Aston Martin DBX Review 2023 | Top Gear
Advertisement
BBC TopGear
BBC TopGear
Subscribe to Top Gear magazine
Sign up to our Top Gear Magazine
Subscribe
Tuesday 3rd October
Advertisement
Aston's first ever SUV is an interesting, exciting thing. Little late to the party, but feels different, and like an Aston

Good stuff

It’s an AM SUV that feels like one. Handsome, noisy, fun… and actually practical. DBX 707 is the one to have

Bad stuff

Multimedia not up to scratch, heavy on fuel, some quality and refinement niggles

Overview

What is it?

The DBX is Aston’s first SUV in its 100-plus years of history - an attempt to wedge open the tall-car-centric doors of global markets like China, the Middle East and the USA - places deeply attached to the idea of Big Vehicle Status. It’s also a stab at making a genuinely useable, practical, everyday Aston – unlike the four-door Rapide. It’s built at a brand new production facility at St Athan in Wales, and despite only being launched in 2020, already accounts for 50 per cent of Aston’s global sales. There’s a lot riding on the DBX’s success…

There’s now two engine options for the five-seat, four-wheel drive DBX – although both are a Mercedes-sourced 4.0-litre biturbo V8. In the entry-level car it has 542bhp and 516lb ft, while the newer DBX 707 uses different turbos with additional cooling to develop a mighty 697bhp (707PS) and 664lb ft. The world’s most powerful luxury SUV is the claim.

Advertisement - Page continues below

Surely a hybrid is more important?

Yes, but also more costly to develop, and there’s the question of whether the world’s wealthy actually want a hybrid SUV, or if they’d prefer to carry on burning hydrocarbons until the exhaust starts gargling in the rising sea levels. Now, Aston has done a 430bhp mild-hybrid V6, but it’s for China only. Expect more news on DBX variants in 2024. 

What else goes on underneath?

There’s a Merc-made nine-speed auto ‘box (further uprated for the 707), triple-chamber air-ride, a suite of electronically-controlled differentials, electric ride control and a host of other up-to-date tech that means this unique-looking Aston can cope with everything life throws at it - be that mud or racetrack kerbs. Or possibly a little of both.

Layered over the hardware is a striking bit of design work by AM’s design overlord Marek Reichman, featuring elements you don’t usually see in the toolkit of blocky SUV design tropes, and the DBX the better for it. There’s a long bonnet that butts up against a generously-raked ‘screen, a low roofline and a pinched ducktail at the rear that apes the Vantage. There’s muscle and tone in the side profile, a long wheelbase and plenty of detail - though it has to be said it looks better in the metal than it does in pictures.

The 707 gains a bigger grille at the front, larger diffuser at the rear and a load of other detail. If that’s the one you’re most interested in, click on these words for a separate review.

Advertisement - Page continues below

Is it a convincing car?

I’m assuming you mean is it a safe place for your money, when you could be putting it into a Bentley Bentayga, Lamborghini Urus or top end Porsche Cayenne. Aston as a company is not as stable as they are, and the DBX as a product doesn’t quite have their depth of engineering and quality. But it’s close. If you want to read a group test on all four of them, click here.

The biggest issue is the lack of a touchscreen dash interface (clickwheel operation only), and the final polish that characterises its rivals, but in terms of driving well and looking good, the DBX is right up there.

Our choice from the range

What's the verdict?

Aston's first ever SUV is an interesting, exciting thing. Little late to the party, but feels different, and like an Aston

It’s a tough one, this. In a sector crying out for some difference, the DBX provides it. It looks interesting, goes really very well and hits all the targets. It does feel like an Aston Martin product, and is a really very practical SUV (running costs aside). It can manage off-road, feels suitably sporty even on a track - if you must - and generally has the chops to make light work of the grind.

The 707 is the really interesting one. Yes, it’s faster and more aggressive if pushed, but when you back off it’s every bit as comfortable and undemanding as the regular car. And not a lot less efficient. If you can afford the 25 grand uplift to £189,000, it’s the one to have. 

But it’s a polarising thing – yet another bawdy V8 petrol SUV in a world increasingly turned on by efficiency. But saying that, it’s a very decent translation of Aston Martin into the cash-generating sector that is the SUV market. It’s a little late to the party, but if this is Aston’s Porsche Cayenne moment that allows the company to settle and produce ever more decent GT/sports cars, then that’s a good thing. It’s noisy and fun, practical and interesting, imposing and challenging. Nobody ever bought an Aston from a spec sheet – they buy them because of the brand, the heart, the passion. It might not be everyone’s cup of tea, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a decent brew.

The Rivals

compare car finance
Powered byZuto Logo
more on this car
Take one for a spin or order a brochure
Powered byRegit Logo

Subscribe to the Top Gear Newsletter

Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, you agree to receive news, promotions and offers by email from Top Gear and BBC Studios. Your information will be used in accordance with our privacy policy.

BBC TopGear

Try BBC Top Gear Magazine

Get your first 5 issues for £5
subscribe