Currently reading: New Volkswagen T-Roc: Has it made the Golf redundant?

New-generation of VW's medium-sized crossover has plenty of strengths, but can it really cope with our tatty roads?

You may already have read Illya Verpraet’s comprehensive report on the new Volkswagen T-Roc, dispatched from Lisbon in November.

And in just a couple of months' time you’ll be able to read an even more comprehensive review bolstered by economy and performance figures obtained at Horiba Mira proving ground, when the T-Roc undergoes its full road test.

But in case this is somehow not enough T-Roc for you, here’s a brief report from the car’s fresh-off-the-boat arrival into the UK – a market in which the first-gen model was spectacularly successful between 2017 and 2025, even as its specific niche became increasingly crowded. In 2026 its chief rivals are the Toyota C-HR, Renault Symbioz and Skoda’s Karoq, and the latest Nissan Qashqai is another serious alternative.

These drives on UK Tarmac matter more for some cars than others, and the Golf-on-stilts T-Roc is one of those for which our tawdry roads might be its undoing. For one thing, VW will sell plenty of these in top-billing R-Line trim, and therefore potentially shod with 19in flying-saucer wheels and slithers of rubber for sidewalls.

Found beneath other models in the VW stable, the T-Roc’s MQB Evo platform has also been hit-and-miss in terms of ride quality, but it's a complex picture because the dampers you opt for have a significant bearing on the car’s ability to weather cruddy surfaces. Even with the T-Roc, a comparatively junior member of an SUV family that culminates in the Touareg, you can choose between ordinary passive dampers and adjustable dampers with selectable rates (for £765). Ride quality is likely to be rather dependent on specification, then, but more in a moment. 

As for the engine line-up, for now there is only VW’s excellent 1.5-litre eTSI mild-hybrid unit, albeit available in two tunes: 114bhp or 148bhp. If you can wait until later in the year, the T-Roc will gain a full hybrid powertrain with 134bhp or 168bhp – a set-up that ought to push economy well beyond the declared figure of 50mpg for the 1.5 eTSI. Of course, a full hybrid T-Roc will also be a more expensive T-Roc. Currently the range starts at £31,635 for base Life trim with the 115bhp unit, and it extends to more than £40,000 if you opt for R-Line trim with the more powerful 148bhp engine and some optional extras, such as the £2260 Leather Comfort pack and matrix headlights for £465 (all very grown up).

We won’t dwell on the cabin here, but in a nutshell the comfort of the seats (particularly for R-Line cars) and the general feeling of quality are improved versus the original T-Roc, and in they certainly sit at the sharp end of the class. The fact the new car has had 30mm injected into the wheelbase has done no harm to rear leg room either, and a longer rear overhang takes boot capacity to 475 litres, up from 445 litres. The T-Roc still can’t match a Karoq (521 litres), but it comfortably out-hauls the Mk8 Golf.

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Driveability is generally good, the 1.5 eTSI pulling you along with decent smoothness and enthusiasm from 2000rpm and pairing neatly with the seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox. Having tried the 148bhp variant, I possibly wouldn’t entertain the thought of having the 114bhp version unless the cost difference (reasonably at just over £2000) was going to be a deal-breaker. Economy is good too: our car returned 46.4mpg on a representative mixed-driving route. That’s 500 miles on a tank. The T-Roc also steers and stops with an intuitive maturity you’d generally expect of a Volkswagen. 

It’s all appealing enough, but ride quality is indeed the possible weak spot. Our test car rode on passive dampers and the smallest 17in wheels, with a general set-up that clearly tends towards the sportier end of what’s acceptable for a basic T-Roc (standby for a possible R derivative). Body control is fine and the car corners cohesively – it isn’t difficult to imagine being impressed with the package on smoother European roads, and the T-Roc is assured on the motorway.

But that decision to tie the body a little more closely to the chassis has repercussions here in the UK, and one of them is that, on country roads and smaller A-roads, the T-Roc will crash over pock-marked surfaces and the like. Unfortunately there is currently enough of that sort of thing in the country to make this a notable drawback. Interestingly, a car with the same dampers but the larger, 18in wheels fared no worse.

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Your best bet is probably to spec an R-Line car with the adaptive dampers and the 18in wheels. Very few people will do this – it’s expensive and people generally don’t buy an R-Line VW to have smaller wheels. But if it rounded off the ride, the result would be an even better little crossover.   

Volkswagen T-Roc Life 1.5 eTSI 150PS

Price £32,335 Engine 4 cyls in line, 1498cc, turbocharged, petrol, plus 48V ISG Power 148bhp at 5000-6000rpm Torque 184lb ft at 1500-3000rpm Gearbox 7-spd dual-clutch auto, FWD Kerb weight (DIN) 1399kg 0-62mph 8.9sec Top speed 132mph Economy 50.3mpg CO2 128g/km, 31% BIK

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Richard Lane

Richard Lane
Title: Deputy road test editor

Richard is Autocar's deputy road test editor. He previously worked at Evo magazine. His role involves travelling far and wide to be among the first to drive new cars. That or heading up to Nuneaton, to fix telemetry gear to test cars at MIRA proving ground and see how faithfully they meet their makers' claims. 

He's also a feature-writer for the magazine, a columnist, and can be often found on Autocar's YouTube channel. 

Highlights at Autocar include a class win while driving a Bowler Defender in the British Cross Country Championship, riding shotgun with a flat-out Walter Röhrl, and setting the magazine's fastest road-test lap-time to date at the wheel of a Ferrari 296 GTB. Nursing a stricken Jeep up 2950ft to the top of a deserted Grossglockner Pass is also in the mix.

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Ruaraidh 16 April 2026

Golf on stilts for sheep. 

Buy a car.