Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

2020 Lincoln Corsair crossover is small in size, but big on luxury

Add as a preferred source on Google

In keeping with parent Ford’s plan to emphasize crossovers, SUVs, and pickup trucks over sedans and hatchbacks, Lincoln will unveil a new crossover at the 2019 New York Auto Show. The 2020 Lincoln Corsair is the smallest utility vehicle in the luxury brand’s lineup, but it borrows tech and luxury features from its larger siblings.

Recommended Videos

The Corsair shares basic underpinnings with the 2020 Ford Escape, which is also making its debut in New York. But engineers made some changes to the blue collar Blue Oval recipe — including added sound deadening and retuned suspension — to make the Corsair feel more luxurious. The chassis is wrapped in a downsized version of the exterior styling from the Nautilus, Aviator, and Navigator.

When it goes on sale later this year, the Corsair will come standard with a 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder engine making 250 horsepower and 275 pound-feet of torque. A 2.3-liter turbo four-cylinder with 280 hp and 310 lb-ft will also be available. Both engines are coupled to an eight-speed automatic transmission with all-wheel drive. The all-wheel drive system defaults to front-wheel drive when extra traction is needed, Lincoln noted, in order to save fuel. A plug-in hybrid powertrain, likely borrowed from the Corsair’s Ford Escape sibling, will be added at some point after launch.

As with the 2020 Lincoln Aviator, Corsair drivers will be able to use their phones in place of a traditional key fob. Drivers can also use it to create personal profiles encompassing up to 80 features, according to Lincoln, from seat position to radio presets.

Other notable tech features include a 14-speaker Revel audio system and a head-up display that Lincoln promises will work with polarized sunglasses. The infotainment system is the familiar Sync 3 system used in every other Lincoln and most vehicles from parent company Ford. The driver gets a 24-way adjustable seat with massage, while rear-seat passengers get more legroom than in a Mercedes-Benz GLS, Lincoln boasted. Alternatively, the rear seats can slide forward 6.0 inches to accommodate more luggage.

The Corsair will likely be set apart from German and Japanese luxury crossovers by the details, though. As in the 2020 Aviator, the warning chimes were recorded by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for maximum fanciness. Instead of an awkward electronic shifter, gears are selected using switches on the center console — a setup borrowed from Lincoln’s flagship Navigator. The Corsair also gets the same imaginative drive-mode names as the Aviator and Navigator. Instead of “sport,” you get “excite,” and instead of “eco,” you get “conserve.”

The standard Co-Pilot360 suite of driver aids includes autonomous emergency braking, blind spot monitoring, lane keep assist, and automatic high beams. The optional Co-Pilot360 Plus package adds adaptive cruise control with lane centering, reverse autonomous braking, evasive steer assist (adds steering assist to make emergency maneuvers easier) and a park-assist system that can steer the Corsair into parallel or perpendicular spaces with almost no intervention from the driver.

The 2020 Lincoln Corsair will be built in Louisville, Kentucky, and hits dealerships this fall. Pricing will be announced closer to launch.

Updated on April 17, 2019: Added full details and photos from the Corsair’s New York reveal.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
iOS 26.4 adds ChatGPT to you car’s infotainment screen
Apple's iOS 26.4 brings ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude to your car's screen, adds calming ambient music widgets, and previews the in-car video future that drivers have been waiting for.
CarPlay shown in March 2025.

Apple rolled out iOS 26.4 recently, and while your iPhone got several upgrades, CarPlay quietly had one of its best days in years. The latest iPhone updates bring two meaningful features that can change the way you use CarPlay on your car’s infotainment screen. 

Would you use ChatGPT while driving?

Read more
Sony and Honda’s electric car dream with Afeela series is officially dead 
Sony Honda Mobility has shelved the Afeela 1 and its follow-up, and the EV market has another high-profile casualty.
Machine, Wheel, Adult

Sony and Honda’s shared dream of launching an electric car has just come to an end. The joint venture between the two brands — Sony Honda Mobility — has just announced that plans for the upcoming Afeela 1 electric car have been shelved. Additionally, the follow-up model has been nixed from the roadmap. 

But why did the Afeela go?

Read more
This AI checks if your driving habits signal crash risk
Researchers say eye tracking, heart rate, and personality data can flag risk early.
Person, Wristwatch, Car

A new AI model is taking aim at a question most drivers don’t ask soon enough. How likely are you to crash before you even start the engine?

The system looks at how you behave behind the wheel, pulling in signals like eye movement, heart rate, and personality traits to flag warning patterns early. Instead of waiting for real-world mistakes, it relies on simulated driving tests to surface behaviors linked to dangerous outcomes.

Read more