All dealer website examples
Brand Example

Subaru Dealer Website Example

No mainstream brand owns the outdoors like Subaru, and its website should smell faintly of campfire. This example uses our rugged adventure style, putting the Outback, Forester, and Crosstrek on earthy, topographic surfaces that match where the cars actually go. The trail aesthetic is wrapped around a complete working store: filterable inventory, payment math, and service scheduling throughout.

Screenshot of a Subaru dealer website example homepage

Homepage of the Subaru example. The full demo includes inventory search, vehicle detail, service, finance, and contact pages.

What this example includes

  • Outback, Forester, and Crosstrek led adventure hero
  • Earthy, topographic design language built for the outdoor buyer
  • Inventory rail with working filters including Wilderness trims
  • Homepage payment calculator and trade-in band
  • Specials with clear, compliant disclaimers
  • Source-tagged review highlights
  • Footer model links for the full Subaru range

See it with your store's name on it

The instant demo builder reads your current website, pulls your live inventory when it can, and assembles a working demo in about 60 seconds.

Frequently asked questions

What should a Subaru dealer website include?

A Subaru dealer website should lead with the Outback, Forester, and Crosstrek, surface Wilderness trims for the core outdoor buyer, tell the symmetrical all-wheel-drive and safety story plainly, and wire in inventory search, payment calculation, trade valuation, and service scheduling.

Why the rugged adventure style for Subaru?

Subaru's brand is lifestyle-first, and this style mirrors it with dark earthy tones and trail-map texture instead of generic showroom white. It signals that the store understands the buyer before a single word is read.

Can the demo reflect my store's community personality?

Yes. The builder picks up your dealership name, city, and tagline, and the emphasis options let you lean the demo toward moving inventory or service loyalty, both of which matter to Subaru stores with strong owner communities.