Skip advert
Advertisement

VW Polo 1.2 TSI review

Three-cylinder Volkswagen Polo supermini has impressed, but what about this 1.2 TSI four-cylinder?

Overall Auto Express Rating

3.0 out of 5

Find your Volkswagen Polo
Offers from our trusted partners on this car and its predecessors...
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Customers got an average £1000 more vs part exchange quotes
Advertisement

The updated VW Polo remains a fine choice, as long as you spec it with the right engine. Around town the 1.2 TSI is smooth and refined, but on faster roads it feels underpowered. If you’re only going to use it in town, we’d suggest opting for the equally efficient 1.0-litre and pocketing the £1,145 difference.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Volkswagen predicts that the new 1.0-litre three-cylinder engine will be the most popular choice in the fresh VW Polo range, but is the larger and more powerful 89bhp 1.2 worth considering?

Rather than cosmetic tweaks, the brand focused on mechanical upgrades when it updated the supermini earlier in the year. This 1.2-litre four-cylinder is one of the new additions to the range, offering 89bhp and 160Nm of torque.

The extra punch the 1.2 has over the 1.0-litre engine is immediately obvious. Acceleration is more urgent, with 0-62mph taking 10.8 seconds as opposed to 16.5 seconds. But find yourself in the wrong gear or on an incline, and it still feels a little bit breathless.

Elsewhere, the Polo has preserved its big car feel with a supple ride and light but accurate steering. And while the car can’t quite frighten a Ford Fiesta when it comes to cornering fun, the petrol models have a sense of agility that the heavier diesels simply don’t.

There’s plenty of head and knee room for passengers in the rear, although 280-litre boot is a bit smaller than supermini rivals’. SE models get a generous level of kit as standard, such as alloys, as well as DAB and air-con. But sat nav is a £700 option.

The problem with the 89bhp 1.2-litre engine is that it holds a middle ground where there is no specific focus isn’t on value, economy or performance. It returns 60mpg, which is better than the equivalent but cheaper Fiesta or Renault Clio, and a match for the smaller 1.0-litre Polo. However, if fuel efficiency is a priority, the three-cylinder 1.4-litre diesel will return 83mpg-plus. For those wanting some extra punch the 148bhp Polo BlueGT will be a stronger choice, and it’s still capable of 58.9mpg.

Admittedly, both cost more to buy, but if you want value, the entry-level Polo 1.0 undercuts the 1.2 by over £1,000 and will be just as cheap to run.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Cheap EV charging comes to public chargepoints via new ‘Plunge Pricing’ app
Octopus Energy’s Electroverse
News

Cheap EV charging comes to public chargepoints via new ‘Plunge Pricing’ app

Octopus’ ‘Plunge Pricing’ events promise to save electric car drivers an average of £6.50 per charge
17 May 2024
Skoda Scala vs Citroen C4 2024 twin test: which is the best-value family hatchback?
Skoda Scala and Citroen C4 - front tracking
Car group tests

Skoda Scala vs Citroen C4 2024 twin test: which is the best-value family hatchback?

The revised Skoda Scala takes on Citroen’s C4 in the battle to be the best-value family hatchback
18 May 2024
Car Deal of the Day: Vauxhall Astra Sports Tourer Electric at an unbeatable £201 a month
Vauxhall Astra Sports Tourer front cornering
News

Car Deal of the Day: Vauxhall Astra Sports Tourer Electric at an unbeatable £201 a month

Our Deal of the Day selection for 18 May will appeal to those who want an all-electric family car that’s not a SUV
18 May 2024