SUVs are no longer a craze or a trend. In fact, they’ve subsumed the (non-truck portion of the) car market. That’s especially true of crossover forms, which have come to dominate the category far more than the body-on-frame truck-based vehicles that pioneered the class.
Today’s crossovers are filling niches that have nothing to do with spaciousness or capability, which were the traditional arguments in their favor; even tiny, pavement-dwelling subcompacts now receive added ride height and extra cladding to justify their existence and boost their sales.
What are crossover SUVs?
Much as the sport-utility vehicle was something of a median point between the car and the truck, a crossover can basically be thought of as the halfway mark between traditional SUVs and cars.
Crossovers stand tall and boast boxy bodies, like SUVs — but those boxy bodies are built on more lightweight unibody skeletons like cars, versus the heavy-but-better-for-off-roading body-on-frame chassis used by traditional SUVs and pickups.
Crossovers usually offer some way to send power to all four wheels, but it’s usually an all-wheel-drive system, not a true four-wheel-drive setup with low range.