Skip advert
Advertisement

Ford Mondeo Estate 2015 review

Long-awaited Ford Mondeo Estate is in Britain at last, and we try 1.5 EcoBoost petrol

Overall Auto Express Rating

4.0 out of 5

Find your Ford Mondeo
Offers from our trusted partners on this car and its predecessors...
Hassle-free way to a brand new car
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Customers got an average £1000 more vs part exchange quotes
Advertisement

This is our first taste of the new Ford Mondeo Estate in the UK, and it’s clearly an important car as it’s been a well established favourite for families and fleets since 1993. The latest model comes as a saloon (as a hybrid only), hatchback and this attractive estate – and this is the model that we would be tempted to go for. It’s good looking, better built than ever and has a great petrol engine in the shape of this 1.5-litre turbo.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Family estates need a diesel engine under the bonnet, right? Not necessarily, because unlike the diesel-only VW Passat Estate, Ford is offering its new Mondeo Estate with a range of clever EcoBoost petrol engines to appeal to a wider spread of buyers.

The Mondeo will be available with the impressively small 1.0-litre EcoBoost three-cylinder (which arrives in early 2015) and a racy 240bhp 2.0-litre, but there’s another petrol option – a 1.5-litre turbocharged four-cylinder. And that’s the unit we’ve tried for the first time in the UK. The good news is that it is a decent little engine, which proves that small cubic capacity can deliver decent performance when there’s a turbocharger attached.

There’s 158bhp on offer, which allows the Ford to reach a top speed of 135mph, get from zero to 62mph in 9.2 seconds and return 47.9mpg – although we struggled to better 32mpg on a mixture of roads.

On the move, the 1.5 turbo is eager to rev, with power kicking in from 1,500rpm. There’s a slightly rorty soundtrack as you press on and the six-speed manual gearbox proves pretty slick, although a six-speed auto is also on offer. It’s a good cruiser, too – the 1.5 settles down to a distant hum on the motorway and overtaking is easy in top gear thanks to 240Nm of torque.

While some rivals can’t pull off the same trick, Ford has managed to make its Estate as good looking as the hatch and saloon models. And it’s practical, too – there’s 500 litres of capacity with the seats up and 1,605 with them down, and once they are folded the load space is wide and flat. If space is the absolute priority, though, look to the Passat, because it offers 650 and 1,780 litres respectively.

Despite our car’s 17-inch alloys – just one of the goodies on offer in the top-spec Titanium – the Mondeo rides well on harsh UK roads. It’s an example of the direction Ford has taken with the new Mondeo, as it trades some of the old model’s fun for comfort, and this is particularly evident with the steering – it’s a tad limp while the suspension is soft. But it’s hardly a major gripe, as the Mondeo Estate has become a highly desirable, comfortable wagon.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Car Deal of the Day: sensational BMW M2 is a bargain at this price!
BMW M2 - front tracking
News

Car Deal of the Day: sensational BMW M2 is a bargain at this price!

Our Day of the Day for 18 April is the formidable BMW M2 performance car
18 Apr 2024
New Nissan Qashqai gets angry, as best-selling family SUV receives aggressive facelift
Nissan Qashqai reveal - front
News

New Nissan Qashqai gets angry, as best-selling family SUV receives aggressive facelift

In addition to its new much sharper design, the Qashqai now features Google apps and voice assistant built in
17 Apr 2024
New 2024 Audi A3 takes the fight to BMW and Mercedes with £32k price tag
Audi A3 Saloon - front action
News

New 2024 Audi A3 takes the fight to BMW and Mercedes with £32k price tag

The updated Audi A3 is available now, with the hot S3 version due from May
16 Apr 2024