Junkyard Find: 1986 Toyota Cressida Wagon

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The Toyota Cressida is now at its moment of peak junkyard availability, with most examples finally getting to the point at which repairs just aren’t justified by the car’s value. The Cressida was an extremely well-built car by 1980s standards, and a pretty good car even through our jaded 21st-century eyes (which view vehicles that get scrapped before 200,000 miles as suspiciously crappy and/or abused). We’ve seen this ’80, this ’82 this ’84, this ’87, this ’89, and this ’92 in the Junkyard Find Series so far, but today’s Cressida is the first wagon.

This one had 234,392 miles on the clock when it finally took that last tow-truck ride.

I shot this in Northern California in January, and this temporary registration expired in August. That means the car was probably still legal when it got towed away for parking tickets and its fines not paid (most likely) or sold for scrap.

No rust. None at all. Fans of old Japanese cars in rusty areas, you’d better come west and rescue some stuff like this.

The same DOHC 5M-GE engine that Supras got. In fact, the whole car is full of Supra drivetrain and suspension hardware.

Worth restoring or converting into a drift car? Not in California!








Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Threeer Threeer on Mar 13, 2014

    I still see a fair number of Cressidas running around here in Riyadh...not that I'm in a position to buy one, though. I always thought that the Cressida with a 6 cylinder made for a decent family hauler, along with the fact that they seemed to be built to last two forevers.

  • AllThumbs AllThumbs on Mar 14, 2014

    Maybe I just had a bad one, but the only Cressida I ever had was a '90 or so work car I had from '92-'95 and I was singularly unimpressed. I'm a guy who has always had at least one Toyota among my cars since 1984 (I also had a South African van/truck Toyota called the Venture as my personal car at the time I had the Cressida), and that Cressida was my least favorite of them all. It worked fine and was comfy and all that, but it seemed way too ponderous for a Toyota, even though I get it that they were shooting for luxury. In fact-- and this is coming from a guy who LOVES Toyotas-- it suddenly reminds me of the 1991 Dodge Diplomat I currently own.

  • ToolGuy Please allow me to listen to the podcast before commenting. (This is the way my mind works, please forgive me.)
  • ToolGuy My ancient sedan (19 years lol) matches the turbo Mazda 0-60 (on paper) while delivering better highway fuel economy, so let's just say I don't see a compelling reason to 'upgrade' and by the way HOW HAVE ICE POWERTRAIN ENGINEERS BEEN SPENDING THEIR TIME never mind I think I know. 😉
  • FreedMike This was the Official Affluent-Mom Character Mobile in just about every TV show and movie in the Aughts.
  • Offbeat Oddity The RAV4, and I say this as someone who currently owns a 2014 CR-V. My aunt has a 2018 CR-V that has had a lot of electrical issues, and I don't trust the turbo and CVT to last as long as Toyota's NA engine and 8-speed automatic. Plus, the RAV4 looks sportier and doesn't have the huge front overhang.
  • Offbeat Oddity I'd go with Mazda, especially now that there's no more cylinder deactivation on the 2024 NA motor. It's around $4-5k less than the Toyota with similar equipment, and I think reliability is probably very close between them.Regarding reliability, hasn't this generation of RAV4 taken a hit? I know it's not rated as highly in Consumer Reports, and there were teething issues during the first few years. I'm surprised it's not mentioned in more reviews- even Jack Baruth's. I'm sure the bugs have been worked out by now, though.
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