00:19 18-12-2025

Mitsubishi Outlander Diamond Trail Edition: what the trademark suggests

Mitsubishi may be preparing a more off-road-leaning version of the Outlander. The clue is a Canadian filing for the Diamond Trail Edition trademark and a matching logo linked to the existing Trail Edition theme.

The current Outlander Trail Edition is largely about styling and equipment rather than bona fide capability upgrades. The word “Diamond” in the name hints at a higher rung in the lineup, and it wouldn’t be surprising if Mitsubishi looked at retuned suspension, a taller ride height, or other off-pavement calibrations. The Outlander already uses the S-AWC all-wheel-drive system with modes for snow, sand, mud, and gravel, so the foundation is there—though anything short of meaningful hardware changes would likely feel more like a dress-up package than a trail tool.

There’s also a scenario where the Diamond Trail Edition is positioned as a pricier, better-equipped trim rather than a rugged specialist. In that case, the crossover could bring a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster, a head-up display, a 12-speaker Yamaha audio system, three-zone climate control, and leather upholstery with ventilated seats. That approach would play to the Outlander’s comfort-first brief, even if it softens the adventurous promise in the name.