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Vehicle Highlights
The 2011 Land Rover Range Rover Sport is largely unchanged following its freshening for the 2010 model year. This premium-midsize SUV seats 5 and shares some of its basic design with the 7-passenger Land Rover LR4.
Range Rover Sport comes as the HSE with a 375-horsepower 5.0-liter V8 engine. The top-end Supercharged has a 510-horsepower supercharged 5.0-liter V8. A 6-speed automatic is the sole transmission. All-wheel drive with low-range gearing is standard. It includes Land Rover's Terrain Response system, which automatically tailors AWD performance to specific off-road conditions. A locking rear differential is optional. Available safety features include ABS, traction control, antiskid system, front-side airbags, and curtain-side airbags. Hill-descent control is standard, as are a sunroof, dual-zone climate control, front- and rear-obstacle detection, a navigation system, and keyless entry/engine start. An adaptive air suspension is also standard. The optional Vision Assist Package includes adaptive headlights and a surround-camera system, which shows the driver nearly the entire circumference of the exterior on the navigation screen. The available LUX Package for HSE models includes heated front and rear seats, a heated steering wheel, adjustable side bolsters on the driver's seat, a cooler box in the center console, upgraded leather upholstery, and 20-inch wheels. Most of the features of the HSE LUX Package are standard on the Supercharged.
- Base MSRP: $59,645 - $74,545
- Invoice: $54,277 - $67,836
- Fuel Economy: 12 (Est) mpg City
- Consumer Guide Rating: 71/110
Model Prices
Trim Name | Retail Price | Dealer Invoice | Destination Charge |
---|---|---|---|
4WD 4dr HSE | $59,645 | $54,277 | $850 |
4WD 4dr HSE LUX | $59,645 | $54,277 | $850 |
4WD 4dr SC | $74,545 | $67,836 | $850 |
Pricing Key: Retail prices listed with each report are set by the vehicle's manufacturer. These figures appear on each car's federally mandated window sticker. Most price lists also include dealer-invoice prices. Dealer-invoice prices are what the dealer pays the manufacturer for the car and its factory-installed options. The destination charge is not included in the suggested-retail or dealer-invoice price and must be added to the cost of the vehicle. Car companies change prices frequently throughout the year. If the prices published do not match those on the vehicle's window sticker, the manufacturer has probably altered the price recently.
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