Skip advert
Advertisement

New Cupra Ateca 2020 review

The facelift Cupra Ateca just falls short of giving the hot SUV a new lease of life

Find your Cupra Ateca
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

While the mid-life changes to the Cupra Ateca are all subtle, they help to freshen up this rapid family SUV. However, with the recent arrival of Cupra’s own Formentor, the case for the hot Ateca has become much harder to justify. Unlike the SEAT-derived Ateca, the Formentor is unique to the Cupra range, plus it’s more distinctive to look at, more sophisticated to drive – and costs only £780 more to buy.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The Cupra Ateca was the first model to launch SEAT’s performance offshoot as a standalone brand. Its start in life has been strong, with more than 10,000 units sold in its first full year – the equivalent of 15 per cent of all Ateca sales.

Now there’s an updated model, which benefits from a range of mostly cosmetic upgrades. However, designers have taken a fairly low-key approach to the exterior refresh. The angular shape is carried over with only a few minor detail changes; the LED headlights get new internal graphics that give the car’s face a slightly sharper look, while the front grille elements and bumper designs are also subtly fresh.

All Cupra Atecas ride on 19-inch alloy wheels, and adaptive dampers are fitted as standard. Cupra has reworked the steering in order to improve the response from the rack, although otherwise the mechanical set-up is largely the same as before. This includes the powertrain; a 2.0-litre petrol turbo sends its drive to all four wheels via a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox.

A maximum of 296bhp is delivered from 5,300rpm up to the 6,500rpm red line... or the copper line, in this case. The rev counter, displayed on a 10-inch digital screen that can be customised to show a variety of driving and media functions, is only one of many details within the cabin that now carries Cupra’s signature colour.

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

Used - available now

1 Series

2015 BMW

1 Series

34,000 milesAutomaticDiesel1.5L

Cash £11,110
View 1 Series
Focus

2017 Ford

Focus

51,000 milesManualPetrol1.0L

Cash £6,995
View Focus
Range Rover Evoque

2019 Land Rover

Range Rover Evoque

53,000 milesAutomaticDiesel2.0L

Cash £11,995
View Range Rover Evoque
3 Series Touring

2018 BMW

3 Series Touring

107,700 milesManualDiesel2.0L

Cash £7,990
View 3 Series Touring

Stitching on the seats, dash and gear-selector gaiter, as well as on a new steering-wheel design, also feature the copper finish, which helps to highlight an otherwise black and moody cabin. The body-hugging sports seats wear a mix of leather and Alcantara, and feel supportive. Quality is decent enough, but the black door handles look rather cheap.

The rest of the cabin nails the family-car brief; there’s loads of room in the back, and cubby spaces are plentiful. Although 485 litres doesn’t sound like a vast amount of boot space, the square area and huge opening make loading easy.

Once out on the road, however, it almost feels like the chassis engineers have forgotten that some semblance of comfort is also welcome in a family car. Within a few hundred yards, it becomes clear that the ride is on the less forgiving side of the current crop of hot hatchbacks. The Ateca always seems busy, and it can crash into abrupt road-surface changes. The adaptive dampers do little to alter this feeling; the ride is at its harshest in full-blown Cupra mode, but the improvements are only marginal when you tone things down to Comfort.

The flip side of this is that the Ateca is a lot of fun to throw around. Perversely, it’s at its most playful in Comfort setting. By introducing a little extra body roll, the weight transfer allows you to play with a chassis whose balance can be adjusted with both the steering and the throttle.

The updated steering doesn’t introduce a huge difference in feel, but it is precise and pleasingly weighted.What hasn’t changed is the Cupra’s ability to cover ground at a seriously rapid rate, whatever the weather. Overall grip levels are high, and the four-wheel-drive system means that even in damp conditions it’s possible to make the most of the 2.0-litre turbo’s full 400Nm. In Sport and Cupra modes, the exhaust system introduces a few pops and bangs to add a little drama to go with the sub-five-second 0-62mph time.

Model:Cupra Ateca
Price:£39,050
Engine:2.0-litre 4cyl turbo petrol
Power/torque:296bhp/400Nm
Transmission:Seven-speed automatic, four-wheel drive 
0-62mph:4.9 seconds
Top speed:153mph
Economy:31.7mpg
CO2:218g/km
On sale:Now
Skip advert
Advertisement
Chief reviewer

Alex joined Auto Express as staff writer in early 2018, helping out with news, drives, features, and the occasional sports report. His current role of Chief reviewer sees him head up our road test team, which gives readers the full lowdown on our comparison tests.

New & used car deals

Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £38,030Avg. savings £3,207 off RRP*Used from £20,799
Omoda 5

Omoda 5

RRP £23,990Avg. savings £1,429 off RRP*
Audi A3

Audi A3

RRP £26,295Avg. savings £3,075 off RRP*Used from £11,700
Vauxhall Corsa

Vauxhall Corsa

RRP £19,690Avg. savings £5,321 off RRP*Used from £11,399
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Cars that will die in 2026: get 'em before they're gone
Auto Express team members standing with their favourite outgoing cars

Cars that will die in 2026: get 'em before they're gone

In 2026 we'll wave goodbye to some big names from the automotive world. We drive the best of these death row models one last time...
Features
27 Dec 2025
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