The Volkswagen Tiguan has been reinvented inside, outside and underneath – to great effect. We get an early prototype drive in the firm's best-selling car...
On sale June 2024 | Price from £35,000 (est)
If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it, or so they say. That tatty pair of jeans you wear to mow the lawn? Still going strong. Your nan’s ancient oven dish that you used to make lasagne last night? Good as new. And then there’s the Volkswagen Tiguan – a family SUV that’s been VW’s best-selling car since 2018, and is still competitive in terms of performance, efficiency, equipment and practicality.
It’s not exactly screaming out for a makeover, and we’d have understood if the brand’s engineers were too busy working on their shiny, all-new electric car line-up to worry too much about freshening up their combustion-powered Kia Sportage rival.
But while the original VW Beetle survived a whopping 65 years with relatively few changes, that form of longevity doesn’t cut it in today’s highly competitive family SUV market. As a result, a new-generation Tiguan is due on sale in June 2024, and is expected to remain available until the end of the decade. The wraps will come off in a few months, but even through the heavy camouflage of the prototype, you can see that the Tiguan has been heavily reinvented for its third outing.
What’s the VW Tiguan like to drive?
The Tiguan’s underpinnings – which are also used for the VW Passat, the VW Polo, the VW T-Cross and the VW T-Roc – have been heavily upgraded for the third-generation Tiguan. Engine-wise, all bases are covered. There will be a choice of familiar pure-petrol, pure-diesel and mild-hybrid petrol engines from launch, with the option of front or four-wheel drive, depending on the version.
If you’re after a plug-in hybrid there’s a choice of 201bhp or 268bhp versions, both of which have a bigger battery than in the previous Tiguan. It’s officially good for an electric-only range of 62 miles and can be rapid-charged if you can find a suitable charging point.
So far, we’ve driven the diesel, and we found that while it sounds a bit rough-and-ready at idle, it has plenty of grunt at low speed and fades away quietly into the background once you get up to motorway pace. Volkswagen has not given any performance figures yet, but you can expect a power output of around 150bhp and a 0-62mph time of roughly nine seconds – and you should be able to manage around 45mpg in daily driving.
New to the Tiguan is an adaptive suspension set-up that offers 15 degrees of firmness, depending on your mood and the state of the road in front of you. In softly sprung Comfort mode, the Tiguan rides serenely and quietly over rough roads – perfect for letting the kids sleep and not spilling the shopping. In stiffened-up Sport mode, you can take corners quicker and flatter, but the trade off is a juddery ride over potholes and bumps.
Since this isn’t a sports car you’ll be perfectly happy to just set the suspension to Comfort and leave it alone forever, but it’s nice to have the choice. The BMW X1 is a keener-handling family SUV, but the Tiguan has long been a frontrunner in the refinement stakes, and it looks like these improvements will help it maintain that position.
What’s it like inside?
While the new Tiguan’s exterior styling isn’t far removed from that of its predecessor, the changes are more far-reaching inside. The most prominent update is a freestanding central touchscreen that, depending on trim, measures either 12.9in or a whopping 15.0in – that’s as big as in a Tesla Model Y. That touchscreen incorporates the latest generation of VW’s MIB infotainment software, as seen in the VW ID 7 electric saloon, so some of the previous iteration’s, ahem, quirks have been ironed out to improve ease-of-use.
For example, more of the climate control functions are now permanently displayed at the bottom of the screen, making them easier to find and adjust when driving. Meanwhile, the touch pads that adjust the temperature now light up so you can use them in the dark. And, thankfully, the touchpads on the steering wheel that make cruise control and audio adjustments tricky in the VW Golf and the VW ID 3 are replaced by physical buttons. There’s also a rotary controller on the centre console (with its own mini screen), which you can use to control the drive mode, radio volume or ambient lighting colour.
Elsewhere, you’ll find that the Tiguan has been usefully expanded to give 10mm more headroom and 33 extra litres of boot space. It retains the 2681mm wheelbase (the distance between the front and rear wheels) of its predecessor to retain more-than-adequate leg room in both rows. There’s no seven-seater version (currently the VW Tiguan Allspace) but the new three-row VW Tayron, due in 2024, will fill that gap in the line-up, using the same underpinnings and engines as the Tiguan.
Keyword: 2024 Volkswagen Tiguan review