| Toyota IZOA (
FAW Toyota; China) It went on sale in Europe, Australia, South Africa and North America in early 2017, and in Southeast Asia, China and Taiwan in 2018. The name
C-HR can stand for either
Compact High Rider, The development of the car began in 2013, led by Toyota chief engineer Hiroyuki Koba, sharing the
TNGA-C (GA-C) platform with the
E210 series Corolla. Initial production was in Japan and Turkey. The 2018–2020 model year North American-spec C-HR is imported from Turkey. File:2018 Toyota C-HR (NGX50R) Koba AWD hatchback (2018-08-27) 02.jpg|Pre-facelift Toyota C-HR 1.2 Koba AWD (NGX50, Australia) File:2017 Toyota C-HR Icon HEV CVT 1.8 Front (1).jpg|2017 Toyota C-HR 1.8 Hybrid (ZYX10, UK) File:2017 Toyota C-HR Icon HEV CVT 1.8 Rear (1).jpg|2017 Toyota C-HR 1.8 Hybrid (ZYX10, UK) File:The frontview of Toyota C-HR G-T (DBA-NGX50-AHXEX) with TRD parts.jpg|Toyota C-HR 1.2 G-T AWD with optional TRD body kit (NGX50, Japan) File:Toyota C-HR - wnętrze (MSP17).jpg|Interior
Japan In Japan, the C-HR is sold at all Toyota dealership sales channels (
Toyota Store,
Toyopet Store,
Toyota Corolla Store and
Netz Store). The Japanese market C-HR is powered by either 1.2-litre turbocharged petrol engine, or 1.8-litre Hybrid. The FWD models are available with both engines, while the only engine for the AWD models is the 1.2-litre turbo. Model grades are S, S-LED, G, S-T and G-T. Models S, S-LED, G are powered with a 1.2-litre turbo engine, while other models by a 1.8-litre Hybrid. LED Package is exclusive for the G and S-LED packages.
Asia The Thai-built C-HR with 1.8-litre 2ZR-FBE or 2ZR-FE engine is sold in certain Asian countries such as Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and Brunei. The ASEAN production version was unveiled in Thailand on 30 November 2017, at the 34th Thailand International Motor Expo. For the Indonesian market, the C-HR was launched on 10 April 2018, initially with a 1.8-litre
2ZR-FE petrol engine. The hybrid variant followed later on 22 April 2019. The petrol variant was discontinued in March 2022. The remaining sole hybrid variant received
Toyota Safety Sense on 27 May 2022 and sold until May 2023. In Brunei, the C-HR was launched in early 2018 and offered in the mid and high grade models with a petrol engine, and a hybrid model. It was discontinued in 2022. For Taiwan, the C-HR is only offered with 1.2-litre
8NR-FTS petrol engine. Buyers in Taiwan can choose the FWD and AWD models. In Singapore, it received the FWD model in Active and Luxury grades by the local distributor with the 1.2-litre engine while hybrid 1.8-litre models are offered by parallel importers. For the Chinese market, the C-HR is sold by
GAC Toyota, while its twin model sold by
FAW Toyota is called the
IZOA (). The IZOA features a front bumper grille with horizontal lines instead of mesh on the C-HR. Both the C-HR and IZOA were revealed at the
Auto Guangzhou in November 2017 and went on sale in April 2018. The electric vehicle (EV) variant of both the C-HR and IZOA were unveiled at the
18th Auto Shanghai on 16 April 2019, as the first
battery electric vehicle in Toyota's upcoming lineup. The C-HR EV went on sale in China in April 2020. The electric motor produces and of torque. The 54.3 kWh lithium-ion battery pack is claimed to deliver a range of up to as per NEDC. In late 2020, the comparatively expensive (being a fully imported model from Thailand) C-HR was discontinued in Malaysia, leading to declining sales. It was replaced by the
Corolla Cross, launched in late March 2021.
Europe As in Japan, the C-HR for Europe can be purchased with either 1.2-litre turbocharged petrol, a 1.8-litre hybrid or with 2.0-litre hybrid. 6-speed manual transmission is only installed in the front-wheel-drive 1.2-litre turbo; the sole gearbox for the 1.2-litre turbo AWD and the hybrid is a
CVT. Trim levels vary across countries. In the UK, they are Icon, Design, Excel and Dynamic. For the French market, there are even more marketing name variations such as Active, Dynamic, Edition, Graphic, Distinctive and Collection. In Romania there are C-enter, C-ult Style and C-lassy. They are essentially similar cars with different standards or optional equipment.
Australia For the Australian market (imported from Japan), the C-HR is only offered with the 1.2-litre, 8NR-FTS turbo motor. The base model is available in manual transmission as a FWD only, automatic transmission models may be FWD or AWD. The high level Koba model is available in both FWD and AWD variants. The gearbox for the base model is a choice of 6-speed manual transmission or CVT with 7-speed simulated gear. The Koba comes with CVT only, and is equipped with LED headlights, leather seats, heated front seats, and smart entry and start system.
North America Unique for the North American C-HR is the larger 2.0-litre
3ZR-FAE naturally aspirated petrol engine which is matched to a CVT gearbox. In North America, the C-HR was originally planned to be marketed under the
Scion brand, before Toyota discontinued the marque. The 2018 model year was available in either the XLE or XLE Premium trim levels. Beginning with the 2019 model year, the C-HR was available in LE, XLE, XLE Premium or Limited trim levels. The C-HR was discontinued in North America after the 2022 model year, where Toyota elected not to market the subsequent, second-generation C-HR, and the Corolla Cross continued as the brand's subcompact crossover/SUV.
Facelift The
facelifted C-HR was unveiled in Japan, Europe, Australia, and North America in October 2019. The European model received the 2.0-litre
M20A-FXS hybrid engine option for the first time.
Android Auto and
Apple CarPlay became standard. The
GR Sport variant is also offered. File:2020 Toyota C-HR Design HEV CVT 2.0 Front.jpg|2020 Toyota C-HR Design 2.0 Hybrid (MAXH10, UK) File:2020 Toyota C-HR Design HEV CVT 2.0 Rear.jpg|2020 Toyota C-HR Design 2.0 Hybrid (MAXH10, UK) File:2022 Toyota C-HR LE in Magnetic Grey Metallic, Front Right, 04-03-2022.jpg|2022 Toyota C-HR LE (ZGX10, Canada) File:Toyota C-HR GR Sport Hybrid, 2021 front.jpg|Facelift Toyota C-HR GR Sport Hybrid (Australia) File:Toyota C-HR GR Sport Hybrid, 2021 rear.jpg|Facelift Toyota C-HR GR Sport Hybrid (Australia) File:TOYOTA C-HR EV.jpg|GAC Toyota C-HR EV (China)
IZOA File:Toyota Izoa 01 China 2019-04-03.jpg|Pre-facelift FAW Toyota IZOA (China) File:Toyota Izoa Hybrid 001.jpg|Facelift IZOA Hybrid (China) File:TOYOTA IZOA EV (TOYOTA C-HR EV) China (3).jpg|IZOA EV (China) File:TOYOTA IZOA EV (TOYOTA C-HR EV) China (4).jpg|IZOA EV (China)
Safety Euro NCAP ANCAP ASEAN NCAP == Second generation (AX20; 2023) ==