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2010–2024

How many miles does a Subaru Outback last?

By the DealScan team · Updated 2026-06-12

Quick answer

200,000-mile Outbacks are common in Subaru country. Oil consumption history and CVT service matter more than mileage.

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What decides how long a Outback lasts

With a Subaru Outback, maintenance records matter far more than the number on the odometer. The issues below are what actually shorten a Outback's life when they go unaddressed — check for them before you judge a car by its mileage.

  • 2013–2015 FB25: oil consumption — extended warranty applied; check for the oil-consumption test paperwork
  • 2010–2012 EJ25: head gasket seepage — look for oil/coolant residue on the block edges
  • CVT (2010+): service-dependent; Subaru extended CVT coverage on many years
  • AWD requires matched tires — measure tread depth on all four

What to verify on a high-mileage Outback

  • Oil consumption test/repair records (2013–2015)
  • Head gasket edges for seepage (2010–2012)
  • CVT fluid service and warranty status
  • Four tires of matching brand and tread depth

Subaru Outback mileage FAQ

How many miles does a Subaru Outback last?

200,000-mile Outbacks are common in Subaru country. Oil consumption history and CVT service matter more than mileage.

What mileage is too high for a used Subaru Outback?

There is no single cutoff. 200,000-mile Outbacks are common in Subaru country. Oil consumption history and CVT service matter more than mileage. A documented, well-maintained example at higher mileage is usually a safer buy than a neglected low-mileage one.

Is a high-mileage Subaru Outback worth buying?

On a used Subaru Outback, the era determines the check: 2010–2012 2.5L engines carry the classic head-gasket and oil-consumption risks, 2013–2015 had piston-ring oil consumption (class action and extended coverage), and CVT cars should have fluid service plus Subaru's extended CVT warranty history verified. AWD also means four matched tires — uneven tread is a real cost.

Found a Outback listing? Check the actual car.

Mileage is only half the story — price and history decide the deal. Paste the ad link or text into the analyzer and DealScan scores the deal, flags mileage-versus-condition mismatches, and lists the questions worth asking this seller.

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