-L is the better fit.
Passenger and cargo space: same seating, Accord has more listed cargo volume
Both sedans seat five people based on the supplied data. That makes this less about seat count and more about cargo volume and powertrain priorities.
Every Accord trim lists 16.7 cu.ft. of cargo capacity. The Altima data lists 15.4 cu ft. On the published figures, Accord has the larger trunk measurement.
No rear-seat dimensions, headroom, legroom, or cabin measurements are included for either car in the provided data. The only verified space comparison here is seating capacity and cargo volume.
Warranty and ownership data: Accord details are available, Altima data is not
The Accord warranty information is consistent across the lineup in the supplied specs: Basic Warranty is 3 yr / 36,000 mi, Powertrain Warranty is 5 yr / 60,000 mi, Roadside Assistance is 3 yr / 36,000 mi, Rust-Through Warranty is 5 yr / unlimited mi, and Complimentary Maintenance is 1 yr / 12,000 mi.
No comparable Altima warranty or maintenance data is included in the provided rival facts. That does not mean Nissan lacks coverage; it means this article cannot make a verified comparison on that point.
Final assembly is listed as United States for every Accord trim. No final-assembly detail is provided for the Altima in this package.
Which buyer should choose which sedan?
Choose Accord if your decision starts with fuel economy, especially if a hybrid sedan is on the shopping list. The Accord EX-L hybrid posts the strongest MPG figures in the supplied data, while the Sport, Sport-L, and Touring hybrids still beat the provided Altima combined MPG rating.
Choose Accord LX if the goal is the lowest published Accord MSRP and you do not need the hybrid system. It starts at $28,395 and carries the same 16.7 cu.ft. cargo figure as the hybrid trims.
Consider Altima if all-wheel drive is the decisive requirement. The Accord data supplied here lists front-wheel drive across the board, while the Altima specs list all-wheel drive. That is the Nissan’s clearest counterpoint in this comparison.
If you are also comparing other midsize sedans against Accord, our 2026 Honda Accord vs Hyundai Sonata: Hybrid MPG or Conventional Gas? and 2026 Honda Accord vs Kia K5: Hybrid MPG or Gas Simplicity? guides cover adjacent cross-shops.
By the Numbers
Frequently Asked Questions
Based on the supplied specs, the Accord hybrid is worth considering if fuel economy matters more than all-wheel drive. The Accord EX-L is rated at 48 combined MPG, while the provided Altima spec is 28 combined MPG.
The Accord EX-L hybrid gets the best published MPG in the lineup: 51 city MPG, 44 highway MPG, and 48 combined MPG.
No Accord trim in the supplied data lists all-wheel drive. Every Accord trim shown is front-wheel drive, while the provided Altima specs list all-wheel drive.
The Accord has more listed cargo capacity in the supplied data: 16.7 cu.ft. for every Accord trim versus 15.4 cu ft for the Altima.
The cheapest Accord trim is the LX at $28,395. It uses a 1.5L turbocharged 4-cylinder, front-wheel drive, and a CVT.
Only partly. Accord prices are supplied, but no Altima MSRP is included in the provided rival facts, so a verified price comparison is not possible.
Bottom Line
The Accord is the stronger published-spec choice for hybrid availability, combined MPG, and listed cargo volume. The Altima’s clearest advantage in the supplied data is all-wheel drive.
Buy the Accord if you want a midsize sedan with hybrid availability, up to 48 combined MPG, and 16.7 cu.ft. of cargo capacity.
Skip it for the Altima if all-wheel drive is a higher priority than hybrid fuel economy.
Buy now if the Accord’s published pricing and MPG fit your needs; wait or compare further if you need verified Altima pricing, warranty details, or feature-by-feature equipment data.
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