Altima Gets Another Year
Rumors have been swirling for months that the Nissan Altima was on its way out, with dealers and enthusiasts both expecting the axe to fall after this model year. Sedans just aren’t the hot ticket anymore, and Nissan even hinted that both the Altima and the smaller Versa could be dropped – but that’s not happening yet. Nissan just confirmed the Altima will return for 2026 with a trimmed-down lineup.
Rather than keeping four or five trims, the 2026 Altima shifts to just SV and SR trims, each offered with front-wheel drive or Nissan’s optional Intelligent All-Wheel Drive. The turbocharged 2.0-liter engine that once gave the Altima some pep didn't return after leaving the lineup in 2025, which means the 2.5-liter four-cylinder is once again the sole powertrain for 2026. Safety tech and infotainment carry over in familiar form, and the car stays squarely on the affordable side of the segment.
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What’s Available in 2026?
The Altima SV comes well-equipped out of the box: 17-inch alloys, an 8-inch touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, remote start, and Nissan’s full Safety Shield 360 suite. That means you get automatic emergency braking, blind-spot warning, rear cross-traffic alert, and lane departure warning as standard. If you want more, the SV Special Edition and SV Premium packages add bigger screens, dual-zone climate, heated seats, and ProPILOT Assist.
Meanwhile, the SR trim gets a bigger set of 19-inch wheels, paddle shifters, a sport-tuned suspension, and contrast-stitched sport seats. The 12.3-inch infotainment screen with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto is now standard here. Want something bolder? The new SR Midnight Edition brings blacked-out trim, dark badges, black wheels, and a two-tone roof, giving the Altima a more aggressive look without bumping it into luxury-territory pricing.
Here’s how the 2026 Nissan Altima trims and pricing break down:
Altima SV | FWD | $28,825 |
Altima SV | AWD | $30,225 |
Altima SR | FWD | $30,325 |
Altima SR | AWD | $31,725 |
These figures don’t include destination and handling, which adds roughly $1,245. Even with destination, the base Altima stays under $30,000, and the SR with AWD lands just above $31,000.
Steven Paul
Pricing Context Versus Midsize Rivals
Stacking the Altima up against its main rivals paints a picture that favors Nissan. The 2026 Toyota Camry is hybrid-only, starting at about $30,195 for the base model and climbing into the mid-$30,000s for higher trims. That’s a bit pricier than the Altima’s entry point, but you do get hybrid efficiency and plenty of standard tech for the money.
Honda hasn’t dropped full 2026 Accord pricing yet, but early estimates put it in the low $30,000s, too. Expect it to line up with, or maybe just edge above, the Altima once you factor in destination and options.
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