Interior
What is it like on the inside?
Mazda has mostly pitched the CX-80 well at the premium crowd: it has a decently posh interior, with lots of fancy tech in the top spec; particularly the ventilated seats that will really give you a gust on a warm day.
We appreciate the buttons, too, though there’s a lot of wasted space on the centre stack around the gearlever and rotary controller for the screen.
Having applauded the quality, the plastics do get cheap below the waist, with some stark borders around the cabin as plush and pauper meet. If you choose to be glass half full about it, you could say that the CX-80 has been carefully designed with some hard-wearing plastics for day to day family use.
It’s all down to taste, but we’re not so keen on the white leather and maple wood trim that you get in the top-spec car. We think it's OTT, but you might think it elegant.
What are the seating arrangements like?
There are three different seating combinations you can go for on the CX-80: a middle bench for the full seven pews, or a ‘captain’s chair’ setup with two individual chairs in the middle row that are a bit swankier. This can have a walk-through gap between them, or the third option comes with a centre console.
The latter is a £750 option on the top-spec model, adding heated and ventilated chairs. The captain’s chairs with walkthrough space are a no cost option on all CX-80s except the entry model. Both bench and individual seats fold and slide backwards and forwards (by 120mm) for added practicality.
Mazda says that the rearmost seats are ‘comfortable’ if you’re up to 1.7m tall, which we think is a reasonable assessment. If you have smaller children or only need the extra seats for occasional use, then the CX-80 is perfect.
What about bootspace?
The CX-80 is largely competitive with rivals in this regard: you get a reasonable 258 litres of space with all the seats up (good enough for a couple of weekend bags or a decent slug of supermarket shopping), 566 litres with the third row down (687 if you shove the middle row all the way forward) and 1,971 litres with all the seats flat.
The Skoda Kodiaq PHEV is roomier in these terms, but the Kia Sorento and Land Rover Discovery Sport can't compete with the CX-80. Note the Disco Sport can't be had with seven seats as a plug-in, either.
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