For infotainment, the dash houses a nine-inch touchscreen, which falls in the not-too-small and not-too-big category and runs Toyota’s latest operating system that includes Android Auto, Apple CarPlay, and Amazon Alexa compatibility. Six USB ports are spread throughout the cabin, so nobody should complain they can’t charge their devices – the Limited adds an additional USB port for media.
Only the base LE model doesn’t feature the option of a rear entertainment system, which features an 11.6-inch display and two wireless headphone sets. The Limited models get a 12-speaker JBL sound system upgrade over the six- or eight-speaker base systems, but it’s nothing special.
Another area where the Sienna rates highly is in terms of safety, both in crash testing results and standard equipment. Toyota’s Safety Sense 2.0 is standard on the range and includes automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection, lane-departure warning with steering assist, lane tracing assist, full-speed adaptive cruise control, and road sign assist. There’s also blind spot monitoring and ten airbags, with the Limited gaining front and rear parking assist. All of this resulted in a Top Safety Pick+ award from the IIHS.