Fullsize Pickup Truck

Nissan Titan Gone After 2024

The 2024 Nissan Titan seen from a front quarter angleThe 2024 Nissan Titan will start at $45,770. The 2025 Nissan Titan will not exist.

Nissan made back-to-back announcements about its full-size truck late last week. One praised the 2024 Titan as having “the most standard horsepower and safety features in its class.” The other announced that the Titan and its heavy-duty Titan XD variant will exit the market after the 2024 model year.

The 2024 Titan

For the new model year, Nissan will trim some fat from the Titan lineup. The selection of trim levels drops from 15 in 2023 to nine in 2024. Gone are several rear-wheel-drive options.

A new bronze package appears, with “black and bronze visual enhancements, including bronze 20-inch wheels, a gloss-black front grille surround, and black front bumper, a sport bar and Bronze Edition floor mats.” Otherwise, there are no substantive changes for the last of the Titans.

2024 Titan Pricing:

Nissan also charges a $1,895 destination and handling fee on the Titan.

Trim Level MSRP
SV Crew Cab 4×2 $45,770
Platinum Reserve Crew Cab 4×2 $59,440
SV King Cab 4×4 $49,140
SV Crew Cab 4×4 $48,960
PRO-4X Crew Cab 4×4 $53,580
Platinum Reserve Crew Cab 4×4 $62,750
XD SV Crew Cab 4×4 $51,930
XD Pro-4X Crew Cab 4×4 $57,890
XD Platinum Reserve Crew Cab 4×4 $65,840

Titanic History

Nissan introduced the Titan in late 2003 in an attempt to break into the lucrative American full-size truck category. But the Titan never lived up to its name as a force in the market. Our expert test driver says the current model “doesn’t have the sales numbers of its more mainstream rivals, but it’s a good value for many drivers in the market for a new truck.”

A standard V8 – a rarity in a time when most manufacturers use half as many cylinders in their base trucks – gives it 400 horsepower in even its cheapest incarnation. But the power is misleading – the truck’s maximum tow rating of 9,320 pounds and maximum payload capacity of 1,710 pounds are underwhelming for a big truck with eight cylinders.

Perhaps as a result, Nissan has sold fewer than 2,000 Titans several months in 2023. Ford sells more than 2,000 F-150 pickups most days.

So, Nissan will end Titan production after 2024. A Nissan spokesperson told multiple media outlets, “Production of the Nissan Titan is scheduled to end summer 2024 at our Canton plant in Mississippi. Under Nissan’s Ambition 2030 vision of an electrified future, we are accelerating the process of transforming the Canton plant with the latest in EV manufacturing technology.”