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HomeLifestyleRecipesToyota HiLux vs Mitsubishi Triton: Australia's Final Manuals

Toyota HiLux vs Mitsubishi Triton: Australia’s Final Manuals

Mitsubishi has confirmed it will only offer one manual version of its updated Triton for the 2026 model year – instead of three – making it one of only two three-pedal midsize cars available in Australia, alongside the Toyota HiLux.

The best-selling Ford Ranger ditched the manual transmission option entirely when the current generation was introduced in 2022, ending a series of gear-changers dating back to Lew Bandt’s famous Model 40 Coupe Utility, which pioneered the Australian ute genre in 1934.

While Ford’s global boss Jim Farley said Daily Sparkz Last month the manual version of its iconic Mustang sports car was forced out of the automaker’s “cold, dead hands,” but manual crew-cab 4x4s have proven not so sacred.

The Isuzu D-Max – the third best-selling small car in Australia last year behind the Ranger and HiLux – also dropped manual options in 2025.

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Fourth on Australia’s crowded commercial vehicle sales ladder was the Mitsubishi Triton, whose range of manual vehicles has since been reduced.

However, for its MY26 update, due in local showrooms next month, Mitsubishi has retained a single three-pedal model variant: the Triton GLX 4×4 double cab chassis chassis, priced at $47,490 before on-road costs.

“The trend to reduce the number of manual models is following the market, particularly in fleets where many now only require automatic models,” a Mitsubishi Australia spokesperson said Daily Sparkz.

“There continues to be some demand (around 11 percent) for the GLX Dual Cab Chassis 4×4 manual gearbox, targeting smaller fleet/private buyer types.”