Volkswagen Eos

£19,027 - £29,565

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Volkswagen Eos 12/20

The world is so full of these coupe-cabrios my head is starting to spin. Get a Golf GTI. What’s the matter with you?

Our verdict

They say the Volkswagen Eos isn’t just a converted hatch but a specially made car bigger than a Golf. We aren’t sure it beats a cheaper Focus CC.

Comfort

The seats are excellent. And of course it's cramped in the back, but not as bad as the hatch-derived opposition, so maybe VW does have a point there. The glass roof slides to make a sunroof if you don't want to blast your passengers.

12 out of 20

Performance

The mid-range 2.0 turbos (petrol and diesel) hit the spot. The 3.2V6 has more power than an Eos knows what to do with.

11 out of 20

Cool

VW has a certain brand equity, but hardly enough to out-cool a Focus CC. Which isn't cool anyway, come to think of it.

11 out of 20

Quality

VW has a knack of making seats and instruments look well-crafted, but the Eos's quality impression is undermined by the shaky body and some scrappy plastics in the lower dash. Roof reliability hasn't been perfect either.

13 out of 20

Handling

You get the usual reassuring VW steering and trustworthy cornering, but there's not much precision and when the roof is down it's worse because the body twists and the front end shakes.

11 out of 20

Practicality

Like all CCs the boot space suffers when the roof is down, despite the huge complexity of the Eos's effort.

10 out of 20

Running costs

Variable service intervals mean if you go gently it'll pay off in costs. Fuel costs aren't bad and depreciation on an Eos is still gentle.

5 out of 20

TG Tips

The ‘base’ 1.4 actually has a turbo and a good torque spread, so comes out quite well in comparison with the 2.0 non-turbo, while giving major-league CO2 savings

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