The Lincoln Aviator and Lincoln Corsair both scream quiet luxury, but they hit different notes – like comparing a spacious penthouse to a chic loft. The Aviator is a bigger, three-row midsize SUV, while the Corsair stays compact, two-row, easier to park downtown. Try getting around Toronto’s core these days. Compact SUV is the way to go.
Size-wise, Lincoln Aviator stretches longer – about eight inches more overall – actually with room for seven people.That third row actually fits adults for short trips, not just kids.
Lincoln Aviator, image by Mark Keast
Lincoln Corsair, image by Mark Keast
The Lincoln Corsair is five seats max, sliding rear bench for legroom tweaks, but no extra row. Cargo’s flipped: Corsair gives you 28 cubic feet behind the seats – great for groceries from a quick trip to Loblaws or weekend bags – while Aviator’s down to 18 behind the third, though it opens up to 65 total when everything folds.
Luxury Meets Muscle
Power’s where luxury meets muscle. Aviator packs a three-litre twin-turbo V6 – 400 horsepower, 415 pound-feet – paired to a ten-speed auto. The SUV hits sixty in under six seconds, tows 5,000 pounds.
Corsair’s lighter: two-litre turbo four makes 250 horses, or go Grand Touring plug-in hybrid for smoother city zips and better MPG – around 30 combined versus Aviator’s 21. Hybrid’s got that silent EV mode, perfect if you hate noise.
Lincoln Aviator, image by Mark Keast
Lincoln Corsair, image by Mark Keast
Inside, both nail the vibe – soft leather, ambient glow, Revel audio – but Aviator goes deeper. Reserve trim adds ventilated seats everywhere, panoramic roof, twenty-eight-speaker 3D sound, even Black Label with Moonbeam leather and concierge perks like free maintenance. It’s got a great feel: choreographed lights, acoustic glass, adaptive air suspension that floats over bumps.
The Lincoln Corsair is plush too – 24-way Perfect Position seats, 14-speaker Revel, hands-free liftgate – but it’s cozier, less ostentatious. Both run Lincoln’s slick BlueCruise hands-free highway driving, but Aviator’s head-up display and 360 cam feel more flagship.
Lincoln Aviator, image by Mark Keast
Lincoln Corsair, image by Mark Keast
What’s the Price?
Aviator’s serene cruiser – adaptive dampers soak up everything, quiet as a library. Corsair’s nimbler, almost sporty for a Lincoln, with integral bush suspension keeping it hushed. Fuel-wise, Corsair wins if you’re eco-minded; Aviator’s thirstier but smoother at speed.
Price seals it: In the Toronto area the Lincoln Aviator Premiere model starts at $79,895, with the Reserve starting at $82,695, and you build in options from there. The Lincoln Corsair Premiere starts at $52,885, the Reserve model starts at $60,295, and the Grand Touring model starts at $62,685.
You’ll likely make your pick based on life. Are you solo or have a small family? Corsair. Big gatherings, long hauls? Aviator. Either way, you’re wrapped in that signature Lincoln hush – just with different room to breathe.
Mark Keast has been a journalist for three decades, starting out as a sports writer and editor for one of Toronto’s largest daily newspapers. Recently he has moved into writing on luxury cars, travel, and Toronto luxury real estate. He owns real estate in downtown Toronto as well, so there’s a vested interest there. Mark spends a lot of his work time connecting with realtors and developers across Canada, staying on top of industry developments.
Check out his stories, and email him direct at mkeast@regardingluxury.com













