Pre-Owned 2022 SubaruWRX Premium
- Exterior Color
- Crystal Black Silica
- Interior Color
- Carbon Black
- Odometer
- 26,306 miles
- Body/Seating
- Sedan/5 seats
- Fuel Economy
- 19/26 MPG City/Hwy
- Transmission
- Manual
- Drivetrain
- All-Wheel Drive
- Engine
- H-4 cyl
- VIN
- JF1VBAF66N9029206
- Stock Number
- 251689A
Highlighted Features
- Automatic temperature control
- Emergency communication system
- Wireless phone connectivity
- Exterior parking camera rear
- Front dual zone A/C
- Auto high-beam headlights
- Auto-dimming rearview mirror
- Split folding rear seat
- Heated front seats
- Perimeter/approach lights
- Remote keyless entry
- Steering wheel mounted audio controls
Included Packages & Accessories
Detailed Specifications
- 1-touch down
- 1-touch up
- Air conditioning
- Auto-dimming rearview mirror
- Automatic temperature control
- Driver door bin
- Driver vanity mirror
- Emergency communication system: STARLINK Safety and Security (Subscription Required)
- Front beverage holders
- Front dual zone A/C
- Illuminated entry
- Overhead console
- Passenger door bin
- Passenger vanity mirror
- Power windows
- Proximity key: doors and push button start
- Rear beverage holders
- Rear door bins
- Remote keyless entry
- Speed control
- Telescoping steering wheel
- Tilt steering wheel
- Alloy wheels
- Four wheel independent suspension
- Front anti-roll bar
- Front tires: 245/40YR18.0
- Power steering
- Rear anti-roll bar
- Rear tires: 245/40YR18.0
- Speed-sensing steering
- Sport suspension
- Tires: performance
- Wheel size: 18"
- 1st row LCD monitors: 2
- AM/FM radio: SiriusXM
- Primary LCD size: 11.6"
- Radio data system
- Satellite radio trial duration with new vehicle purchase (months): 4
- Smart device integration: STARLINK/Apple CarPlay/Android Auto
- Steering wheel mounted audio controls
- Wireless phone connectivity: Bluetooth
- Front center armrest
- Front seats: bucket
- Heated front seats
- Leather shift knob
- Leather steering wheel
- Max seating capacity: 5
- Rear seat center armrest
- Rear seats: bench
- Rear seats Folding position: fold forward seatback
- Seat Upholstery: cloth
- Split folding rear seat
- Sport steering wheel
- Compressor: intercooled turbo
- Cylinder configuration: H-4
- Drive type: all-wheel
- Engine liters: 2.4L
- Engine location: front
- Fuel economy city: 19mpg
- Fuel economy combined: 22mpg
- Fuel economy highway: 26mpg
- Fuel tank capacity: 16.6gal.
- Horsepower: 271hp @ 5,600RPM
- Hybrid traction battery type: none
- Number of valves: 16
- Recommended fuel: Premium Unleaded
- Standard fuel economy fuel type: gasoline
- Torque: 258 lb.-ft. @ 2,000RPM
- Transmission: 6 speed manual
- Variable valve control
- Bumpers: body-color
- Door mirrors: body-color
- Heated door mirrors
- Power door mirrors
- Rear cargo: trunk
- Spoiler
- Tailpipe finisher: polished
- Compression ratio: 10.60 to 1
- Engine bore x stroke: 94.0mm x 86.0mm (3.70" x 3.39")
- Engine displacement: 2.4 L
- Engine horsepower: 271hp @ 5,600RPM
- Engine torque: 258 lb.-ft. @ 2,000RPM
- Exterior body width: 1,826mm (71.9")
- Exterior height: 1,468mm (57.8")
- Exterior length: 4,669mm (183.8")
- Front headroom: 1,011mm (39.8")
- Front hiproom: 1,374mm (54.1")
- Front legroom: 1,095mm (43.1")
- Front shoulder room: 1,440mm (56.7")
- GVWR: 2,096kg (4,620lbs)
- Interior maximum rear cargo volume: 354 L (12 cu.ft.)
- Interior rear cargo volume: 354 L (12 cu.ft.)
- Passenger volume: 2,801L (98.9 cu.ft.)
- Rear headroom: 932mm (36.7")
- Rear hiproom: 1,252mm (49.3")
- Rear legroom: 927mm (36.5")
- Rear shoulder room: 1,412mm (55.6")
- Turning radius: 5.6m (18.4')
- Wheelbase: 2,672mm (105.2")
- Appearance: analog
- Auto high-beam headlights
- Exterior parking camera rear
- Front fog lights
- Front reading lights
- Fully automatic headlights
- Low tire pressure warning
- Outside temperature display
- Rear window defroster
- Tachometer
- Trip computer
- Variably intermittent wipers
- 4 wheel disc brakes
- ABS brakes
- Adjustable head restraints: driver and passenger w/tilt
- Brake assist
- Dual front impact airbags
- Dual front side impact airbags
- Electronic stability
- Ignition disable
- Knee airbag
- Occupant sensing airbag
- Overhead airbag
- Panic alarm
- Perimeter/approach lights
- Security system
- Tracker system
- Traction control
KBB.com Consumer Reviews

- 5.0
Fun ride!
By New Owner | on Saturday, February 11, 2023
Sporty, responsive and very fun to drive. If you are looking for a gas saver, then this is NOT the car for you. This car is for someone interested in feeling the road and handling every turn with precision! Such a joy to shift and hear the Boxer engine and cruise, in my opinion.⌠- 5.0
Best bang for your buck!
By ATLisWHEREweATÂ |Â on Wednesday, April 19, 2023
Love the way it handles and drives. Sounds awesome even with the stock exhaust. You can hear it inside the house during cold starts, so awesome! I donât think there is another car that compares in this price range. The AWD system is great and has no issues.⌠- 5.0
It's Still 1970 here!
By Steve | on Thursday, July 13, 2023
Among performance cars, on a scale from 1 to 10, todayâs WRX holds its head up proudly at a solid 9. If youâre old enough to remember the age before pollution controls and safety features, you wonât argue with me when I cite the 1971 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 as a 10 (âRelaxed at 140, undemanding at 150âŚcontrollable at 193âŚbut acceleration tends to fall off after 155,â according to the contemporary Road & Track article). Back to the WRX, I hadnât passed the break-in period at the time I started writing (see below), and the manual advises short shifting at 4000 until that point. Iâve been observing 3,000, because the WRX is turbocharged and boost comes on strongly a little above 3,000 so that stopping the acceleration precisely at 4,000 is a challenge. So, I didnât experience the full performance of the car at first. Nevertheless, its capabilities are obviously huge, triggering a flood of cliches from the sports cars of the 60âs-70âs. âCorners as if on railsâŚsteering direct and linear up to speeds where I donât want to find out if it understeers, oversteers, or just slides sideways at the limitâŚglued to the pavement.â Thereâs no body roll, no squeal from the tires, and acceleration even in top gear is pleasantly lively through 55, without ever exceeding 3,000 on the tachometer. When we consider that this âold fashionedâ performance comes in a 4-door sedan with comfortable accommodations (at least in front) for a tall driver, yet, unlike BMW sedans at the time I bought mine, you can get it with a manual transmission, I hardly think the basic design could be improved. The seats are firmly bolstered; the designers obviously thought hard cornering would be happening a lot of the time, and so it should! The WRX is a Gran Turismo, though, not a sports car, as befits something with 4 doors and a useful back seat. Its cabin is fairly quiet and you wonât be pulled over because the exhaust is making such a racket that youâre making cows miscarry. (You might be pulled over because youâre going 80 in a 35 mile zone but thatâs your own fault). Now letâs mention rideâŚanother 60âs clichĂŠ comes unbidden to my computer: âif you run over a coin, you can tell if itâs a dime or a quarter.â The ride is tightly snubbed and very hard. For a GT, I question whether this is necessary. A similar odd decision from the designers is to deliver the car with summer-only high performance tires. To their credit, the dealer suggested I buy all season tires because this would have to be my only car, a daily driver, I canât afford a sports car that I would take out only on nice days with another car getting the groceries. There are high performance, all season tires these days, and thatâs what itâs riding on now. They cost $1000. Hard to imagine how summer-only tires could be better. The all weather tires should be a factory option for those who donât have space to store the summer tires. On the other hand, itâs no longer 1968. Some things are better but others arenât as good as in the old days. The transmission has 6 forward speeds, which means itâs often not obvious with the optional âshort-throwâ shifter what gear itâs in. The manufacturer gave us a dashboard indicator to tell you that, but itâs low on the panel where itâs partly obscured by the steering wheel hub unless you adjust the tilt wheel and seat height carefully. (On the other hand itâs good there are many adjustments, unlike the sports cars of the 60âs). Worse, the indicator doesnât show anything until you let in the clutch, when itâs too late to correct having selected the wrong gate. I understand why this is: itâs a âsmartâ manual transmission that wonât let you start the engine till youâve floored the clutch, and the indicator evidently takes its signal from the same source so it canât show you anything till the transmission âknowsâ itâs in gear. Furthermore, the movement of the shifter is a little unnatural in the top two gears with a deliberate sideways push necessary to get 6th when shifting up from 3rd, instead of 4th, and if youâre trying to downshift to 5th, the synchromesh wants to give you 3rd. Fortunately itâs a close ratio transmission so you wonât cause much trouble by getting 4th instead of 6th. Finally, like most post-1975 cars, the brake and accelerator pedals are placed at different levels and too far apart for heel-and-toe downshifts while braking. This is the unhappy result of a series of âunintended accelerationâ incidents with automatic transmissions in the 70âs, and the decline of manual transmissions so that special pedal geometries for the latter are no longer practical from an industrial engineering point of view. Alas, my geriatric ankles are no longer up to the maneuvers necessary to double clutch while decelerating with this pedal geometry. The collar on the shifter you have to pull up on to engage reverse is another modern âidiot proofâ feature but I think it's helpful â with the sideways push you need to engage 6th it would be truly a disaster if you got reverse instead and the gates are really close. Moving on to more general interest items, shame on you, Subaru, for not giving us a boost gauge! I know where it should go, at the top of the panel between the analog gauges where the âmpg gaugeâ is now. I think the âmpg gaugeâ might actually be a vacuum gauge, so maybe it shows boost, but a direct calibration is necessary for any turbocharged engine. No one driving this kind of car cares about fuel consumption enough to look at the âmpg gauge.â Thereâs also a âcumulative mpgâ readout that seems to be applied when you reset the trip odometer. This is somewhat useful and shows Iâm getting about 28 mpg on the average, 31 highway, which for this lively a car is great! (Although, itâs premium fuel so itâs more expensive per gallon than most cars need). Then there are less important quirks. The turn signals, although thereâs a stalk where you expect, are electronic with no detents. This makes you wonder if the signal has been engaged, making you look at the flasher on the dashboard to be sure the signal is on. Signaling a lane change is particularly clumsy. The high beams are âsmartâ â they turn themselves off when they detect an oncoming car, back on when it goes by, and keep them off when you slow down to 25 mph going into town. While this is useful, on principle I donât think a GT should be âsmarterâ than its driver. Mercifully, the lane departure warning and other irritating alarms Iâve put up with on recent cars have been left off the base model I selected. The WRX is available with the continually variable transmission (CVT) that is used on many other Subarus, including my previous car, an Impreza. I think a CVT is a very sensible match for a turbo engine that has relatively low torque at low RPMâs, so if youâd rather not shift it yourself, you could rationalize that itâs probably faster with the CVT. Old timers like me often think their automatic is in the wrong gear so a manual transmission is essential. Then thereâs the trunk releaseâŚthe Impreza had a button on the outside while the WRX requires that you trigger the trunk release either from the dash or with your âsmartâ key fob. I prefer the button on the back of the car. And donât get me started on the seat belt alarm! Itâs a loud chime that becomes twice as loud if you ignore it for 10 seconds. And the low tire pressure warning still doesnât tell you which tire is low or whether itâs so low you have to pull over. The HVAC system has its own quirks. It has a thermostat so you dial in the temperature you want. This system has been available since 1990 to my certain knowledge, but itâs an example of âwhy-techâ rather than âhigh techâ (with apologies to Road & Track, which produced an article with that title). If you get into the WRX and itâs below freezing outside, youâll discover quickly that the thermostatâs lowest setting is 60. That results in hot air pouring out of the heater. You then have to pull over and take off your outer layer, or turn the heater off. Thereâs no analog lever you can open just slightly so youâre still comfortable in your winter clothes. Air conditioning seems to work better. But, the downside things are mostly nits. The WRX is an excellent GT. After Break-in: Yep, itâs fast! Taking the engine to 5,000 results in the scenery behind shrinking rapidly with a satisfying pressure against your back. However, itâs not an abrupt surge of boost, another reason there should be a boost gauge. Turbo lag is there but itâs subtle. Acceleration off the line is nothing special. If youâre old enough to remember a V-8 with 4-speed, youâll miss the need to back off on the throttle to keep wheelspin under control. In fact, with power going to all 4 wheels, itâs hard to get wheelspin regardless of technique. But in the midrange thereâs a satisfying surge of thrust limited only by the redline that approaches with remarkable speed to the accompaniment of a subdued burble from the exhaust. Full throttle acceleration through the gears shows another quirk â a noticeable squat as each gear âhooks upâ with the turbocharger. Possibly this is why such a hard suspension is necessary? The American solution would be a longer wheelbase but that would be a weight penalty and the car is big enough. Bottom line is the WRX is an excellent GT! Iâve taken a 200 mile road trip in it and while itâs not a 60âs sports car, it gives you a combination of comfort and performance that is as entertaining as anything available today. If you like going fast, the WRX is for you!âŚ
Dealer Notes
*Why Buy at McGee Toyota of Claremont*
-- Complete buy online experience through Toyota SmartPath
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Clean CARFAX.
2022 Subaru WRX Premium Premium 4D Sedan Crystal Black Silica AWD 6-Speed Manual 2.4L DOHC 19/26 City/Highway MPG
McGee Toyota of Claremont is proud to present you with another True Market Priced Pre-Owned Vehicle. This 2022 Subaru WRX Premium is loaded with the following Factory Options: Standard Model (6MT), 4-Wheel Disc Brakes, 6 Speakers, ABS brakes, Air Conditioning, Alloy wheels, AM/FM radio: SiriusXM, Auto High-beam Headlights, Auto-dimming Rear-View mirror, Automatic temperature control, Brake assist, Bumpers: body-color, Cloth Upholstery w/Red Stitching, Driver door bin, Driver vanity mirror, Dual front impact airbags, Dual front side impact airbags, Electronic Stability Control, Emergency communication system: STARLINK Safety and Security (Subscription Required), Exterior Parking Camera Rear, Four wheel independent suspension, Front anti-roll bar, Front Bucket Seats, Front Center Armrest, Front dual zone A/C, Front fog lights, Front reading lights, Fully automatic headlights, Heated door mirrors, Heated front seats, Illuminated entry, Knee airbag, Leather Shift Knob, Leather steering wheel, Low tire pressure warning, Occupant sensing airbag, Outside temperature display, Overhead airbag, Overhead console, Panic alarm, Passenger door bin, Passenger vanity mirror, Performance Design Heated Front Bucket Seats, Power door mirrors, Power steering, Power windows, Radio data system, Radio: Subaru STARLINK 11.6" Multimedia Plus Sys, Rear anti-roll bar, Rear seat center armrest, Rear window defroster, Remote keyless entry, Security system, Speed control, Speed-sensing steering, Split folding rear seat, Spoiler, Sport steering wheel, STARLINK/Apple CarPlay/Android Auto, Steering wheel mounted audio controls, Tachometer, Telescoping steering wheel, Tilt steering wheel, Traction control, Trip computer, Variably intermittent wipers, and Wheels: 18" x 8.5" Dark Gray Finish Alum Alloy!!
Awards:
* ALG Residual Value Awards, Residual Value Awards
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