2016 INFINITI QX60

3.5L V6AWDCVTgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$13,447 maintenance + known platform issues
~$2,689/yr · 220¢/mile equivalent · $5,159 maintenance + $7,453 expected platform issues
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2.5L Supercharged I4 Hybrid
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 2016 QX60 is Nissan's CVT-8 transmission paired with the VQ35 V6 (hybrid is rare). The CVT is the Achilles' heel here, failing catastrophically between 60k-120k miles, while the VQ35 can suffer from timing chain wear and valve body failures that often get misdiagnosed as transmission issues.

CVT Transmission Failure (Judder, Slipping, Complete Failure)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Shuddering or lurching during acceleration, especially 15-40 mph, Whining or grinding noise from transmission, Hesitation when accelerating from stop, Check engine light with P17F0 (CVT ratio error) or P0868 codes, Sudden loss of power or limp mode
Fix: CVT replacement or rebuild required. Nissan extended warranty to 10yr/120k on some units but many 2016s fall outside coverage. Replacement CVT is 12-16 hours labor plus $3,500-4,500 in parts. Used/reman units available but risky. Fluid changes every 30k can delay but not prevent failure on affected units.
Estimated cost: $5,000-7,500

Timing Chain Stretch and Guide Failure (VQ35)

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Cold-start rattle for 2-5 seconds that worsens over time, Check engine light with P0011, P0021 (cam timing over-advanced), Rough idle and reduced power, Metal shavings in oil, Catastrophic failure: bent valves and piston damage if chain jumps
Fix: Requires front timing cover removal, both chains, tensioners, guides, and upper oil pan gasket replacement. This is 18-22 hours labor on the QX60 due to tight engine bay. If chain jumped timing, add valve work or full head rebuild. Parts run $800-1,200 for quality kit.
Estimated cost: $3,000-5,000

CVT Cooler Line Leaks

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 50,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Red transmission fluid puddle under vehicle, usually passenger side, Burnt smell from fluid hitting exhaust, Low CVT fluid level causes erratic shifting, Fluid visible on frame rail or subframe
Fix: Cooler lines corrode where they connect to radiator and transmission. Some fail at crimp fittings. Requires replacement of hard lines and sometimes auxiliary cooler. 3-5 hours labor plus $300-600 parts. Must flush CVT if contaminated with coolant (radiator leak scenario adds $800-1,200).
Estimated cost: $600-1,200

Valve Body Solenoid Failure

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-110,000 mi
Symptoms: Harsh or delayed engagement into drive or reverse, Flare on 2-3 or 3-4 shift feel (not actual gears, CVT ratio change), Intermittent limp mode, Codes P0746, P0776 (pressure control solenoid), Can mimic full CVT failure but far cheaper fix
Fix: Valve body removal and solenoid pack replacement. Some techs replace entire valve body ($1,800-2,400 parts) but individual solenoids can be swapped for $400-700 parts. 6-9 hours labor to drop pan, valve body, replace, and relearn. Critical: confirm with pressure tests before assuming full CVT replacement needed.
Estimated cost: $1,200-3,000

Front Differential Mount Failure (AWD)

Occasional · low severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunk when shifting into drive or reverse, Vibration during acceleration, Visible oil seepage from transfer case/front diff area, Driveline shudder on takeoff
Fix: Front diff mount cracks or tears, allowing excessive movement. Must support engine/transmission from above, unbolt and replace mount. Sometimes coincides with transfer case oil leak requiring seal replacement. 3-4 hours labor, $250-400 parts.
Estimated cost: $500-900

Radiator Failure with CVT Cross-Contamination

Rare · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Coolant in CVT fluid (strawberry milkshake appearance in reservoir), Transmission overheating and failure symptoms, Coolant loss with no external leak, White smoke from exhaust if severe
Fix: Internal radiator failure allows coolant into CVT cooler circuit. Requires radiator replacement, complete CVT fluid flush (often multiple times), and if contamination severe, CVT replacement. Radiator alone is 4-5 hours, but CVT damage assessment adds diagnosis time. Catch early and you save the CVT with $1,500 flush job; catch late and you're buying a transmission.
Estimated cost: $1,500-7,000
Owner tips
  • Change CVT fluid every 30,000 miles with Nissan NS-3 fluid regardless of 'lifetime fill' claims—it buys time but won't prevent failure on weak units
  • Listen for cold-start rattle on VQ35 engines—address timing chain before 100k to avoid catastrophic failure
  • Check CVT cooler lines during every oil change; they corrode from underneath and leak without warning
  • AWD models: inspect front diff mount annually; a $600 fix prevents $2,000 in driveline damage
  • If buying used, get pre-purchase inspection focusing on CVT function test and timing chain noise—walk away from any cold-start rattle or shift hesitation
Hard pass unless under 50k miles with documented CVT fluid changes and extended warranty; budget $5k-7k for inevitable CVT replacement otherwise—better Lexus RX or Honda Pilot options exist for reliability.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
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