Enhanced with a freshened exterior and interior design, the 2005 Jeep Liberty offers a new diesel option for the first time in the North American markets. Available on the 4x4 Jeep Liberty Sport and Limited models, a newly revised 2.8L turbo common rail diesel engine (CRD) is equipped with a five-speed automatic transmission.
According to Jeep, the Liberty is the first mid-size sport/utility vehicle available with a diesel in the U.S. Diesel engines improve fuel economy an average of 30 percent and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by an average of 20 percent.
The 2.8L CRD is an enhanced version of the four-cylinder diesel engine currently offered on Jeep Liberty models in Europe. The CRD boasts three best-in-class stats: 295 lb.-ft of torque, a 500-mile driving range, and 5,000-lb. towing capacity. The engine produces 160 horsepower with an estimated fuel economy of 22 miles city and 27 miles highway.
To reduce the noise, vibration, and harshness (NVH) issues that plague older diesel-powered vehicles, Jeep engineers addressed the sources of NVH, re-engineered the body structure, and improved acoustics. The turbodiesel engine has a new noise-reducing cover and a torque converter turbine damper. An air induction resonator reduces induction noise emissions. Fluid-filled engine hydro mounts reduce the amount of vibration and harshness that reaches the body. Additionally, the body’s sheet metal has been stiffened and dampened to lessen the noise that travels into the vehicle. Airborne noise is decreased through an acoustic belly pan attached beneath the engine, an engine compartment hood liner, and cabin-installed, noise-absorbing carpet.
Liberty Sport and Limited design enhancements include new grille styling, and a new sill to protect the body side from road blast. The Limited also offers body-color front and rear fascias and bumpers, standard fog lamps, and tow hooks available with the skid plate group package.
The Sport model features higher positioning for park/turn lamp and optional fog lamp locations for greater protection from road debris, a new front fascia for a wider, more stable appearance, and an under-the-grille front bumper providing a twin-tube appearance.
Jeep Introduces Liberty Diesel to North American Markets
With a newly revised 2.8L common rail diesel engine and enhanced exterior and interior design, the Jeep Liberty Sport and Limited diesel models are available for the first time in the U.S.
More Operations

Lytx Introduces New AI Fleet Technologies at Protect 2026
The company introduced new AI-driven fleet safety and operations technologies during its annual user conference.
Read More →
Fleet Costs Are Rising: Here’s How Leaders Are Responding
Fleet leaders are under pressure to reduce costs, adapt to economic uncertainty, and make smarter decisions. See how peers across North America are responding with real data, proven strategies, and forward-looking insights. Download the 2026 Market Pulse Report to benchmark your strategy and uncover where you can gain an edge.
Read More →From Waffle House to AI: Fleet Trends You Need to Know
In this AF news recap, host Faith Howell covers how Waffle House stepped up during disaster response and new AI tech on the market.
Read More →Fleet Operations in the Age of AI: Navigating Ethical and Legal Challenges
AI is no longer a future concept for fleets—it’s already embedded in the tools, data, and decisions that operators rely on every day. In this episode of the Fleet Forward Podcast, recorded live at Fleet Forward, industry leaders take the conversation beyond hype to examine what responsible AI adoption really looks like in fleet operations.
Read More →Factory Installed vs. Aftermarket: Choosing the Right Telematics Path & Managing the Data
As fleets rethink how they capture, manage, and act on vehicle data, telematics is at a major inflection point. In this episode of the Fleet Forward Podcast, we dive deep into one of the most pressing questions facing fleet leaders today: Should you rely on OEM factory-installed connectivity, aftermarket devices, or a hybrid of both?
Read More →
What Real-Time Data Reveals About EV Cost, Performance, and Scalability
Experts from telematics analytics, fleet-as-a-service operations, and national EV benchmarking share how real-time data is reshaping fleet strategy—dispelling assumptions, validating best practices, and exposing costly missteps.
Read More →
Planning Through Policy Shifts: What Fleets Must Track in 2026
A powerhouse panel featuring experts from the American Automotive Leasing Association, CalSTART, and municipal fleet leadership dives into the realities of navigating shifting emissions rules, regulatory waivers, federal agency actions, the future of the EPA’s endangerment finding, and the push for unified standards. They also examine the impacts of tariffs, autonomous vehicle policy, battery innovation, and the accelerating global EV market.
Read More →
Managing Market Turbulence with Strategic Fleet Insights
This episode kicks off with a deep dive into the technologies and market forces reshaping today’s fleet landscape. Host Chris Brown is joined by Laolu Adeola (Leke Services), Tyson Jomini (J.D. Power), and Richard Hall (ZappiRide) to break down real-world data, shifting incentives, and practical strategies fleet leaders can use right now.
Read More →
Adapting Fleet Policy When Disasters Strike
In the middle of natural disasters fleet managers must shift priorities to protect people and assets. What policy items should be loosened, and when should the line be held?
Read More →EV Reality Check: How Fleets Are Managing Policy Shifts, Safety, and Scaling Challenges
In this episode, fleet leaders from municipal, university, and private-sector organizations share a candid EV reality check. From infrastructure setbacks and policy whiplash to grant funding, total cost of ownership, and charging resiliency, this conversation dives into what it actually takes to scale electrification in the real world.
Read More →