Lexus Has Finally Ditched The Stupid Trackpad In Its Flagship LS Luxury Sedan

2023 Lexus Ls Topshot 2
ADVERTISEMENT

The state of full-sized luxury Mercedes has a new S-Class on sale, BMW has a new 7-Series, Genesis has a new G90, and Lucid has entered the scene with the Air. All of this puts the once segment-defining Lexus LS in a bit of a tight spot. It’s been on sale for several years now and feels rather familiar compared to BMW’s George Foreman-grilled slab of onyx and Lucid’s extremely Californian EV. To keep up with the pack, the LS gets a few updates for 2023 that aim to fix some big complaints.

You may be asking, does the Lexus LS still matter? After all, it’s changed a lot in the past three decades or so. There’s no more silky V8, no more Celsior-branded JDM counterpart, no more giving the S-Class a bloody nose by offering more for less. Still, the LS holds a certain appeal as it has morphed from inoffensive luxury sedan to extremely Japanese flagship. More importantly, full-size luxury sedans like this are vestiges of a world most of us were raised in. A time before SUVs took over everything, a place where reasonably successful businesspeople weighed 5-Series against E-Class rather than X5 against GLE. While LS sales have slowed to just under 2,000 units year-to-date as of September, it’s still pleasant to see people choose sedans.

2023 Lexus Ls 500 0001

Let’s start with the big news for 2023, the banishment of the dreaded trackpad. While not nearly as abominable as the mouse you’d find in a 2013-to-2017 Lexus LS, the trackpad was a contentious interface that was hated by many. It’s all gone now, replaced with Lexus’ latest 12.3-inch touchscreen infotainment system. Not only should this reduce infotainment frustration, it also allows for a cleaner center console setup with more logical button layout. Just look at all those lovely hard buttons for seat heating and ventilation, rear sunshade operation, and heated steering wheel use. Add in six USB ports on tap, and the tech update sounds like an all-around win.

2023 Lexus Ls 500 F Sport Atomic Silver 010 Scaled 1

Of course, new tech isn’t the only big revision the Lexus LS gets. New anti-roll bars aim to keep the big sedan more level through the turns, while the variable dampers gain new solenoids and valves to keep ride quality supple. In addition, Lexus has re-tuned the electric power steering, re-mapped the gearbox calibration, and played around with the braking system for good measure. It all sounds extremely promising and could result in the best-driving fifth-generation LS to date.

As for pricing, the basic 2023 Lexus LS 500 clocks in at $77,535 including a $1,150 freight charge, while the LS 500 F-Sport starts at $81,135. All-wheel-drive is an extra $3,250 on either of those trims, while the LS 500h hybrid model costs an eye-watering $113,435 but comes standard with virtually everything including Lexus’ Teammate hands-free Level 2 advanced driver assistance suite. That big-dog hybrid version seems to be in a class of its own, what with no other manufacturer offering a traditional hybrid in the executive sedan segment.

2023 Lexus Ls 500 F Sport Atomic Silver 009 Scaled 1

While it doesn’t feature the cabin tech of the new BMW 7-Series or quite the same opulence as the Mercedes-Benz S-Class, the updated Lexus LS should keep its loyal fanbase happy. You know exactly who I’m talking about, those old money types who were burned one too many times by expensive service department visits when driving other brands’ cars. Plus, it remains a bit of a bargain compared to the German competition, handy given how expensive even luxury cars have become.

All photos courtesy of Lexus

About the Author

View All My Posts

11 thoughts on “Lexus Has Finally Ditched The Stupid Trackpad In Its Flagship LS Luxury Sedan

  1. I’ve dealt with the old Lexus mouse controller (2015 GS350) and it’s laughably bad. Glad they’ve finally realized that a touch screen is easiest/most intuitive.

    Hope Acura is next. Honda touch-systems are good while Acuras get saddled with a touch pad.

  2. Having lived with the touchpad in an RC for 6 years, it actually works quite well. I’ve also had loaner NX’s with the new touch everything and screen was distracting and terrible. For example, listening to the radio? Here’s let me show you your radio presets several different ways on the screen instead of showing you useful information, like what is actually playing. Also, oh yeah, got rid of HD radio so sounds much worse. Want to get out of the car? Well just push the button and wait for it to open the catch… better build that delay into your muscle memory for opening the door or you’re just going to keep hurting your hand pushing against it. It’s really too bad as the more powerful trim levels of the NX are way more fun then they have a right to be but the new touch all interfaces really ruin the vehicle.

  3. Well, Lexus is moving a ton of the track pads it’s got in stock in its other vehicles. Heck, it put it in the GX in ’22 for the first time. So, it’ll burn through them there and be forever done with them.

  4. I can see why they did it – Im sure consumer reports were chock full of how ugly fingerprints all over the touch screen were…but it was a bad choice.

  5. Great. Hopefully it trickles down and yoinks it out of their less prestigious models as well…hell can we bring like, all of the non-flagship Lexus interiors into the 21st century? I want to love the IS500 but that interior is just dreadful for a 60k car in 2022….

    1. The all touchscreen system is on most of their line-up already for 23. Not the IS though, it just got a refresh so that may take longer. The IS does have the older system with a touchscreen and a touchpad. The RC and the LC are the ones really left out, with just the touchpad.

  6. I haven’t thought about the LS in years…juuuust a bit above my budget. But wait, these things had a trackpad? Even on a laptop, I hate the trackpad with an inexpressible passion. I can’t imagine trying to operate one in a moving car while keeping my eyes on the road, no matter how smoothly it rides.

Leave a Reply