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Renault’s market-leading crossover is back with a new face and fresh tech as part of a mid-life update

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Since the second-generation Renault Captur's launch in 2019, Gilles Vidal has taken the reins at Renault's styling department and brought in a new design language, which now makes the Captur look quite dramatic. 

Its appearance has been brought into line with cars like the Renault Scenic and Rafale. As well as the exterior changes, the update brings a reworked interior and multimedia system.

As is the trend on all new Renaults, an oversized ‘lozenge’ badge dominates the Captur’s gently restyled front grille. Chrome brightwork lends it an appealingly upmarket appearance.

One thing that hasn't changed is that the Captur continues to offer strong value. Prices start at just over £20,000, undercutting many rivals such as the Ford Puma, the Hyundai Kona and the Nissan Juke.

Although welcome, it’s not like Renault desperately needed to make the changes. The Captur is a popular model, selling more than two million units since its 2013 launch. Together with its Renault Clio sibling model, it takes a significant portion of the global B-segment share.

So can this update, along with the car’s mix of style and value, help to continue the Captur’s sales success? Renault will definitely hope so, especially given it is now competing in what has become one of the most oversaturated segments in the market, with competitors ranging from the Puma and Volkswagen T-Cross to the Peugeot 2008.

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Renault Captur range at a glance

VersionPower
TCe 9090bhp
E-Tech Hybrid 145 Auto147bhp

 

DESIGN & STYLING

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New Renault Captur side driving

For this facelift, there is only one place to start: that front end. The facia is centred on the brand’s new emblem, which has been designed to seem as if it’s pulsating. This gives the Captur a completely fresh look, one more suggestive of a new generation than a refresh.

As well as that new nose, the daytime-running lights have had a redesign too, now more angular and lightning bolt-shaped. This brings it in line with the rest of the range’s newer models, such as the Renault Clio, Renault Rafale and Renault Scenic.

The C-pillar is much more substantial and stylised on the Mk2 Captur than on the original model. The chrome strip makes for a smart-looking dividing line between the body and contrasting-coloured roof.

Not much has changed at the rear, but Renault has still subtly redesigned the lights to differentiate it from pre-facelift cars.

Because it’s only a facelift, the Captur is the same size as it was before (4239mm long, 1575mm tall) and its underpinnings are largely similar to the car it replaces. It uses the same CMF-B platform as the Clio and Nissan Juke.

Beneath the body, Renault has added new dampers on the front axle to improve body control and modified the suspension geometry for better ride comfort and "a more dynamic ride". The steering is also said to have been recalibrated for improved response and control. 

Renault said much of these changes were in response to negative feedback over the ride of the pre-facelifted car.

As before, the Captur features a torsion beam at the rear and pseudo-MacPherson struts (in which a lower wishbone is fitted and the anti-roll bar done away with) at the front. Wheel sizes have increased too and now range from 17in to 19in.

INTERIOR

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New Renault Captur side interior

Open the driver’s side door and the relationship between this Captur and the Clio is immediately recognisable. Like that of its supermini sibling, the compact crossover’s cabin has been thoroughly overhauled.

Compared with rivals, this feels like one of the more visually appealing cars in its class. Renault says the upgrades make the Captur "modern" and "upmarket”.

The centrepiece of the overhauled cabin is a new 10.4in, Google-integrated, vertical touchscreen – available on all trims – that runs Renault's latest OpenR Link infotainment platform, bringing a raft of new connectivity functions and wireless smartphone mirroring as standard. 

It's quite easy to use, with key areas such as maps, vehicle controls, phone and music pinned at the top. It's much slicker than its laggy predecessor and its bright and clear display makes map reading from the integrated Google Maps a doddle. Physical volume buttons can also be found on the top of the screen, which is a nice touch.

Downsides come in the form of poor rear camera quality, which really lacks what rivals such as Ford and Hyundai offer. 

Renault has – following other car makers – also done away with the climate control dials that once sat below the screen. In its place, as in the Renault Mégane, are smaller piano key-style switches that work just as well. The fact that the climate controls are not in the screen itself is a big plus.

In our Techno test car, which sits in the middle of a three-car UK line-up, soft-touch plastics cover the dashtop, with a metal-feeling bar – strangely like in a Land Rover Defender – in front of the passenger. In top-rung Esprit Alpine spec, much of the plastics are replaced with a soft-touch cloth design. Alpine logos are also added.

Unfortunately, the Captur's interior doesn’t impress consistently under closer tactile inspection; your fingers don’t have to stray too far into the cabin’s lower reaches to discover harder, cheaper-feeling surfaces and fixings.

Our testers found that the shifter for the automatic transmission – which is unchanged for the new model – felt particularly flimsy and brittle, and will loudly recoil and rattle around in its housing if you try to put the car into gear with a quick flick of the wrist. 

For something that will be used so often by the driver, that’s a peculiar oversight in a car in which such trouble has plainly been taken elsewhere to boost perceived quality.

The amount of cabin space in the Captur remains some distance off the class leaders. Our tape measure revealed that the smaller Clio offers 40mm more maximum head room than its larger sibling, although neither feels under-provisioned for it. 

The sunroof fitted to our test car was partly responsible for this deficit, and would be worth avoiding if you’re catering for taller occupants. For the facelifted model, this comes as standard in Esprit Alpine trim.

Yet in the Techno trim, which didn’t feature a sunroof, that lack of head space was still prevalent, mainly due to the seats not allowing a low enough seating position for our six-foot tester. During normal situations, this didn’t translate into any major issues, except that some traffic lights can be obscured.

The car’s second row is big enough for taller adults – but only just. Even with the Captur’s sliding rear bench pushed all the way back (it can slide 160cm), there’s still only 680mm of leg room to be found, while head room is a pretty average 920mm.

Admittedly, that’s more than you will find in the Clio; and the car’s raised hip point is not to be forgotten when accounting for ease of entry and exit. But when a humble Volkswagen Polo can conjure 950mm of head room and 690mm of leg room, the loftier Captur’s efforts are made to look no better than respectable.

Still, there are at least plenty of useful storage bins and trays dotted around the place. The facelifted car’s upgraded multi-layered console that protrudes from the dash is particularly useful, offering a wireless charging pad and lots of space to stash wallets, phones and keys.

Compared with the previous car, there are a couple of additional cubbies, albeit only large enough for phones.

Boot space, meanwhile, stands at an impressive 484 litres with the back seats in their rearmost position; 616 litres when they are slid forward; and 1275 litres when folded flat.

ENGINES & PERFORMANCE

New Renault Captur distance dynamic

Just two powertrains are available in the UK. 

These are the entry-level 1.0-litre three-cylinder engine, which sends 90bhp through a six-speed manual gearbox, and the full-hybrid E-Tech, which combines a 94bhp 1.6-litre engine with a 48bhp electric motor, a 24bhp starter-generator and a 1.2kWh traction battery for 145bhp.

Keen drivers will find the stability and traction controls overly intrusive but the correlated responses of its steering and chassis make the car easy to position in corners.

Renault quotes an economy of 48.3mpg for the petrol and 60.1mpg for the hybrid. Due to modest sales, no diesels or plug-in hybrid powertrains are returning this time.

For responsiveness and inner-city usability, the Captur's hybrid E-Tech powertrain really is very good.

Thanks to the electric motor, stop-start rush-hour traffic – as we found trundling around a mixed route through Oxfordshire's towns, villages and countryside - made what would be everyday driving a simple task. 

On the open road, this powertrain can get quite animated, however, particularly when you're not smooth with your inputs. At higher speeds, it's bordering on gruff and can sound unpleasant. 

On uphill sections, the gearbox is eager to kick down and hold on to those lower gears and high revs. With no manual control over the gearbox, there's not much you can do about that, either. We found the transition between EV and ICE to be quite aggressive on the Captur in particular.

It's more at home on flatter stretches, although the kickdown was still annoyingly laggy in pivotal motorway overtaking situations. Once it got going, we never wanted for more than the 145bhp powertrain offered.

RIDE & HANDLING

New Renault Captur distance

The Captur gets off to a good start in this section simply by being more natural-feeling and intuitive in its handling than a great many of its crossover rivals.

Instead of doing some doomed impression of a bigger, softer-sprung SUV, or setting out to deny its raised ride height entirely and pretending it’s a warm hatchback, the Captur is an agreeable moderate. 

It’s got medium-paced steering with progressive on-centre response that makes it easy to guide along the road, and moderately sprung suspension that, while probably placing it towards the sportier end of the class’s dynamic spectrum, simply makes for good body control and fairly clean, crisp chassis response. 

The steering is on the lighter side, which is good for city driving, but could do with a bit more weight to aid motorway use.

By and large, the car goes where you point it with a pleasing sense of accuracy and linearity; is predictable in most respects; maintains good vertical control of its mass, even at speed; and is governed by stability and traction control electronics that, while always on, intervene discreetly enough so as not to intrude.

Dynamic qualities such as these may seem fairly elementary but they’re not common among a lot of the Captur’s rivals, whose softened, jacked-up suspension and over-assisted controls can make for quite an unintuitive driving experience by comparison.

The Captur is plainly one of the better-handling cars of its ilk yet it still isn’t one an interested driver would really seek out and it stops a way short of engaging its driver when driven quickly.

Like the related Clio, the Captur steers with an intuitive pace and weight that’s well matched to the rate of handling response of its chassis and that makes it easy to place in corners. With the vast majority of drivers in mind, that’s as it should be.

With the slightly updated suspension set-up (new stiffer front dampers and revised geometry), the Captur’s lateral body control is fair, although it does have tendency to slightly tumble onto its outside wheels when cornering.

In a similar fashion to its Mk5 Clio sibling, the Captur’s ride seems to have lost some of the easy-going fluency of its immediate predecessor.

Its vertical body movements now feel as though they’re being monitored far more closely than before, which admittedly makes for a usefully taut primary ride when travelling quickly on rolling stretches of road.

This translates to a slightly brittle ride in town, although not to uncomfortable levels. 

That said, we'd advise against the Esprit Alpine's 19in wheels, which exacerbate the brittleness. With these wheels, on bumpier roads, the Captur felt borderline uncomfortable. Much of the UK has roads comparable with our Oxfordshire route, so it's best to avoid them.

Nevertheless, the driving position is generally pretty good (slight lack of head space aside), thanks to abundant adjustability in the steering column and seat base. The seats themselves err on the softer side of things but provide decent enough support over lengthier drives.

MPG & RUNNING COSTS

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New Renault Captur front lead

The good news if you like the look of the updated Captur is that it costs less to buy than almost all of its major rivals, including the T-Cross, 2008 and Puma.

Entry-level Evolution cars get a reversing camera, 10.4in touschreen, a 7in digital driver display, 17in wheels, tinted rear windows. automatic headlights, wireless phone charging and automatic wipers as standard. Also included is a suite of safety technology, including cruise control, a speed limiter, active emergency braking and front and rear detection.

Captur matches the Volkswagen T-Cross for residual strength on a percentage basis, which is impressive.

Techno - which is our pick of the range - adds 18in wheels, roof bars, front, rear and side parking sensors, fabric seats, Google services, a 10.25in digital driver display and two additional USB ports for passengers. 

Range-topping Esprit Alpine cars get 19in wheels and a slight makeover, with Alpine badging throughout, plus blue design details inside and out. That's on top of aluminium sports pedals, heated, electrically adjustable seats, adaptive cruise control and 75%-recycled fabric upholstery. 

One thing to note is that, like the Clio, the Captur’s interior ambience is quite dependent on spec and colour. Techno brings yellow stitching while Esprit Alpine adds blue inserts and French flag motifs, for example. There is no chrome or leather on offer, in line with Renault's sustainability ambitions. 

On a 110-mile mixed route in the E-Tech hybrid, we averaged an indicated 63mpg, which actually beats the factory claim. 

All in all, the Captur's positioning looks strengthened by its technology, which should help those all-important residual values, especially when compared with its rivals. 

VERDICT

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New Renault Captur parked

Renault did a lot right with the second-generation Captur, making it a much more complete product than its predecessor. This facelift builds on that, with a much better-looking design and significantly improved on-board technology for a really competitive price.

Renault's 145bhp E-Tech model is fine for power, economy and city centre driving, with a comfortable ride and easy-to-use responsive tech that really improves the car’s day-to-day usability.

Updated Captur should prove popular, especially with its low entry price.

But the way the gearbox performs on faster routes, especially those with even the slightest of inclines, does rob the car of the effortlessness some buyers will be expecting.

This facelift also slims down what was a broad range of engines that originally distinguished the car from rivals. But given that Renault says sales of those powertrains were dropping, it’s no real surprise.

Still, with greater quality than its predecessor, a fresh design to keep up with an increasingly diverse-looking segment (Juke, Puma, Kona et al) and an aggressive pricing structure, it really isn’t short of ways to win over buyers looking for a good-looking practical small family SUV.

Even the Esprit Alpine car costs far less than many of its rivals, including the Nissan Juke Hybrid 143, although it is slightly more expensive than the Toyota Yaris Cross. 

The Captur is a well-priced deal, although we’d advise picking the mid-range Techno. 

Will Rimell

Will Rimell
Title: News editor

Will is a Autocar's news editor.​ His focus is on setting Autocar's news agenda, interviewing top executives, reporting from car launches, and unearthing exclusives.

As part of his role, he also manages Autocar Business – the brand's B2B platform – and Haymarket's aftermarket publication CAT.

Renault Captur First drives