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    Home»Cars»Baby Defender: Land Rover Defender 90 Review and Buyer’s Guide 2025
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    Baby Defender: Land Rover Defender 90 Review and Buyer’s Guide 2025

    Paul PetersenBy Paul PetersenApril 4, 2026Updated:April 4, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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    The “baby defender“ traditionally refers to the Defender 90, the nimble three-door variant that starts at roughly $56,400. However, for 2026, Land Rover has officially confirmed a smaller, more affordable “Defender Sport” (often called the 80) is in development. This new entry-level model will be fully electric, offering the rugged, squared-off silhouette of its big brother in a more urban-friendly size, expected to start around $45,000 to compete directly with the Ford Bronco Sport and Rivian R2.

    Despite its smaller footprint, the Defender 90 is not a watered-down version. It gets the same chassis, the same air suspension, the same Terrain Response system, and the same powertrain options as the 110. What you give up is rear seat space and cargo room – what you gain is one of the most characterful and capable SUV driving experiences available at any price.

    What Is the Baby Defender?

    ‘Baby Defender’ is a popular nickname for the Defender 90, used to distinguish it from the larger Defender 110 (5-door) and the Defender 130 (extended wheelbase). Land Rover introduced the current-generation Defender in 2020, and the 90 body style arrived shortly after as a more driver-focused, sportier alternative.

    It seats up to six in the standard layout – two in front and four in the rear – though rear legroom is genuinely tight for adults on longer journeys. For shorter trips and off-road adventures, it is perfectly comfortable.

    Land Rover Defender 90 – Key Specs

    Specification

    Detail

    Body Style

    3-door SUV (short wheelbase)

    Seating Capacity

    Up to 6

    Engine Options

    2.0L P300 Petrol / 3.0L P400 Mild Hybrid / 5.0L P525 V8

    Base Power (P300)

    296 hp

    V8 Power (P525)

    518 hp

    0-60 mph (P300)

    7.0 seconds

    0-60 mph (P525 V8)

    4.9 seconds

    Off-Road Ground Clearance

    291 mm (11.5 inches)

    Wading Depth

    900 mm (35.4 inches)

    Starting Price (US)

    ~$55,300

    V8 Price (US)

    ~$130,000+

    Design – Classic Looks, Modern Engineering

    The Defender 90 is a striking car in person – shorter and squarer than almost anything else on the road, with exposed door hinges, an external spare wheel, and a rear-opening tailgate that still feels delightfully old-school. Land Rover’s designers managed to honour the original Defender’s geometric honesty while building something that is undeniably modern.

    Available in a wide range of colours including Sedona Red, Pangea Green, Fuji White, and the popular Gondwana Stone, the 90 also accepts a huge array of factory accessories – roof racks, side steps, snorkels, and body armour packs – that let owners personalise them heavily without voiding any warranties.

    Interior and Technology

    PIVI Pro Infotainment

    Land Rover’s PIVI Pro system sits on a 11.4-inch curved touchscreen and is one of the better infotainment systems in the premium off-road segment. It updates over the air, responds quickly, and integrates navigation with off-road data including pitch, roll angle, and terrain information – genuinely useful when the going gets rough.

    Seating Configuration

    The standard Defender 90 layout puts two seats in front and four in the rear bench. An optional jump seat configuration can add a seventh seat, though practically this is very cramped and best treated as an emergency option. The front seats are excellent – supportive, well bolstered, and available with heating and cooling on upper trims.

    Off-Road Capability – Is It Still a Real Defender?

    Absolutely. The Defender 90 has more genuine off-road capability than most people will ever use. Terrain Response 2 allows the driver to select optimised settings for mud, sand, rock, grass, or snow with a single dial turn. The air suspension lifts the body to maximise clearance when needed, and the optional Wade Sensing system monitors water depth when crossing rivers.

    On steep descents, the Hill Descent Control manages speed precisely without driver input. In real-world testing, the Defender 90 has proven capable of terrain that would stop most other premium SUVs – it earns its Defender name genuinely, not cosmetically.

    Baby Defender vs. Full Defender 110

    Feature

    Defender 90 (Baby)

    Defender 110 (Standard)

    Doors

    3

    5

    Wheelbase

    2,587 mm

    3,022 mm

    Seating

    Up to 6

    Up to 7

    Cargo Volume (seats up)

    295 litres

    857 litres

    Starting Price (US)

    ~$55,300

    ~$57,300

    Length

    4,323 mm

    4,758 mm

    Best For

    Sporty driving, style, off-road

    Family use, practicality, travel

    Price and Available Variants

    The Defender 90 is available in four trim levels in most markets: Standard, S, SE, and X. The base model at $55,300 is the entry point, while the fully loaded X trim with the 3.0-litre mild hybrid easily crosses $85,000 before options.

    The V8 First Edition – packing 518 hp from Land Rover’s supercharged 5.0-litre V8 – is available at around $130,000 and is one of the most dramatic factory 4x4s you can currently buy.

    Pros and Cons

    Pros

    Cons

    Genuinely capable off-road hardware

    Tight rear passenger space

    Distinctive, iconic design

    Land Rover reliability concerns linger

    Excellent PIVI Pro infotainment

    Expensive options list inflates price quickly

    Strong engine range including V8

    Fuel economy is poor across all trims

    Huge personalisation options

    Cargo space compromised vs 110

    V8 variant is genuinely thrilling

    Service costs are premium-level

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    Paul Petersen

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