Skip advert
Advertisement

New Volkswagen Tiguan Allspace 2018 review

The bigger, seven-seat Volkswagen Tiguan Allspace SUV arrives in Britain

Find your Volkswagen Tiguan
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

Volkswagen’s longer, seven-seat Tiguan feels at home on UK roads, with solid driving dynamics and a classy feel. The third-row rear seats aren’t really usable for adults, however. This punchy 2.0 BiTDI model looks expensive at nearly £40,000, too, and compared with lesser variants, a Skoda Kodiaq is a better value all-round proposition.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Volkswagen’s SUV offensive will continue in 2018, and joining a growing range is the Tiguan Allspace – a new sister model to the popular Tiguan.

Compared with the regular car, the Allspace sits on a wheelbase extended by 109mm, and is 215mm longer overall. This helps to provide more legroom, a larger boot and up to seven seats. The new model also features a slightly bulkier design, thanks to several styling changes, including a taller-looking bonnet, extended rear doors, a tweaked C-pillar and a slightly altered roof.

Best 7-seater cars on sale 

The Allspace is expected to account for around 15 per cent of all Tiguan sales in 2018, and will come in three trim levels: SE Nav, the mid-level SEL we have here, and the more sporty R-Line, which will arrive later in the year.

Extra space and practicality are what will attract buyers to this car, especially with seven seats as standard. In truth, the folding third row is only really suited to children; headroom is tight, while there’s not a lot of space for legs, even with the middle row slid forward. Access is fine for kids, but undignified for adults. Second-row passengers fare better, with the extended wheelbase providing an extra 60mm of legroom and 54mm of knee room.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

Corolla Touring Sports

2022 Toyota

Corolla Touring Sports

43,946 milesAutomaticPetrol1.8L

Cash £17,176
View Corolla Touring Sports
Corsa Electric

2021 Vauxhall

Corsa Electric

34,939 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £10,497
View Corsa Electric
Fiesta

2021 Ford

Fiesta

55,010 milesManualPetrol1.0L

Cash £9,797
View Fiesta
XC40

2022 Volvo

XC40

39,687 milesAutomaticPetrol2.0L

Cash £21,305
View XC40

The boot expands to 700 litres with the third row folded, up from 615 litres in the regular Tiguan. It puts VW’s mid-size SUV in touch with the Skoda Kodiaq in terms of practicality, but it still can’t match that car’s 720-litre capacity. The third-row seats in the Kodiaq aren’t for adults, either, but are a little more roomy.

Otherwise, the interior has been lifted from the Allspace’s sister car. The sharp design is assembled well and uses high-quality materials. The eight-inch touchscreen infotainment system is easy to use, and SEL and R-Line cars benefit from the 12.3-inch Active Info Display as standard, replacing analogue dials with a customisable digital set-up.

Best SUVs on the market

In fact, all versions are well equipped, with the Allspace only available in SE Nav trim upwards, so even entry-level models get sat-nav as standard.

Both petrol and diesel engine options are available, with the Tiguan’s range-topping, 237bhp 2.0 BiTDI unit reserved for SEL and above. It’s a powertrain that has impressed us before with its punch and refinement, and there’s no difference here. It serves up more than creditable performanceon the road, with a deep well of 500Nm of torque to rely on. It’s an easy car to make good progress in, and it’s respectably refined, too, paired with a smooth, seven-speed DSG transmission.

The 0-62mph time of 6.7 seconds is two tenths slower than the five-seat Tiguan’s, while claimed economy only takes a slight dip to 43.5mpg. This Allspace variant weighs in at 1,920kg; that’s 125kg more than an equivalent five-seat Tiguan in the same spec with the same engine. It’s still a controlled, if unexciting, drive despite that, with a decent balance of ride and handling.

There’s one sticking point, however: the Allspace starts at £29,370. That’s £2,645 more than an equivalent Tiguan, which, even on a monthly Personal Contract Purchase deal, looks steep.The Kodiaq, our favourite seven-seat SUV, is more than £2,000 cheaper spec-for-spec, and starts from £24,925.

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Kia Sportage

Kia Sportage

RRP £28,065Avg. savings £4,599 off RRP*Used from £13,800
Dacia Spring

Dacia Spring

RRP £14,995Avg. savings £3,158 off RRP*
Nissan Qashqai

Nissan Qashqai

RRP £27,415Avg. savings £6,044 off RRP*Used from £12,695
Vauxhall Corsa

Vauxhall Corsa

RRP £19,690Avg. savings £4,506 off RRP*Used from £10,799
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Car headlights are too bright, but the Government can’t do much about it
Car headlights - opinion

Car headlights are too bright, but the Government can’t do much about it

Editor Paul Barker thinks car headlights are too bright but any solution to combat headlight dazzle is some way off
Opinion
5 Nov 2025
New Tesla Model Y Standard 2025 review: proof that less is more
New Tesla Model Y Standard - front tracking

New Tesla Model Y Standard 2025 review: proof that less is more

The Tesla Model Y Standard is proof that electric cars with decent build quality and strong real-world range don't need to be expensive! There's one s…
Road tests
8 Nov 2025
A new Mazda 2 is on the way and it’ll be a shot in the arm for the petrol supermini market
Opinion - Mazda supermini

A new Mazda 2 is on the way and it’ll be a shot in the arm for the petrol supermini market

Mazda's next-gen 2 supermini could be an ideal small car for buyers not yet convinced by all-electric power
Opinion
7 Nov 2025