Kelley Blue Book


HomeJeep
2010 Jeep Commander

Used 2010 Jeep Commander

4.1
rating
Consumer
Write a Review
Save this car
2010 Jeep Commander Exterior: 0
2010
2009
Fuel Economy
15 - 16 combined mpg
Horsepower
210 - 357 hp
Seating
7
Cargo Volume
68.5 cu ft
Next Steps: Shopping for this car?
See Cars for Sale
Build & Price
Get My Car's Value

2010 Jeep Commander Review

KBB Editors

By KBB Editors

Updated December 23, 2019

Our editors drive and evaluate hundreds of new cars every single year, turning thousands of miles and countless hours behind the wheel into helpful reviews, ratings, and comparisons. They also have lives outside of work, or so they think. You’d be surprised what you can learn by hauling a dirt bike, hunting for a wayward sippy cup, or just packing the trunk full of groceries.

Pros

This is the SUV for you if you like the bolted-together industrial look, want seven-passenger capacity and have an occasional desire for serious off-road capability. If you covet Jeep’s tough "Trail Rated" image and reputation in a quiet, fully-equipped, leather-lined cabin, you’ll like the 2010 Jeep Commander all the more.

Cons

If your SUV needs are more about fashion than function, and/or your driving preferences are more attuned to on-road ride and handling than off-road aptitude, this may not be the car for you. There are sleeker, less-expensive and more fuel-efficient SUV and crossover wagon choices available to get you around town.

What's New?

For 2010, Limited trims now have as standard a 5.7-liter V8, power rear liftgate and body-colored exterior mirrors. The Overland trim has been dropped from the Commander line up, as has the 4.7-liter V8 engine.

Jeep purists never got over the loss of the original Cherokee, so it’s no surprise the 2010 Jeep Commander bears a striking resemblance to the former’s beloved and boxy design. Unlike the old Cherokee, the Commander offers far better interior accommodations, including a third-row seat. The Commander is Jeep’s largest SUV to date and, although it shares much of its chassis and suspension with the Grand Cherokee (as well as the availability of a HEMI V8 engine), no one will ever mistake the two. While the Commander doesn’t offer the same cargo space as a full-sized Chevrolet Tahoe or Ford Expedition, it should suit most families looking for a workable combination of comfort, power and superior off-road ability.

Used 2010 Jeep Commander Pricing

Used 2010 Jeep Commander pricing starts at $5,780 for the Commander Sport Utility 4D, which had a starting MSRP of $34,295 when new. The range-topping 2010 Commander Limited Sport Utility 4D starts at $7,842 today, originally priced from $43,610.

Original MSRP
KBB Fair Purchase Price (nat'l average)
$34,295
$5,780
$43,610
$7,842

The Kelley Blue Book Fair Purchase Price for any individual used vehicle can vary greatly according to mileage, condition, location, and other factors. The prices here reflect what buyers are currently paying for used 2010 Jeep Commander models in typical condition when purchasing from a dealership. These prices are updated weekly.

Driving the Used 2010 Jeep Commander

The standard 3.7-liter V6 is adequate on- or off-road with light passenger and cargo loads, but would be underpowered with heavier loads or at higher altitudes. Steering is nicely weighted and fairly precise, while the on-road ride is surprisingly quiet and smooth. Braking is strong and fade-free. The hot-rod HEMI V8 is delightfully smooth and powerful at any speed, as you would expect. Given its hefty weight and high center of gravity, on-road cornering is not the Commander’s forte, but truly impressive off-road capability is. Also impressive are the Limited’s leather- and woodgrain-trimmed interior and ultra-comfortable front bucket seats.

Interior Comfort

Jeep’s first three-row vehicle provides good two-row room, but we wouldn’t want to spend much time in that way-back third row with just 28.9 inches of legroom and 35.7 inches of headroom. Behind it are grocery hooks and a bin with a clever three-way lid, but little cargo capacity with the seatbacks up. Echoing the exterior’s "bold, rugged, constructed" theme, the base Commander cabin has cloth seats and a nicely textured upper dash. Sixteen Allen-head screws retain eight large, round air vents, while simulated Allen heads encircle the gearshift knob and steering wheel hub. The second row splits 40/20/40, the third row 50/50, and both fold flat for cargo.

Exterior Styling

While the Commander’s shape is cinder-block blunt, much wind-tunnel effort has been devoted to reducing aerodynamic drag for fuel efficiency and interior quietness. The big, blocky outside mirrors, for example, are virtually invisible to the wind, according to the vehicle’s chief designer. The roof is raised 3.15 inches, with the upturn beginning over the second row to provide more headroom. The roof-rack stanchions resemble buttress-style bridge supports, and five large simulated Allen screws appear to hold on each trapezoidal fender flare. The uplevel Limited wears chrome on its signature seven-slot grille, front fascia, body-side moldings, roof-rail crossbars and the two large liftgate grab handles that assist access to rooftop cargo.

Favorite Features

HEMI V8 Engine
This smooth and muscular powerplant, named for its ’50s high-performance ancestors, is an always-eager sweetheart, electronically tethered to your throttle foot. Despite its size, power and simple OHV (pushrod) valvetrain, it delivers EPA fuel economy ratings of 14 miles per gallon city and 20 miles per gallon highway, due to its Multi-Displacement System (MDS), which transparently disables four of its eight cylinders at light loads to conserve fuel.

Quadra-Drive II Active Full-Time Four-Wheel Drive
Jeep’s most advanced four-wheel-drive technology, Quadra-Drive II uses front and rear Electronic Slip Differentials (ELSDs) to transfer up to all available torque to any individual wheel with traction. Standard with the HEMI V8 and available with the other two engines, it is as capable in difficult conditions as any system, either on or off the road.

Standard Features

The 2010 Jeep Commander Sport boasts a 3.7-liter V6 engine, Quadra-Trac 1 (4×4 models), 17-inch machined-face wheels with painted pockets, power windows, heated power mirrors, air conditioning, cruise control, AM/FM/CD six-speaker audio and rear park assist. Its standard safety package includes multi-stage front and three-row side-curtain airbags, tire pressure monitoring and Electronic Stability Control (ESC) with "Roll Mitigation" that senses an impending roll-over and works to prevent it. The loaded Limited adds a 5.7-liter V8 engine, leather seats with heated fronts and a four-way power passenger’s seat, leather-wrapped steering wheel, dual-zone automatic climate control, rear heating and air conditioning, power-adjustable pedals, CD/DVD/HDD/MP3 player with navigation, SIRIUS Satellite Radio, power flip-up liftgate glass, power sun roof, ParkView rear back-up camera and twin tinted second-row skylights.

Factory Options

Available options include driver’s eight-way and passenger’s four-way power seats, an engine block heater, 20G hard drive audio and navigation system, ParkView rear backup camera, auto-leveling HID headlights, rain-sensing wipers, power rear liftgate, Uconnect hands-free communication system, rear heating and air conditioning, rear-seat DVD with nine-inch screen and a "popular equipment group" that includes heated front seats, power-adjustable pedals, remote start and a 115-volt outlet. Four-wheel-drive choices include Quadra-Trac I (standard on four-wheel drive Sport), Quadra-Trac II (standard on four-wheel drive Limited) and Quadra-Drive II.

Engine & Transmission

Chrysler’s modern HEMI V8 gets all the attention, but it is costly and, despite the best efforts of its fuel-saving MDS, less fuel-efficient than its more affordable stablemates. Potential buyers should test drive and consider the more frugal V6, depending upon their anticipated towing and hauling needs. The HEMI is more glamorous and more fun when you tickle its throttle, but you don’t need 357 horses to cruise around town on level ground.

3.7-liter V6
210 horsepower @ 5200 rpm
235 lb.-ft. of torque @ 4000 rpm
EPA city/highway fuel economy: 15/20 (2WD), 14/19 (4WD)

5.7-liter V8 HEMI
357 horsepower @ 5200 rpm
389 lb.-ft. of torque @ 4350 rpm
EPA city/highway fuel economy: 14/20 (2WD), 13/19 (4WD)


What did you think of this review?

KBB Vehicle Review and Rating Methodology

Our Expert Ratings come from hours of both driving and number crunching to make sure that you choose the best car for you. We comprehensively experience and analyze every new SUV, car, truck, or minivan for sale in the U.S. and compare it to its competitors. When all that dust settles, we have our ratings.

We require new ratings every time an all-new vehicle or a new generation of an existing vehicle comes out. Additionally, we reassess those ratings when a new-generation vehicle receives a mid-cycle refresh — basically, sprucing up a car in the middle of its product cycle (typically, around the 2-3 years mark) with a minor facelift, often with updates to features and technology.

Rather than pulling random numbers out of the air or off some meaningless checklist, KBB’s editors rank a vehicle to where it belongs in its class. Before any car earns its KBB rating, it must prove itself to be better (or worse) than the other cars it’s competing against as it tries to get you to spend your money buying or leasing.

Our editors drive and live with a given vehicle. We ask all the right questions about the interior, the exterior, the engine and powertrain, the ride and handling, the features, the comfort, and of course, about the price. Does it serve the purpose for which it was built? (Whether that purpose is commuting efficiently to and from work in the city, keeping your family safe, making you feel like you’ve made it to the top — or that you’re on your way — or making you feel like you’ve finally found just the right partner for your lifestyle.)

We take each vehicle we test through the mundane — parking, lane-changing, backing up, cargo space and loading — as well as the essential — acceleration, braking, handling, interior quiet and comfort, build quality, materials quality, reliability.

More About How We Rate Vehicles
Advertisement

2010 Jeep Commander
KBB.com Consumer Reviews

4.1
Consumer Rating
Based on 713 Consumer Reviews
Write a Review
88%Recommend this vehicle
5
50%
5
50%
4
27%
4
27%
3
9%
3
9%
2
8%
2
8%
1
5%
1
5%
Value
4.1
Performance
4.3
Quality
4.2
Comfort
4.4
Reliability
4.3
Styling
4.5

Trending Topics in KBB.com Consumer Reviews

2010 Jeep Commander Styles

Lowest-Priced

Sport Utility 4D

16 MPG
Combined Fuel Economy
7
Seating
210 @ 5200 RPM
Horsepower
V6, 3.7 Liter
Engine

Limited Sport Utility 4D

15 MPG
Combined Fuel Economy
7
Seating
357 @ 5200 RPM
Horsepower
V8, HEMI, 5.7 Liter
Engine
See Full Specs for All 2010 Jeep Commander Styles

Specifications

Dimensions, Weights & Capacities

Curb Weight
4710 lbs.
EPA Passenger
113.0 cu.ft.
Fuel Capacity
21.1 gallons
Front Head Room
42.1 inches
Front Leg Room
41.7 inches
Max Seating Capacity
7
Minimum Ground Clearance
8.4 inches
Overall Length
188.5 inches
Front Shoulder Room
59.0 inches
Towing Capacity, Maximum
6500 lbs.
Trunk or Cargo Capacity
68.5 cu.ft.
Turning Diameter
38.7 feet
Wheel Base
109.5 inches
Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR)
6400 lbs.
Payload Capacity
1280 lbs.
Width with mirrors
74.8 inches

Exterior

Alloy Wheels
Available
Fog Lights
Available
Moon Roof/Sun Roof
Available
Number of Doors
4 doors
Privacy Glass
Available
Roof Rails
Available

Fuel Economy

City
14 mpg
Highway
19 mpg
Combined
16 mpg

Mechanical

Drivetrain
4WD
Transmission Type
Automatic
5 speed
Available
Recommended Fuel
Regular
Hill Descent Control
Available
Hill Start Assist
Available

Performance

Horsepower
210 @ 5200 RPM
Torque
235 @ 4000 rpm
Engine
V6, 3.7 Liter

Warranty

Basic
3 years / 36000 miles
Powertrain
5 years / 100000 miles
Corrosion
3 years / Unlimited miles

Comfort & Convenience

  • Climate Control Air Conditioning

Entertainment

  • DVD Entertainment System
  • iPod Connector
  • MP3 Player
  • Satellite Radio
  • CD Player

Interior

  • Leather-Wrapped Steering Wheel
  • Power Windows
  • Rear Window Defroster
  • Power Outlet
  • Steering Wheel Controls
  • Tilt Steering Wheel
  • Tilt/Telescoping Steering Wheel

Seating

  • Third Row Seat
  • Leather Seats
  • Folding Rear Seat
  • Cloth Seats
  • Power Driver's Seat

Technology

  • Cruise Control
  • Hands Free Phone
  • Remote Keyless Entry
  • Voice Recognition System
  • Real-Time Traffic Information

2010 Jeep Commander Safety

2010 Jeep Commander Safety Technology

  • Child Door Locks
  • Child Seat Anchors
  • Driver Airbag
  • Passenger Airbag
  • Stability Control
  • Traction Control
  • Emergency & Security Services
  • Front Head Curtain Airbag
  • Front Side Airbag
  • Rear Head Curtain Airbag
  • Rear Parking Sensors
Not Available
Crash Test Rating
Provided by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
Driver Front
5.0
Passenger Front
5.0
Rollover Rating
3.0

Compare to Similar Vehicles

Used 2010
Jeep Commander
Used 2012
Suzuki Grand Vitara
Used 2011
Nissan Murano
Used 2010
Saturn Outlook
See Details
Price$6,280$5,916
$5,913
$5,944
KBB.com Rating
N/A
2.5
3.7
N/A
Consumer Rating
4.1
4.3
4.4
4.3
Fuel Economy
City 14/Hwy 19/Comb 16 MPG
City 19/Hwy 26/Comb 22 MPG
City 18/Hwy 23/Comb 20 MPG
City 17/Hwy 24/Comb 19 MPG
Fuel Type
Gas
Gas
Gas
Gas
Safety Rating
N/A
N/A
4.0
N/A
Seating Capacity7558
Basic Warranty
3 years or 36000 miles
3 years or 36000 miles
3 years or 36000 miles
3 years or 36000 miles
Horsepower
210 @ 5200 RPM
166 @ 6000 RPM
260 @ 6000 RPM
288 @ 6300 RPM
Engine
V6, 3.7 Liter
4-Cyl, 2.4 Liter
V6, 3.5 Liter
V6, 3.6 Liter
Drivetrain
4WD
2WD
AWD
FWD
Compare More

2010 Jeep Commander Rankings

People Who Viewed This Also Viewed
Used 2011
Jeep Grand Cherokee
$7,594
18 MPG
Combined Fuel Economy

Also from Jeep

Advertisement