Cupra Formentor 2021 long-term review

Cupra Formentor 2021 long-term review

Autocar

Published

We’re about to get familiar with this head-turning crossover in plug-in hybrid form

*Why we’re running it: *To see if Cupra’s classy crossover is up to the rigours of day-to-day running

-Month 4 - Month 3 - Month 2 - Month 1 - Specs-

-Life with a Cupra Formentor: Month 4-

*Smart and stylish in equal measure - 12 January 2022*

Design-led features can often be an ergonomic nightmare, so it’s refreshing to see thought has gone into the Cupra’s blindspot warning system. Rather than LEDs slapped onto the wing mirrors, it’s neatly integrated into the interior ambient lighting system. It illuminates but doesn’t distract and doesn’t detract from the car’s sleek styling.

*Mileage: 15,662*

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-Life with a Cupra Formentor: Month 3-

*So much going on - 24 November 2021*

With the climate control handled by the touchscreen instead of buttons, the Cupra’s infotainment system looks overly busy. The graphics are colourful and distinctive, but their resemblance to those used by Apple CarPlay can make it easy to mix up which does what. When you’re busy driving, a whole screen full of similar shapes just becomes distracting.

*Mileage: 7255*

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*Easy reach, but not in regular use - 3 November 2021*

The oversized button on the steering wheel looks inviting, but I rarely use it to swap driving modes. The plug-in hybrid Formentor is well balanced as standard, with respectable performance (regardless of battery charge) and sensibly weighted steering. Perhaps it makes more sense in the spicier versions, where Eco mode can help offset a thirstier engine on longer journeys.

*Mileage: 6964*

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-Life with a Cupra Formentor: Month 2-

*A useful addition? - 13 October 2021*

Adopting the Formentor had me a bit worried, if only for that photographer cliché: will it hold all my stuff? The visual promise that crossovers give of extra room over hatchbacks is often not kept, and I was stepping out of a Ford Tourneo that could swallow all my outdoorsy gear, too. The car’s roof rails might yet come in handy, but for now I’ve been using straps to attach things like surfboards.

*Mileage: 5105*

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*Our potent crossover isn’t always easy to live with - 29 September 2021*

The honeymoon is over. I was still gleaming with faint pride six weeks ago when I wrote the first report on our Cupra Formentor long- termer. Well, now I’ve encountered a few quirks and frustrations, which I’ll fill you in on shortly. On balance, though, I’m still feeling good about life in this handsome, alternative, high-rise hatchback.

So far, I’ve just been using and abusing the car on the daily grind. The occasion has yet to present when I might take it on a really long trip, although I did manage to get out to South Wales the other day, and I’ve now had a full roster of passengers on a couple of weekend trips.

We’ve got the PHEV version, but since it doesn’t do DC rapid charging (which is gripe number one) and I’m not set up for home charging, I’ve yet to charge it up more than once in our 3000 miles together. That being the case, the 43.2mpg that the car’s long-term trip computer is displaying doesn’t seem half bad.

So, 3000 miles later, what have I learned? That life aboard the Formentor isn’t always quite the picnic that the inviting cabin might suggest. Six weeks in, I’m still getting used to some of the car’s ergonomics. Despite using it pretty much every day, I regularly press the traction control button adjacent to the gear selector when I’m looking to start the engine, instead of prodding the starter button, which hangs off the steering wheel boss.

This, to me, just seems the wrong place for a starter button. I mean, this isn’t a Lamborghini. And while I find other Volkswagen Group cars a cinch to just get into and drive, the Formentor’s alternative layout makes it that bit less intuitive and – only occasionally – a bit frustrating.

The other button located just off the steering boss is the car’s driving mode selector, which I’ve been fiddling with aplenty. Our test car has Cupra’s adaptive dampers, so it’s worthwhile experimenting to find a profile that you like.

I rarely use Cupra, the car’s sportiest mode, for a few reasons. On the back roads near where I live, it makes the car feel a bit frantic and bouncy, and while it can be kind of exciting set up like that, it’s more often annoying.

Like Cupra, Sport mode introduces a lot of fake engine noise into the driving experience, which is another personal bugbear. So I’ve configured my own combination of preferences for everything from engine sound to gearbox setting in the Formentor’s Individual mode: dampers set to maximum soft and engine noise set to quiet, but sporty settings for most other things.

Thus configured, I’m enjoying putting some miles on the car. It feels lower, lighter and sportier than my last long-termer (a Suzuki Across), albeit a bit less versatile and mature. I’m used to the seats now and find them comfortable over distance.

I’ve even found a colour I like for the ambient lighting in the cabin: a bronzey gold that matches the car’s decorative interior trim.

*Mileage: 3394*

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-Life with a Cupra Formentor: Month 1-

*A comfortable ride - 8 September 2021*

After some adjusting from the instantly comfortable seats in my previous long-termer, the Suzuki Across, I am pleased to report that I’m finding my back no longer hurts after long journeys in the much sportier Formentor. I recently went for a short drive with my partner and his family, and they also approved of the lovely blue seats.

*Mileage: 2895*

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*Welcoming the Formentor to the fleet - 18 August 2021*

Some enthusiastic horn-tooting accompanied my first drive in the latest addition to Autocar’s long-term test car fleet: the alluringly different Cupra Formentor.

There was I, waiting at the traffic lights when I looked to my right and saw an excited man gesturing at me to lower my window. “What is that? I like it so much.” I told him. Maybe now he’s a Cupra customer-in-waiting.

Evidently this is a car that has an effect on people, and that alone ought to make the coming months interesting. I remember finding it similarly arresting when I first saw the Formentor concept on a motor-show stand a couple of years ago (the production version hasn’t changed much in the meantime).

The details all look great. The full-width light bar at the back is really well integrated and more cohesive than it is on the Cupra Leon. The front foglights, tucked away neatly beneath the headlights, give a concentrated look to the car’s face. And I’m particularly taken by the crease above the rear wheels: it’s confident, it adds dynamism and it breaks up the car’s visual mass in a clever way.

All of which is another way of saying I’m looking forward to taking photos of this car as time passes. The Urban Silver paintwork will allow the shadows and highlights created by its sculpture to really shine. I think the standard-fit 19in alloys could have been a little less generic and a touch more technical in their design, like some of the options offered by Audi and Volkswagen, but otherwise I’ve got very few complaints.

Taking in the car as a whole, perhaps it’s the unconventional body type that makes people stare. The Formentor is a ‘crossover-lite’ kind of vehicle. The ride height and overall profile is only slightly raised over that of a Cupra Leon: just enough to make the driver’s seat a bit easier to access but not feeling so tall that the car feels at all bulky or becomes in any way unwieldy to drive.

The Formentor is a something of a throwback to all those early, family- size crossover hatchbacks that the market wasn’t quite ready for around 20 years ago: the Vauxhall Signum, Fiat Croma, Subaru Forester and Lancia Delta. I think it’s a much more accomplished design than those earlier efforts, though: more attractive and less geeky. It lacks some of their quirkiness, granted, but that should play well for its commercial success. I foresee a lot of these emerging onto our roads over the next 12 months, and have already been eyeing a neighbour’s black one.

Ours comes in a lovely shade of silver, with a slightly golden-grey look to it. It’s a higher-spec VZ2 trim level, which means you get leather as standard, and you can choose between regular black nappa hide or a two-tone interior in black and petrol blue (which we plumped for, and very nice it looks, too). The air vents have a bit of a Lamborghini vibe about them, and there are lots of copper-coloured trim highlights around the place (a Cupra-brand design signature) to help lift the ambience.

In the past I’ve noted that Seat’s cars have often had funkier interiors than their Volkswagen Group opposites, but ultimately they are less classy-feeling ones with harder, more monotone plastics. In this Cupra, however, that situation has been emphatically reversed: there’s real material plushness here. I’d much rather spend a long journey in the Formentor than the Volkswagen Golf R we had recently, for example. The Cupra has lots of soft-touch plastic, and the combination of interior colours is both lavish and classy.

We’ve gone for Cupra’s upper- level plug-in hybrid powertrain, which is sure to be popular with fleet operators. It’s the Volkswagen Group’s familiar combination of 150bhp 1.4-litre petrol turbo, 114bhp electric motor and six-speed DSG dual-clutch automatic gearbox: the same one that powered a Skoda Superb iV I ran for a while last year. The difference is that here it makes nearly 30bhp more than in the Skoda (242bhp in all), and it gives a slightly quicker 0-62mph time of 7.0sec versus 7.4sec.

The Formentor is smaller than the Superb was, of course, and I’ll be interested to find out if that also makes it any more frugal in the real world. With lots of motorway miles to do and little opportunity to charge, I’ll be doing well if I can beat 45mpg. Already it’s clear that this isn’t a slow car, and apart from four-wheel drive, it lacks little of the technical content that you get on the more powerful, top-of-the-range petrol version (it comes with Cupra’s adaptively damped sports suspension and variably geared steering, but no Brembo brake calipers).

All in all, I’m very happy with the specification of this car. It doesn’t have a panoramic sunroof or surround-view parking cameras, which is a bit of a shame; but it doesn’t have matt-finish paint (which isn’t remotely a shame in my book). Overall, the car seems well prepared for everything my daily motoring routine may throw at it.

Here’s to continuing to cut a dash at the traffic lights, then. If you see me, just wave your arms and honk your horn like a lunatic – I’m always happy to chat.

*Olgun Kordal*

*Second Opinion*

A big chunk of the Formentor’s appeal lies in the richness of its interior, so I’m delighted that we’ve got a pretty high-end trim with the two-tone leather and multi-coloured ambient lighting. It’s a really handsome car externally, too. If Olgun ever needs somewhere to charge it, there’s a spot on my driveway always open to him.

*Matt Saunders*

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-Cupra Formentor 1.4 Hybrid 245 VZ2 specification-

*Specs: Price New* £40,560 *Price as tested* £41,115 *Options *Urban Silver metallic paint £555, Mode 3 charging cable £0

*Test Data: Engine* 4cyls in line, 1390cc, turbocharged petrol; plus front-mounted electric motor *Power* 241bhp (combined) *Electric power* 114bhp *Top speed* 130mph *0-62mph* 7.0sec *Fuel economy* 176.6mpg *CO2* 33g/km *Faults* None *Expenses* None

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