Vauxhall Antara

£19,047 - £26,847

More Vauxhall cars

Vauxhall Antara 9/20

‘Yet another ghastly compromise that does nothing well.’

Our verdict

The Vauxhall Antara jumps on the crossover bandwagon with nothing to distinguish it, although it’s basically competent.

Comfort

The Antara is more supple than many mini-SUVs, which, taken with the reasonable cornering manners, is a good effort. There's plenty of room too, but the 2.4 petrol version is noisy because you have to cane it.

11 out of 20

Performance

The diesel is the one, because of its torque, although it's laggy in the very low rev range. It'll do 0-62mph in about 11 seconds, which is par for the course, no better. The cheaper petrol engine takes 12.4sec to do the same job, but the difference in economy and CO2 (229g/km petrol vs 198 diesel) isn't that big.

6 out of 20

Cool

No, no. Vauxhall isn't a proper SUV maker and this isn't a proper SUV. It's a softy school-runner.

8 out of 20

Quality

The interior trim is quite nicely done, apart from a terrible wood-u-like in the top version. Everything fits together well in the Antara, so a pat on the back to the Koreans who build it.

10 out of 20

Handling

The Antara corners well for a tall off-roader, taking bends without much roll and with much of the deportment of a car. The steering is quicker-acting and more accurate than most other 4x4s.

9 out of 20

Practicality

The Antara uses the same platform as the Chevrolet Captiva and is built at the same factory, but doesn't feature the Captiva's seven-seat option, which limits versatility. On the other hand all Antaras are at least 4WD, unlike the base Captiva. Oh and you can get Vauxhall's neat Flex-fit pushbike carrier.

11 out of 20

Running costs

Vauxhall servicing isn't too bad, and nor is insurance on the Antara. But we worry about depreciation: with so many similar vehicles flooding onto the market and sentiment turning against them at the same time, you might end up taking a cold bath.

5 out of 20

TG Tips

Last time the 4x4 market was hot, Vauxhall launched the awful Frontera, then lost interest in the segment altogether. Could happen again...

Advertisement