Skip advert
Advertisement

New Jaguar F-Pace P400e PHEV 2021 review

Is the new plug-in hybrid Jaguar F-Pace 400e the pick of the range? We find out...

Find your Jaguar F-Pace
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

Verdict

With the P400e powertrain proving its worth elsewhere in the JLR line-up, it’s an unsurprising but welcome addition to the F-Pace. Power, pace and refinement are on hand with both battery and engine working together, but when the battery runs flat, those claims of 130mpg will fall flat quickly too. The rest of the package feels like a strong update though, with well thought-out improvements over the pre-facelift car. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

New Jaguar boss Theirry Bollore’s battle cry to transform the brand into Britain’s answer to Tesla has seen the company plot out a startling path forward from 2025 onwards. The whole Jaguar line-up will have to change and in a relatively short space of time. But until then, electrified cars from the old regime will need to keep buyers interested. 

Perhaps, then, this new plug-in hybrid variant of the F-Pace - the car that saw Jaguar cash in on the SUV craze - could in turn become the most important version of Jaguar’s most important car. Badged P400e, its introduction coincides with a significant mid-life update for the brand’s biggest SUV.

Though this is an all-new version of the F-Pace, the source of power is very familiar. The P400e plug-in hybrid powertrain makes use of a 296bhp version of JLR’s 2.0-litre four-cylinder Ingenium petrol engine, which is used in all P400 badged Jaguar Land Rover models, alongside electric assistance. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

Golf

2024 Volkswagen

Golf

11,940 milesAutomaticPetrol1.5L

Cash £23,697
View Golf
Golf GTE

2024 Volkswagen

Golf GTE

25,554 milesAutomaticPetrol1.4L

Cash £20,776
View Golf GTE
XC40

2024 Volvo

XC40

17,468 milesAutomaticPetrol1.5L

Cash £27,976
View XC40
Q4 e-tron

2023 Audi

Q4 e-tron

8,432 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £25,897
View Q4 e-tron

The 17.1kWh battery pack is positioned under the boot floor and sends power to a 141bhp electric motor driving the front axle. The F-Pace P400e can be driven on electric power alone at up to 87mph - or, more importantly, for up to 33 miles - by putting the car into EV mode.

The battery takes one hour 40 minutes for a 0-80 per cent charge using a 7kW wallbox. 32kW DC charging is standard too, so using a rapid charger a top-up to 80 per cent will take 30 minutes. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

With the exception of DC charging, which is often not fitted on plug-in hybrid vehicles, those are pretty much benchmark specifications for a plug-in hybrid SUV of this size and price. You’ll have to step up beyond the F-Pace P400e’s size and starting price of £56,060 to get into something with a larger battery, such as the six-cylinder BMW X5 xDrive45e, with its promises of 50 miles on electric power. 

With peak outputs standing at 398bhp and 640Nm of torque, buyers unconvinced of four-cylinder power in a large SUV needn’t worry as there’s plenty of punch here. But before you begin to explore the combination of petrol and electric power, EV mode is where you’ll likely start. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Activated by pressing a new button on the F-Pace’s revised centre console, it moves off silently and without much struggle up to speed around town and on slower A-roads. But, if you want to cruise on the motorway while not producing any CO2 emissions, you’ll have to be patient. 

The F-Type P400e tips the scales at just over two tonnes, and you’ll almost certainly have to push through the kickdown on the throttle and engage hybrid mode to get up to speed, before flicking it back to battery power.

Leave it in the default Hybrid mode and there’s a good mix of power and refinement. The headline act is the 640Nm of torque, which comes with minimal fuss. Reaching high into the rev band isn’t necessary, nor is turning to the Dynamic drive mode, which brings out some strange, V8-aping sound actuation from the speakers. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

Instead, settling into a cruise turns out to be the best option in the F-Pace P400e. Thanks to its great steering and a ride that isn’t compromised too harshly by the extra weight, it’s a very relaxing large SUV to drive, only losing refinement when the battery is drained and the engine is called upon to provide all the power. However, it can be recharged on the move if you put the F-Pace into the Save drive mode (which will be renamed Attain in the near future). 

Elsewhere, the wide-ranging interior update introduced as part of the facelift continues to impress, with the smart new 11.4-inch Pivi Pro touchscreen infotainment screen a huge improvement on the old set-up. The spacious cabin oozes quality, and the new design improved in all the right places.

The P400e powertrain is available in several trim levels (S, SE and HSE, each with sporty looking R-Dynamic variants), but only entry-level S and R-Dynamic S models sneak below the 50g/km CO2 threshold – an important point to note for any company car buyers, given that SE models and above will incur larger tax bills year on year. Stick with an S model, and the 10 per cent Benefit-in-Kind band is where the F-Pace P400e sits.

Model: Jaguar F-Pace P400e SE
Price: £58,975
Engine: 2.0-litre 4cyl turbo petrol with electric motor
Power/torque: 398bhp/640Nm
Transmission: Eight-speed automatic, four-wheel-drive
0-62mph: 5.3sec
Top speed: 149mph
Economy: 130.2mpg
CO2: 51g/km
On sale: Now
Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Renault Clio

Renault Clio

RRP £16,160Avg. savings £4,422 off RRP*Used from £7,495
Kia Sportage

Kia Sportage

RRP £28,065Avg. savings £3,066 off RRP*Used from £13,249
Hyundai Tucson

Hyundai Tucson

RRP £29,820Avg. savings £5,344 off RRP*Used from £10,195
Volkswagen Golf

Volkswagen Golf

RRP £25,235Avg. savings £2,502 off RRP*Used from £11,470
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

What do car journalists drive? The cars our experts spent their own cash on
Auto Express team members standing with their own cars

What do car journalists drive? The cars our experts spent their own cash on

The Auto Express content team is fortunate enough to drive many cars on a regular basis. But that knowledge sometimes translates into unusual private …
Features
29 Dec 2025
New Skoda Fabia 130 2026 review: a likeable warm hatch, but it’s no vRS
Skoda Fabia 130 - front tracking

New Skoda Fabia 130 2026 review: a likeable warm hatch, but it’s no vRS

The new 130 is the hottest Fabia we’ve seen in a while, but it’s also one of the most expensive
Road tests
29 Dec 2025
Jaguar will prove the naysayers wrong by building a monolith of design and taste
Jaguar design - opinion, header image

Jaguar will prove the naysayers wrong by building a monolith of design and taste

Jordan Katsianis thinks the criticism of Jaguar’s bold new approach is misplaced. If anything, it isn’t bold enough.
Opinion
29 Dec 2025