The name is familiar, very familiar, but this is a Suzuki Vitara unlike anything that has gone before.
Vitara has been the cornerstone of Suzuki for the best part of four decades, but this is not just a model update. It is new from the ground up, built on a purpose built electric platform and instead of a petrol engine it has an electric motor. Yes, Suzuki has finally given us an electric car and I am going to tell you whether it has been worth the wait.
Meet the e Vitara and the new face of Suzuki. It is fitting the company has kept the name, after all Suzuki is Vitara rather than the other way round, but first let’s get the essentials nailed down.
Two battery options, 49kWh or 61kWh, with ranges of 214 miles and 264 miles respectively, two models, Motion and Ultra, all wheel drive, which is rare in this segment, and with a competitive starting pricing.
Pricing: £26,249 will secure a pearlescent white 49kWh Motion. Metallic colours are £650 extra or £950 for two tone. Top of the range Ultra is £32,049 and £34,049 for Allgrip.
We have waited a while for Vitara to join the smart set and here it is. A compact SUV, no surprises there, with a smart, modern interior, by that I mean a bang up to date digital displays rather than outdated dials, and contrasting tan trim around the cabin but only on two body colours. I always felt Suzuki lagged behind on interior quality, too much hard black plastic, so this is a decent step forward.
The tan dashboard finish breaks things up with a 10.3in digital driver’s binnacle and 10.1in central touchscreen for navigation, infotainment, etc but separate physical switches for heating, and hooray for that. The splash of colour is carried over to the door trim and seats on the two tone Ultra model.
That pushes you to the top end of the price scale but I would be looking at the entry Motion with the option of the 49 or 61kWh battery because the spec level is generous and includes reversing camera, front and rear parking sensors, smartphone connectivity, keyless entry, navigation and a heat pump which preserves driving range. It is not unusual to see 25-30 miles disappear on a frosty morning with the heating going full blast so a useful addition.
Add in a suite of safety features, with front collision braking and rear cross traffic alert, and this is looking like a substantial package.
The higher battery output Motion also throws in heated front seats and heated steering wheel. Does anyone really need a heated steering wheel?
Additional features for Ultra are wireless phone charger, adaptive auto dipping headlights, higher grade sound system, 360 degree camera, glass roof panel and powered driver’s seat. The upgraded Allgrip model gets hill descent control and trail mode and is surprisingly good at keeping you on the straight and narrow in challenging conditions.
Cabin space is good and there is loads of backseat legroom room while the sliding back seat is a useful addition. The 310 litres of boot space is down on some rivals who are topping 400 litres but it will take three good sized suitcases. If the children have grown out of pushchairs and the like it might not be important.
Performance from the 61kWh battery is adequate, some rivals are quicker off the mark but surely slamming foot to the floor does not match with driving an electric car. The ride favours comfort although there should be no complaints of intrusive body roll on twisting roads.
Vitara can take a maximum charge of 150kW so away from home a top up to 80 percent takes 45 minutes, a bit longer than rivals which can do the job in under 30 minutes. You will save a heap of money charging at home which will take between six and nine hours depending on battery size.
A worthwhile new feature for Suzuki is an extended 10 year car and battery warranty (the industry standard for the battery is eight years) activated after three years but you must have the car serviced at a Suzuki dealer. And private buyers get a free wall charger.
Suzuki has been lagging behind on the electric front but given its solid reputation for reliability and exceptional value should put e Vitara on an equal footing with its rivals.
Fast facts
e Vitara Ultra 174bhp
£32,049
Battery: 61kWh
0-62mph 8.7secs; 93mph
E consumption: 4.2 miles/kWh
Boot: 310-562 litres
1st VED £10
Insurance group 23
