Tesla has always had its own body shop, at least around here. Some cars can't be repaired even by the best shops around here and are sent to Tesla's own shop. There are "Certified" Tesla shops as well, since many materials and safety items are different than a typical car. I have a friend who works at the actual Tesla body shop.
I have had a standard '21 Subaru Outback (fully loaded w/eyesight) for over 2 months now while Subaru tries to figure out how to fix my 2004 WRX. They damaged a harness while performing my airbag recall last year and now it stopped working completely (passenger). Now they can't get a replacement for that harness period and are talking about repairing it, but since it is a safety item, they have to do it properly and certify it and that seems to be a bunch of legal hoops to deal with on their part.
This Outback was given to me with just 400 mi on it. I already drove it down to LA and its seen its fair share of use so far and I have to say, even without the turbo, it is a solid and comfortable car. The giant touch screen is hard to give up; even when driving my STI, I do miss that lol. The transmission leaves a bit to be desired, though they've improved the CVT a lot. The one thing you can't do much about is the weight. They do a good job at masking it, because the car still feels pretty nimble, but there's no getting around a curb weight like that. My brother in law has a '20 XT and I much prefer the power there. I found it to feel very similar to the base until you really get on it. The torque has to be delivered smoothly because of the CVT, so IMO, you don't really notice it. It feels a lot more torquey than the 3.6R to me. When you really get on it, I definitely felt the turbo motor has sufficient torque for this type and size of car, but the car is still heavy. The flat 6 is more expensive to maintain and is heavier, which are the only reasons I think they dropped it.
The Crosstrek is nice, but lacks some of the features of the Outback and gives up quite a bit of space for the price. I had a fully loaded one when my other car was getting its airbag recall done, though they did not have the 2.5l version at that time. I'd have to take the XT over it.
"Performance" and SUV don't exactly go together IMO lol. Though I understand. I bought my WRX wagon because I wanted room to haul stuff AND have decent power and handle great. My Forester XT delivered there as well, it handled almost as well as my STI (both modded suspension) in the mountains while being able to haul large items around. IMO, handling is more important to me than outright power, but a heavy car like a SUV, does need a sufficient amount to haul itself around. IMO, I'd have to just drive them all and pick one that ended up feeling right.
With the wagon potentially needing to be replaced if they can't fix it, Subaru doesn't really offer something like it anymore so I did start looking around as well. The Mazda 3 2.5L turbo AWD got some interest from me, but I'd need to drive one.