2024 Dodge Durango vs 2024 Land Rover Discovery
Reliability comparison based on NHTSA recall and complaint records.
2024 Dodge Durango
2024 Land Rover Discovery
Stories from the shop
These come from different vehicle segments, which means we're not declaring a winner here. The 2024 Dodge Durango scores 4.5; the 2024 Land Rover Discovery scores 4.5. Different testing populations, different driving patterns, different categories of failure. Use the data below to understand what each one is good at and what each one breaks.
Going with the 2024 Land Rover Discovery? Watch the electrical. The 2024 Dodge Durango has fewer reports in those categories, so you'd be trading one set of weak spots for another.
Bottom line: these are different categories of vehicle. Pick based on what you actually need it for. We're showing the reliability data so you can factor in long-term ownership cost, not pick a winner.
Side-by-side by problem area
Common questions
Which is more reliable, the 2024 Dodge Durango or the 2024 Land Rover Discovery?
It's close to a tie. Both vehicles score within 0.2 points on our reliability index (4.5 vs 4.5). At this margin, either choice is defensible — base your decision on the specific failure modes that matter to you.
What goes wrong more often on the 2024 Dodge Durango?
On the categories we tracked, the 2024 Dodge Durango doesn't show meaningfully more complaints than the 2024 Land Rover Discovery. Both have similar issue patterns.
What goes wrong more often on the 2024 Land Rover Discovery?
Compared to the 2024 Dodge Durango, the 2024 Land Rover Discovery has more complaints in electrical. Whether that's a deal-breaker depends on the cost and severity — see the comparison table above for repair cost ranges.
Which has more recalls?
Both vehicles have 0 active recalls. Total recall count alone isn't a great signal — what matters is severity. See the recall counts by severity in the comparison table.
Is an extended warranty worth it on either of these?
Both vehicles are out of factory bumper-to-bumper coverage at this point. Combined repair exposure across the top problem categories runs around $850 on the higher-risk vehicle. A quality service contract typically costs $1,800–3,500 over 3 years, so a single major failure usually pays for the contract. The math favors warranty coverage on whichever vehicle you choose, especially if you plan to keep it past 100,000 miles.