AutoDeal Canada

Volkswagen Tiguan 2018 for sale

89 vehicles available

Average Price

From

$9 939

Listings

89

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Comfortline 4motion

131 818 km
16 711 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Comfortline 4MOTION

223 349 km
9 939 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Trendline | 4motion

132 614 km
18 785 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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Accident-Free

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Trendline 4MOTION

148 122 km
15 798 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured
Low KM

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Highline Panoramic

133 427 km
19 990 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Trendline

140 000 km
14 499 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Highline 2.0t 8sp At

191 000 km
13 795 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Highline 4MOTION

156 996 km
18 494 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

HIGHLINE R-LINE BAS KILO CUIR TOIT PANO NAV FENDER

145 300 km
16 490 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Highline 4motion

178 949 km
13 990 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Trendline

110 261 km
20 995 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

135 064 km
15 488 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

167 441 km
14 995 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

91 000 km
19 995 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

98 000 km
21 995 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

76 394 km
20 479 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

150 710 km
16 505 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

238 195 km
12 254 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured
Accident-FreeOne Owner

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Highline

162 887 km
17 288 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

135 560 km
16 549 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
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2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Comfortline

113 759 km
19 495 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Highline

149 213 km
18 998 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

Highline

125 956 km
20 907 $
2018 Volkswagen Tiguan
Featured

2018 Volkswagen Tiguan

106 113 km
16 999 $

Frequently Asked Questions

01

What distinguishes the Tiguan 2022+ Aisin 8-speed from the earlier DSG variants, and why does it matter for a used buyer?

Volkswagen introduced the Aisin AW8F45 8-speed torque-converter automatic on Tiguan Comfortline and Highline trims starting in 2022, replacing the DQ381 wet-clutch DSG on those configurations. The practical differences are substantial for a family SUV buyer. The Aisin is smoother at parking-lot speeds and in stop-and-go traffic — the DSG's characteristic micro-hesitation on creep is completely absent. It handles sustained towing better over long mountain grades. It does not require the specialized DSG ATF fluid servicing, simplifying maintenance. The DQ381 is not a bad gearbox — when properly serviced it is durable and rewarding to drive enthusiastically — but for a buyer who prioritizes frictionless daily driving over sporty gearchanges, the 2022+ Aisin variant is the more composed choice.

02

What are the most common repair issues to inspect for on a 2018-2023 Tiguan during a pre-purchase inspection?

Canadian used-car inspection reports consistently flag three areas. First, DSG service history: a DQ381 that has not had ATF fluid and filter changed at 60,000 km frequently exhibits harsh shifts and eventually mechatronic failure; repair costs reach $2,000-$3,500 at a dealership. Second, 2.0L TSI fuel injectors: a small percentage of 2018-2020 units developed minor injector leaks presenting as white smoke on cold startup at temperatures below -10°C, with injector replacement at $400-$600 per unit. Third, air conditioning condenser: first-generation Tiguan II (2018-2020) condensers were particularly vulnerable to stone chips due to thin aluminium construction; confirm AC blows cold in inspection, as dealer condenser replacement runs $900 or more. A $150 independent pre-purchase inspection addresses all three items and typically pays for itself in the first negotiation.

03

Is the Tiguan's optional third row worth specifying for a Canadian family compared to stepping up to the Atlas?

The Tiguan's optional third row accommodates children up to roughly age 10-11 adequately on trips under an hour, with 30.4 inches of legroom. For adults or teenagers over 5 feet 4 inches, it becomes uncomfortable beyond 30 minutes. Its primary value is flexibility: it folds flat in seconds, converting from a five-passenger utility to a seven-seat option for occasional use. A family that needs true three-row capability for regular 4-6 hour drives — grandparents visiting from out of province, carpool duty for a hockey team — should step up to the Atlas, which delivers 33.6 inches of third-row legroom and doors with a full sweep that adults can enter without ducking. If you need the extra seats two or three times per year for cousins or neighbourhood carpool, the Tiguan seven-seat configuration covers that occasional need at a cost saving of $5,000-$8,000 versus an equivalent Atlas on the used market.

04

How does 4Motion perform in typical Canadian winter conditions compared to Subaru's symmetrical AWD?

The Tiguan's Haldex-based 4Motion is a reactive all-wheel-drive system: it runs primarily in front-wheel drive during normal conditions and transfers torque rearward within 150 milliseconds when front-wheel slip is detected. Subaru's Symmetrical AWD uses a viscous centre differential that is always-on, providing a small but measurable traction advantage at the very first instant of wheel spin — relevant when launching from a complete stop on sheet ice. In a controlled test on packed snow with identical winter tires, the gap between the two systems is less than 0.5 seconds in a 0-50 km/h acceleration run. On wet pavement and moderate snow, the difference is imperceptible in daily driving. The Tiguan recovers its footing in wet-weather handling balance, where its equal front-rear weight distribution gives it a slight edge over Subaru's slightly forward-biased layout. Dedicated winter tires deliver more measurable benefit on either platform than the difference between the AWD systems themselves.

05

What is the honest long-term cost difference between owning a Tiguan and a Honda CR-V over 150,000 km of Canadian driving?

Based on Canadian independent shop data and owner-reported costs aggregated through 150,000 km of real-world use, a Tiguan 4Motion costs approximately $1,800-$2,400 more in maintenance than a comparable CR-V AWD over the same distance. The largest individual contributors are DSG fluid service (required twice over 150,000 km at $350-$500 per service), premium-specification synthetic oil meeting VW 504.00 (priced $20-$30 higher per change than Honda-specification equivalents), and parts pricing that runs 25-40% above domestic and Japanese equivalent components. The gap narrows significantly if a qualified independent European-vehicle shop handles routine maintenance rather than the dealership, where labour rates average $40-$60 per hour less. The Tiguan's lower purchase price partially offsets the higher running costs: buying a comparable Tiguan $4,000-$5,000 below a CR-V means you absorb the maintenance premium over roughly two years before the Tiguan becomes net-more-expensive to operate.