News

Daimler Truck and Toyota will each aim to own 25% of the (listed) holding company of the integrated Mitsubishi Fuso and Hino. The holding company plans to own 100% of Mitsubishi Fuso and Hino.
(Oslo, Norway, 16 June 2025) Hexagon Purus (the “Company”), a world leading manufacturer of zero-emission mobility and infrastructure solutions, has signed a long-term agreement with Hino ...
Toyota Motor and Daimler Truck have agreed to finalize a merger of their truck manufacturing subsidiaries, Hino Motors and Mitsubishi Fuso Truck & Bus, under a new holding company by April 2026 as ...
Hino was founded and has its headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, but its products are available in many countries besides the U.S. Here's a quick look at who makes Hino trucks and where the vehicles are ...
HINO EURO 5 comes with the new diesel engine, A09C UR-EU5-350/145, which gives off 350 horsepower at maximum, combining with the Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR System) which is accepted at the ...
Hino Motors, a subsidiary of Japanese automaker Toyota, pleaded guilty on Wednesday over a multi-year emissions fraud scheme in the United States and must pay $1.6 billion in penalties, the U.S ...
Hino Motors, a subsidiary of Toyota, pleaded guilty on Wednesday over a multiyear emissions fraud scheme in the United States and must pay $1.6 billion in penalties, the U.S. Justice Department said.
Certain Canadian Hino truck buyers and lessees may be entitled to cash due a class action lawsuit against the truck maker. Hino settled a $55-million class action suit in B.C. and Quebec, which ...
Toyota subsidiary Hino Motors agreed to plead guilty and pay more than $1.6 billion to resolve alleged emissions fraud with its heavy-duty diesel engines. The U.S. government announced the ...
Toyota Motor unit Hino Motors has agreed to a $1.6 billion settlement with US agencies and will plead guilty over excess diesel engine emissions in more than 105,000 US vehicles, the company and ...
U.S. officials announced a $1.6 billion deal with Toyota's Hino Motors unit to settle charges it deceived regulators about the amount of emissions spewed by its diesel engines.
Hino Motors will plead guilty to submitting false emissions data to regulators for more than 100,000 heavy-duty trucks. The company will pay an array of fines, and fix some affected vehicles for free.