Toyota is getting ready to shrink its LandCruiser legacy into a new size. The 2026 LandCruiser FJ, already nicknamed the “baby LandCruiser”, is on track for launch in Japan by mid-2026. It’s designed to slot into the growing market for compact adventure SUVs, taking aim at the likes of the Suzuki Jimny and Renault Duster, but with Toyota’s unmistakable 4×4 DNA.
From Concept Sketch to Driveway Ready
Back in 2022, Toyota teased the world with the Compact Cruiser EV concept, a playful, boxy little SUV that felt like a modern callback to the much-loved FJ Cruiser. Fast-forward three years, and the production version is no longer a what-if. Patent images that surfaced in June 2025 show the real deal: a five-door, upright SUV with all the squared-off charm and LandCruiser design cues you’d expect.
It looks tough, it looks familiar, and it looks like Toyota actually wants this thing to get dirty.
Under the Hood: Nothing Fancy, Just Reliable
Reports from Japan suggest the FJ won’t be running anything new or flashy. Instead, Toyota is going with its tried-and-tested 2.7-litre four-cylinder petrol engine, the same one you’ll find in the HiLux Workmate. On paper, it makes 122kW and 245Nm, which isn’t headline-grabbing—but stack it against the Jimny’s 1.5-litre (75kW/130Nm) and suddenly the baby Cruiser looks like a heavyweight.
Toyota has apparently decided against offering its 2.8-litre turbo-diesel, partly because of supply headaches. The absence of the newer 2.4-litre turbo-diesel—already used in smaller trucks like the HiLux Champ—is a head-scratcher, especially since the FJ is said to share Toyota’s IMV ladder-frame chassis. Still, the petrol setup signals Toyota wants this model to be simple, rugged, and broadly reliable.
Size Matters: Bigger Than a Jimny, Still Compact
At 4.35 metres long, the LandCruiser FJ is noticeably larger than the Jimny but roughly the same size as the Corolla Cross. That makes it compact enough for city life while giving it more space and presence than its pint-sized rival. The key difference? Where the Corolla Cross is built for comfort and fuel efficiency, the FJ is being pitched as a true off-roader in a small package. Think short overhangs, ladder-frame bones, and a shape that screams “take me off the tarmac.”
Who’s Going to Buy This?
Toyota seems to be chasing two groups: younger drivers who like the idea of an affordable adventure SUV, and old-school LandCruiser fans who still miss the discontinued FJ Cruiser. It’s practical where the Jimny isn’t, yet still carries the fun, toy-like charm that makes small off-roaders so appealing.
If you’ve ever wanted a LandCruiser but didn’t need (or couldn’t stomach) the size and price of a Prado or 300 Series, this could be the sweet spot.
What’s Next
The Japanese launch is pencilled in for Q2 2026, and while global availability hasn’t been locked in, Toyota would be leaving money on the table if it didn’t bring the FJ to markets like Australia, Southeast Asia, and maybe even parts of Europe.
The way it’s shaping up, the LandCruiser FJ won’t just be a baby Cruiser. It could be the most approachable LandCruiser in years—smaller, simpler, and ready to make off-roading less of an exclusive club.




