Why is Honda stopping the Ridgeline?
What changed for Honda’s Ridgeline
Honda has unexpectedly stopped production of its Ridgeline, leaving the current model “dead” ahead of a next-generation replacement.
That matters for buyers because the Ridgeline has long been a recognizable mainstream pick, and a production halt can quickly turn into supply constraints, trim-level availability issues, and pricing changes at dealerships. It also raises a common decision point for shoppers who were waiting for incentives or a specific configuration—those may become harder to find once existing inventory runs out.
The key practical takeaway is timing: if you want a current Ridgeline, the window to shop new inventory may be narrowing until Honda rolls out the follow-up. For people in the market for a truck alternative, the pause also creates more leverage for competitors that can keep inventory steady.
What we know
- The current Ridgeline is described as being ended.
- Honda indicates a new model will arrive later, but details about timing and what changes aren’t provided in the snippet.
What to watch next
- Announcements about the next-gen Ridgeline’s release timeframe.
- Whether dealers offer larger incentives as the model exits.
- Availability of key trims and powertrain options during the transition period.
Until Honda provides specifics on the replacement, shoppers are essentially navigating a short-term gap between a discontinued model cycle and the next launch. That gap is where inventory and pricing pressures typically show up first.