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2025 Cupra Terramar VZ review

2025 Cupra Terramar VZ review

Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
What do you get when you send a Volkswagen Tiguan on exchange to Barcelona? Well, probably the Cupra Terramar.
The performance-leaning Spanish subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group is making strides (globally) with continued growth and is currently in the midst of a big product offensive. Next cab off the rank? A mid-size SUV to indirectly replace the smaller Ateca which is nearing the end of its life.
Cupra has been Hungary (you'll get the pun in a moment) to get in on the action that forms Australia's highest-volume and arguably most competitive new-car segment.
Now, the Hungarian-sourced Terramar (teehee!) has landed in Australian showrooms pitched as a sexier, spicier alternative to the related VW Tiguan and a litany of other competitors in this hotly-contested segment.
The Terramar arrives with petrol and mild-hybrid power at launch, with a 200kW plug-in hybrid (PHEV) variant offering more than 100km of electric driving range due here in November. If you're wondering, that's two more electrified options than Volkswagen has managed to offer locally with the related Tiguan.
Cupra says the Terramar, despite competing in a fairly mundane medium SUV market in terms of design, continues the brand's "focus on style and design, positioning that is neither luxury nor mainstream, and a clear focus on the driver and driving dynamics".
Has the Barcelona-based brand succeeded in offering a fun-to-drive mid-size crossover for the masses? We joined the Australian launch drive in Melbourne to find out.
The Terramar range in Australia opens from $53,990 plus on-road costs or $58,490 drive-away, with the flagship VZ asking for $68,200 plus on-roads or $73,490 drive-away before options.
The Terramar S and VZ have already landed in the country, while first production versions of the V for Australia have been built and are on the water ahead of a scheduled September arrival.
Cupra will complete the range with the VZe PHEV later this year, earmarked for a November launch. Pricing and specifications for the plug-in Terramar are still to be confirmed.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
While you might spot displays and switchgear shared with other VW Group products, the Terramar has a very different look and feel inside to the Tiguan with which it shares its DNA.
Cupra's driver-focused ethos sees the dashboard wrap around the driver, with all displays and key switchgear angled towards the pilot, accompanied by flourishes of the brand's signature copper highlights and Audi-esque ambient lighting details.
In the S and V the standard upholstery is a black Dinamica suede combination, but in the flagship VZ you get this lovely Deep Burgundy leather trim that is unlike anything you'll see at this end of the market. You can option the coloured cowhide on lower grades as part of the $1600 Leather and Sound Package.
The seats themselves are comfortable to sit in, with solid bolstering that doesn't overdo it and allows for different size frames. Full electric adjustment with driver memory is standard, as is heating – but no ventilation, sadly. At least the range of adjustment is great so you can find a tailored driving position for your height and build.
Perceived build quality is very good, with plenty of soft-touch materials and contrast stitching details that make this interior feel a little more special, and the hard silver plastic elements feature parametric details which like the copper bits add a bit of spice and flair, too. It's also good to see tactile, hard buttons on the steering wheel – and I love the satellite buttons.
Displays include a 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster which really apes the old Audi Sport (ie: S and RS) layout with the available centre dial, while the 12.9-inch freestanding touchscreen offers DAB+ digital radio, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, in addition to embedded satellite navigation – but, as yet, no connected functionality.
As we've come to expect from the VW Group, the displays offer crisp resolution and snappy animations. And while Cupra goes for an edgier look and sportier typeface, everything is pretty easy to read. You also get a head-up display as standard, which is clear and simple to keep key information in your line of sight.
Cupra's latest interface also permanently has a toolbar with the climate controls at the base of the screen, augmenting the polarising touch sliders below which now are illuminated – hallelujah! While this will never be as simple and user-friendly as a physical pod of switchgear, this is a big improvement over the original iteration of the company's capacitive touch tech.
The standard Cupra sound system in the Terramar S is already pretty good, but the 12-speaker Sennheiser premium audio is very good, particularly at this end of the market. It offers clear and full sound without shaking the windows or distorting the audio. The bass and subwoofer can be dialled up to concert or nightclub levels of 'doof', too.
Storage is decent, with a pair of toothed cupholders in the centre console sitting alongside a slot for your key. Ahead of that there's a cubby with a phone holder that doubles as a charging pad, and there are decent bins in the doors to supplement the storage cubby under the centre armrest.
The ambient lighting not only adorns the dashboard but also through the cutouts in the suede-trimmed door cards, much like the latest Audi A3 and Q3 – fitting, given the Terramar hails from Audi's Hungarian factory which produces the Q3. There's also Cupra's interesting interactive light under the windscreen that shows indicators as well as alerts for the assistance systems.
The second row is a good size for growing families, with the 2681mm wheelbase affording generous leg and knee room even for taller adults like 6'1″ me. The backs of the front seats are scalloped out to allow for knobbly knees, too.
Unlike the front sports seats, the rear bench is less bolstered, which makes it easier to squeeze three across back there if you need – but I'd only do this for short journeys if you need to. The rear floor is pretty flat, which is a plus, but the protruding rear console eats into rear legroom a little.
Said rear console does, however, house the directional rear air vents, which are also hooked up to a third zone of climate control as standard. A pair of USB-C charge outlets live further down.
As I've found in other VW Group products with chunky sports seats though, forward visibility can be obstructed for shorter passengers, which could be an issue for kids or teenagers prone to motion sickness. The rear windows aren't exactly huge, either.
Interestingly, the Terramar doesn't offer map pockets on the front seatbacks, though there is a fold-down centre armrest with cupholders, and bottle holders in the doors to stow your kids' or passengers' stuff. Further, you get the requisite ISOFIX and top-tether points for child seats.
Behind the second row, there's a 540-litre cargo area with the second-row in its rearmost position (it slides on rails), opening up to a maximum 1415L with the rear bench folded. When in the latter position, the floor is even and mostly flat, which is great if you're stowing longer items after a trip to IKEA.
The rear seats also split 40:20:40 to accommodate skis or the like but still need to use the two outer chairs, and there's an underfloor storage area that houses the space-saver spare wheel. Also worth noting is that if you opt for the $4200 Akebono brakes on the VZ, you remove the spare wheel and sub-in a tyre repair kit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ is the most powerful Terramar variant at launch, featuring the same 195kW 'EA888' 2.0-litre turbo four as mid-tier VW Group performance heroes like the Golf GTI and Skoda Octavia RS.
*Full specifications for Terramar VZe e-Hybrid are yet TBC
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Our launch drive took us from Cupra's Richmond 'Garage' in Melbourne's inner-east out to Healesville and Kinglake in Victoria's southeast, then back into the CBD. As you'd expect, we covered a range of different roads and conditions.
We spent some time in the entry-level Terramar S with its mild-hybrid drivetrain, but for this particular review we'll focus on the VZ in which we spent the most time. Stay tuned for a follow-up article covering the mHEV.
Riding on big 20-inch alloy wheels and relatively low-profile Continental performance tyres, you might expect the Terramar VZ to be a touch terse and unforgiving over pockmarked city streets on patchy B-roads, but you'd be wrong.
Being a Cupra, it leans into the firmer and sportier side of the ride/handling equation, but even in Cupra mode the Terramar VZ remained well sorted and impressively comfortable over a wide range of urban and rural blacktop – which lately has been littered with sections of construction and ripped-up tarmac.
It was a similar story in the passively-damped Terramar S, so I imagine it will be the same for the mid-spec Terramar V, which wasn't available to test for the launch. Insulation from road and wind noise is also good for the segment.
Before long you'll also notice the wonderful feel to the Terramar's steering, which we rate as among the best in this segment – mainstream or premium – in terms of feel and accuracy.
While it's not quite Porsche-good in terms of feedback, there's a wonderful linearity in the way the progressive ratio builds up weight as you increase lock and speed, and the accuracy with which the front wheels respond to your steering inputs.
The Terramar is satisfying just putting around the city or the 'burbs, but really comes into its own when you're carving up a winding B-road like we did ascending up Meyers Creek Rd through the Toolangi Forest.
Hitting the steering-mounted Cupra button (very Audi R8), the Terramar VZ's most aggressive setting really dials up the steering and throttle response without making it too twitchy or tense, as can often be the case with 'sporty' SUVs.
It feels like a very balanced and capable high-riding grand tourer, kind of like a budget Porsche Macan – the petrol one, just to be clear. To be fair, this has basically the same engine as the outgoing Macan and Macan T, but it's quicker.
While not as sharp overall as the old Tiguan R, there's perhaps a more natural and fluid feel to the handling and body control that makes it more fun, more of the time.
In Cupra mode you also get a synthesised engine sound that's meant to enhance the EA888's note to give it a bit more meat. However, it's less of an enhancement of the engine's natural sound a more an overlay of something else.
It's sort of somewhere between rumbly boxer and brassy five-pot, and whether you like it or not is a matter of personal taste. I didn't hate it, but I can understand why some journalists found it a little contrived.
The more spirited stints really showed me that this thing is actually quite quick. All 400Nm comes on song at just 1650rpm, meaning there's heaps of shove from quite low down, and it pulls hard all the way to peak power output at 5000-6500rpm.
If you're in Cupra mode and you pull one of the paddles it'll switch to manual mode as well, allowing you to take full control of the gears yourself. The DSG transmission offers very quick shifts in manual or S mode, with no perceptible interruption to torque delivery under hard throttle applications.
That said, in regular driving you do get the odd occasion where you can catch the DSG out when setting off in first or rolling through a slip lane and getting caught out between second and third. It's not necessarily clunky or unrefined, it can just be a little slow to react even with its plentiful torque.
The all-wheel drive system – which Cupra calls 4Drive – offers good on-demand grip despite its front-end bias, and is very quick to react. Some damp sections of twisty roads through the Toolangi Forest were a good test of the Terramar's ability to detect slip and put its power down, and it did a very clean job of it.
Additionally, the VZ's Continental performance tyres felt more suited to dynamic driving than the standard S's Kumho-branded economy rubber. The base car with FWD felt less confident driving harder, which is to be expected.
The assistance systems are all pretty good, as we've come to expect from VW Group vehicles. Travel Assist – which combines adaptive cruise, adaptive lane guidance and traffic jam assist functions – gives you semi-autonomous highway driving capability and is regarded one of the benchmark systems at this end of the market.
Standard blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts are a handy set of extra eyes given the Terramar's thick rear pillars, as is the standard surround camera system which makes parking a cinch. The Terramar also gets speed sign recognition and speed limit assistance, which can automatically adapt your cruise speed to the signposted limit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ sits above the S and V grades in the local Terramar lineup.
2025 Cupra Terramar S equipment highlights:
Terramar V adds:
Terramar VZ adds:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Several packages and single-item options are offered depending on variant.
Leather & Sound Package: $1600 (S + V)
Standalone options include:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
A total of seven exterior paint finishes are available for the Cupra Terramar, with two commanding price premiums.
Standard: $NCO
Premium paint: $620
Later this year (MY26 production), you'll also be able to opt for Century Bronze or Enceladus Grey matte finishes for $2900.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar has a five-star ANCAP safety rating, based on 2025 Euro NCAP tests.
Standard safety features include:
The Terramar VZ adds Matrix Ultra LED headlights with adaptive high-beam.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Terramar is covered by Cupra's five year, unlimited-kilometre warranty in Australia. 24-hour roadside assistance is also included for the warranty period.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar is arguably the new driver's pick of the hotly-contested medium SUV segment, especially alongside anything priced under the $75,000 bracket.
Not just a sporty looker, the flagship Terramar VZ blends keen dynamics and dialled-in driver controls with brisk performance and good all-round practicality and usability.
Cool colour options and a nicely presented, driver-oriented cabin are also key selling points. Further, it's decent value, lining up well against its Tiguan cousin and sitting somewhere between mainstream and premium rivals in terms of pricing.
The VZ is the Terramar that best embodies the Spanish brand's driver-first ethos, though its solid foundations give even the base mild-hybrid an engaging drive and no doubt sets the tone for the incoming V and VZe models, too.
There's something to be said about Cupra defying the odds and giving Australia the same drivetrains and electrification options out of the European market, whereas its VW and Skoda stablemates continue without hybridised versions of their key models to local buyers for the time being.
The Terramar – and the Cupra brand in general – won't be for everyone. Cupra executives have admitted that themselves, and instead they've really honed in on their target market and really aimed to differentiate their products from the existing cohort.
In the case of the Terramar, it makes a great case for those currently in a Formentor that want more space, as well as mid-size SUV buyers that don't want to sacrifice driver enjoyment or spend over six figures. It's a formula that would previously have required you to visit a BMW or Porsche showroom.
Areas for improvement? The fiddly touch sliders won't be to everyone's taste, nor will the burgundy leather trim. Some plastic trims on the centre console are more mainstream than premium, and the VZ's pricing is a decent ask above even flagship versions of mainstream-branded competition.
It's unclear if there will ever be an even hotter version in the realm of the old Tiguan R's 235kW or even the 221kW Ateca VZx, but as it stands Cupra's new flagship SUV already has a lot to offer keen drivers shopping for a family wagon, for whom the Terramar is most definitely worth a look.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new Cupra Terramar. Click here to get a great deal.MORE: Explore the Cupra Terramar showroom
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
What do you get when you send a Volkswagen Tiguan on exchange to Barcelona? Well, probably the Cupra Terramar.
The performance-leaning Spanish subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group is making strides (globally) with continued growth and is currently in the midst of a big product offensive. Next cab off the rank? A mid-size SUV to indirectly replace the smaller Ateca which is nearing the end of its life.
Cupra has been Hungary (you'll get the pun in a moment) to get in on the action that forms Australia's highest-volume and arguably most competitive new-car segment.
Now, the Hungarian-sourced Terramar (teehee!) has landed in Australian showrooms pitched as a sexier, spicier alternative to the related VW Tiguan and a litany of other competitors in this hotly-contested segment.
The Terramar arrives with petrol and mild-hybrid power at launch, with a 200kW plug-in hybrid (PHEV) variant offering more than 100km of electric driving range due here in November. If you're wondering, that's two more electrified options than Volkswagen has managed to offer locally with the related Tiguan.
Cupra says the Terramar, despite competing in a fairly mundane medium SUV market in terms of design, continues the brand's "focus on style and design, positioning that is neither luxury nor mainstream, and a clear focus on the driver and driving dynamics".
Has the Barcelona-based brand succeeded in offering a fun-to-drive mid-size crossover for the masses? We joined the Australian launch drive in Melbourne to find out.
The Terramar range in Australia opens from $53,990 plus on-road costs or $58,490 drive-away, with the flagship VZ asking for $68,200 plus on-roads or $73,490 drive-away before options.
The Terramar S and VZ have already landed in the country, while first production versions of the V for Australia have been built and are on the water ahead of a scheduled September arrival.
Cupra will complete the range with the VZe PHEV later this year, earmarked for a November launch. Pricing and specifications for the plug-in Terramar are still to be confirmed.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
While you might spot displays and switchgear shared with other VW Group products, the Terramar has a very different look and feel inside to the Tiguan with which it shares its DNA.
Cupra's driver-focused ethos sees the dashboard wrap around the driver, with all displays and key switchgear angled towards the pilot, accompanied by flourishes of the brand's signature copper highlights and Audi-esque ambient lighting details.
In the S and V the standard upholstery is a black Dinamica suede combination, but in the flagship VZ you get this lovely Deep Burgundy leather trim that is unlike anything you'll see at this end of the market. You can option the coloured cowhide on lower grades as part of the $1600 Leather and Sound Package.
The seats themselves are comfortable to sit in, with solid bolstering that doesn't overdo it and allows for different size frames. Full electric adjustment with driver memory is standard, as is heating – but no ventilation, sadly. At least the range of adjustment is great so you can find a tailored driving position for your height and build.
Perceived build quality is very good, with plenty of soft-touch materials and contrast stitching details that make this interior feel a little more special, and the hard silver plastic elements feature parametric details which like the copper bits add a bit of spice and flair, too. It's also good to see tactile, hard buttons on the steering wheel – and I love the satellite buttons.
Displays include a 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster which really apes the old Audi Sport (ie: S and RS) layout with the available centre dial, while the 12.9-inch freestanding touchscreen offers DAB+ digital radio, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, in addition to embedded satellite navigation – but, as yet, no connected functionality.
As we've come to expect from the VW Group, the displays offer crisp resolution and snappy animations. And while Cupra goes for an edgier look and sportier typeface, everything is pretty easy to read. You also get a head-up display as standard, which is clear and simple to keep key information in your line of sight.
Cupra's latest interface also permanently has a toolbar with the climate controls at the base of the screen, augmenting the polarising touch sliders below which now are illuminated – hallelujah! While this will never be as simple and user-friendly as a physical pod of switchgear, this is a big improvement over the original iteration of the company's capacitive touch tech.
The standard Cupra sound system in the Terramar S is already pretty good, but the 12-speaker Sennheiser premium audio is very good, particularly at this end of the market. It offers clear and full sound without shaking the windows or distorting the audio. The bass and subwoofer can be dialled up to concert or nightclub levels of 'doof', too.
Storage is decent, with a pair of toothed cupholders in the centre console sitting alongside a slot for your key. Ahead of that there's a cubby with a phone holder that doubles as a charging pad, and there are decent bins in the doors to supplement the storage cubby under the centre armrest.
The ambient lighting not only adorns the dashboard but also through the cutouts in the suede-trimmed door cards, much like the latest Audi A3 and Q3 – fitting, given the Terramar hails from Audi's Hungarian factory which produces the Q3. There's also Cupra's interesting interactive light under the windscreen that shows indicators as well as alerts for the assistance systems.
The second row is a good size for growing families, with the 2681mm wheelbase affording generous leg and knee room even for taller adults like 6'1″ me. The backs of the front seats are scalloped out to allow for knobbly knees, too.
Unlike the front sports seats, the rear bench is less bolstered, which makes it easier to squeeze three across back there if you need – but I'd only do this for short journeys if you need to. The rear floor is pretty flat, which is a plus, but the protruding rear console eats into rear legroom a little.
Said rear console does, however, house the directional rear air vents, which are also hooked up to a third zone of climate control as standard. A pair of USB-C charge outlets live further down.
As I've found in other VW Group products with chunky sports seats though, forward visibility can be obstructed for shorter passengers, which could be an issue for kids or teenagers prone to motion sickness. The rear windows aren't exactly huge, either.
Interestingly, the Terramar doesn't offer map pockets on the front seatbacks, though there is a fold-down centre armrest with cupholders, and bottle holders in the doors to stow your kids' or passengers' stuff. Further, you get the requisite ISOFIX and top-tether points for child seats.
Behind the second row, there's a 540-litre cargo area with the second-row in its rearmost position (it slides on rails), opening up to a maximum 1415L with the rear bench folded. When in the latter position, the floor is even and mostly flat, which is great if you're stowing longer items after a trip to IKEA.
The rear seats also split 40:20:40 to accommodate skis or the like but still need to use the two outer chairs, and there's an underfloor storage area that houses the space-saver spare wheel. Also worth noting is that if you opt for the $4200 Akebono brakes on the VZ, you remove the spare wheel and sub-in a tyre repair kit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ is the most powerful Terramar variant at launch, featuring the same 195kW 'EA888' 2.0-litre turbo four as mid-tier VW Group performance heroes like the Golf GTI and Skoda Octavia RS.
*Full specifications for Terramar VZe e-Hybrid are yet TBC
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Our launch drive took us from Cupra's Richmond 'Garage' in Melbourne's inner-east out to Healesville and Kinglake in Victoria's southeast, then back into the CBD. As you'd expect, we covered a range of different roads and conditions.
We spent some time in the entry-level Terramar S with its mild-hybrid drivetrain, but for this particular review we'll focus on the VZ in which we spent the most time. Stay tuned for a follow-up article covering the mHEV.
Riding on big 20-inch alloy wheels and relatively low-profile Continental performance tyres, you might expect the Terramar VZ to be a touch terse and unforgiving over pockmarked city streets on patchy B-roads, but you'd be wrong.
Being a Cupra, it leans into the firmer and sportier side of the ride/handling equation, but even in Cupra mode the Terramar VZ remained well sorted and impressively comfortable over a wide range of urban and rural blacktop – which lately has been littered with sections of construction and ripped-up tarmac.
It was a similar story in the passively-damped Terramar S, so I imagine it will be the same for the mid-spec Terramar V, which wasn't available to test for the launch. Insulation from road and wind noise is also good for the segment.
Before long you'll also notice the wonderful feel to the Terramar's steering, which we rate as among the best in this segment – mainstream or premium – in terms of feel and accuracy.
While it's not quite Porsche-good in terms of feedback, there's a wonderful linearity in the way the progressive ratio builds up weight as you increase lock and speed, and the accuracy with which the front wheels respond to your steering inputs.
The Terramar is satisfying just putting around the city or the 'burbs, but really comes into its own when you're carving up a winding B-road like we did ascending up Meyers Creek Rd through the Toolangi Forest.
Hitting the steering-mounted Cupra button (very Audi R8), the Terramar VZ's most aggressive setting really dials up the steering and throttle response without making it too twitchy or tense, as can often be the case with 'sporty' SUVs.
It feels like a very balanced and capable high-riding grand tourer, kind of like a budget Porsche Macan – the petrol one, just to be clear. To be fair, this has basically the same engine as the outgoing Macan and Macan T, but it's quicker.
While not as sharp overall as the old Tiguan R, there's perhaps a more natural and fluid feel to the handling and body control that makes it more fun, more of the time.
In Cupra mode you also get a synthesised engine sound that's meant to enhance the EA888's note to give it a bit more meat. However, it's less of an enhancement of the engine's natural sound a more an overlay of something else.
It's sort of somewhere between rumbly boxer and brassy five-pot, and whether you like it or not is a matter of personal taste. I didn't hate it, but I can understand why some journalists found it a little contrived.
The more spirited stints really showed me that this thing is actually quite quick. All 400Nm comes on song at just 1650rpm, meaning there's heaps of shove from quite low down, and it pulls hard all the way to peak power output at 5000-6500rpm.
If you're in Cupra mode and you pull one of the paddles it'll switch to manual mode as well, allowing you to take full control of the gears yourself. The DSG transmission offers very quick shifts in manual or S mode, with no perceptible interruption to torque delivery under hard throttle applications.
That said, in regular driving you do get the odd occasion where you can catch the DSG out when setting off in first or rolling through a slip lane and getting caught out between second and third. It's not necessarily clunky or unrefined, it can just be a little slow to react even with its plentiful torque.
The all-wheel drive system – which Cupra calls 4Drive – offers good on-demand grip despite its front-end bias, and is very quick to react. Some damp sections of twisty roads through the Toolangi Forest were a good test of the Terramar's ability to detect slip and put its power down, and it did a very clean job of it.
Additionally, the VZ's Continental performance tyres felt more suited to dynamic driving than the standard S's Kumho-branded economy rubber. The base car with FWD felt less confident driving harder, which is to be expected.
The assistance systems are all pretty good, as we've come to expect from VW Group vehicles. Travel Assist – which combines adaptive cruise, adaptive lane guidance and traffic jam assist functions – gives you semi-autonomous highway driving capability and is regarded one of the benchmark systems at this end of the market.
Standard blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts are a handy set of extra eyes given the Terramar's thick rear pillars, as is the standard surround camera system which makes parking a cinch. The Terramar also gets speed sign recognition and speed limit assistance, which can automatically adapt your cruise speed to the signposted limit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ sits above the S and V grades in the local Terramar lineup.
2025 Cupra Terramar S equipment highlights:
Terramar V adds:
Terramar VZ adds:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Several packages and single-item options are offered depending on variant.
Leather & Sound Package: $1600 (S + V)
Standalone options include:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
A total of seven exterior paint finishes are available for the Cupra Terramar, with two commanding price premiums.
Standard: $NCO
Premium paint: $620
Later this year (MY26 production), you'll also be able to opt for Century Bronze or Enceladus Grey matte finishes for $2900.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar has a five-star ANCAP safety rating, based on 2025 Euro NCAP tests.
Standard safety features include:
The Terramar VZ adds Matrix Ultra LED headlights with adaptive high-beam.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Terramar is covered by Cupra's five year, unlimited-kilometre warranty in Australia. 24-hour roadside assistance is also included for the warranty period.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar is arguably the new driver's pick of the hotly-contested medium SUV segment, especially alongside anything priced under the $75,000 bracket.
Not just a sporty looker, the flagship Terramar VZ blends keen dynamics and dialled-in driver controls with brisk performance and good all-round practicality and usability.
Cool colour options and a nicely presented, driver-oriented cabin are also key selling points. Further, it's decent value, lining up well against its Tiguan cousin and sitting somewhere between mainstream and premium rivals in terms of pricing.
The VZ is the Terramar that best embodies the Spanish brand's driver-first ethos, though its solid foundations give even the base mild-hybrid an engaging drive and no doubt sets the tone for the incoming V and VZe models, too.
There's something to be said about Cupra defying the odds and giving Australia the same drivetrains and electrification options out of the European market, whereas its VW and Skoda stablemates continue without hybridised versions of their key models to local buyers for the time being.
The Terramar – and the Cupra brand in general – won't be for everyone. Cupra executives have admitted that themselves, and instead they've really honed in on their target market and really aimed to differentiate their products from the existing cohort.
In the case of the Terramar, it makes a great case for those currently in a Formentor that want more space, as well as mid-size SUV buyers that don't want to sacrifice driver enjoyment or spend over six figures. It's a formula that would previously have required you to visit a BMW or Porsche showroom.
Areas for improvement? The fiddly touch sliders won't be to everyone's taste, nor will the burgundy leather trim. Some plastic trims on the centre console are more mainstream than premium, and the VZ's pricing is a decent ask above even flagship versions of mainstream-branded competition.
It's unclear if there will ever be an even hotter version in the realm of the old Tiguan R's 235kW or even the 221kW Ateca VZx, but as it stands Cupra's new flagship SUV already has a lot to offer keen drivers shopping for a family wagon, for whom the Terramar is most definitely worth a look.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new Cupra Terramar. Click here to get a great deal.MORE: Explore the Cupra Terramar showroom
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
What do you get when you send a Volkswagen Tiguan on exchange to Barcelona? Well, probably the Cupra Terramar.
The performance-leaning Spanish subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group is making strides (globally) with continued growth and is currently in the midst of a big product offensive. Next cab off the rank? A mid-size SUV to indirectly replace the smaller Ateca which is nearing the end of its life.
Cupra has been Hungary (you'll get the pun in a moment) to get in on the action that forms Australia's highest-volume and arguably most competitive new-car segment.
Now, the Hungarian-sourced Terramar (teehee!) has landed in Australian showrooms pitched as a sexier, spicier alternative to the related VW Tiguan and a litany of other competitors in this hotly-contested segment.
The Terramar arrives with petrol and mild-hybrid power at launch, with a 200kW plug-in hybrid (PHEV) variant offering more than 100km of electric driving range due here in November. If you're wondering, that's two more electrified options than Volkswagen has managed to offer locally with the related Tiguan.
Cupra says the Terramar, despite competing in a fairly mundane medium SUV market in terms of design, continues the brand's "focus on style and design, positioning that is neither luxury nor mainstream, and a clear focus on the driver and driving dynamics".
Has the Barcelona-based brand succeeded in offering a fun-to-drive mid-size crossover for the masses? We joined the Australian launch drive in Melbourne to find out.
The Terramar range in Australia opens from $53,990 plus on-road costs or $58,490 drive-away, with the flagship VZ asking for $68,200 plus on-roads or $73,490 drive-away before options.
The Terramar S and VZ have already landed in the country, while first production versions of the V for Australia have been built and are on the water ahead of a scheduled September arrival.
Cupra will complete the range with the VZe PHEV later this year, earmarked for a November launch. Pricing and specifications for the plug-in Terramar are still to be confirmed.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
While you might spot displays and switchgear shared with other VW Group products, the Terramar has a very different look and feel inside to the Tiguan with which it shares its DNA.
Cupra's driver-focused ethos sees the dashboard wrap around the driver, with all displays and key switchgear angled towards the pilot, accompanied by flourishes of the brand's signature copper highlights and Audi-esque ambient lighting details.
In the S and V the standard upholstery is a black Dinamica suede combination, but in the flagship VZ you get this lovely Deep Burgundy leather trim that is unlike anything you'll see at this end of the market. You can option the coloured cowhide on lower grades as part of the $1600 Leather and Sound Package.
The seats themselves are comfortable to sit in, with solid bolstering that doesn't overdo it and allows for different size frames. Full electric adjustment with driver memory is standard, as is heating – but no ventilation, sadly. At least the range of adjustment is great so you can find a tailored driving position for your height and build.
Perceived build quality is very good, with plenty of soft-touch materials and contrast stitching details that make this interior feel a little more special, and the hard silver plastic elements feature parametric details which like the copper bits add a bit of spice and flair, too. It's also good to see tactile, hard buttons on the steering wheel – and I love the satellite buttons.
Displays include a 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster which really apes the old Audi Sport (ie: S and RS) layout with the available centre dial, while the 12.9-inch freestanding touchscreen offers DAB+ digital radio, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, in addition to embedded satellite navigation – but, as yet, no connected functionality.
As we've come to expect from the VW Group, the displays offer crisp resolution and snappy animations. And while Cupra goes for an edgier look and sportier typeface, everything is pretty easy to read. You also get a head-up display as standard, which is clear and simple to keep key information in your line of sight.
Cupra's latest interface also permanently has a toolbar with the climate controls at the base of the screen, augmenting the polarising touch sliders below which now are illuminated – hallelujah! While this will never be as simple and user-friendly as a physical pod of switchgear, this is a big improvement over the original iteration of the company's capacitive touch tech.
The standard Cupra sound system in the Terramar S is already pretty good, but the 12-speaker Sennheiser premium audio is very good, particularly at this end of the market. It offers clear and full sound without shaking the windows or distorting the audio. The bass and subwoofer can be dialled up to concert or nightclub levels of 'doof', too.
Storage is decent, with a pair of toothed cupholders in the centre console sitting alongside a slot for your key. Ahead of that there's a cubby with a phone holder that doubles as a charging pad, and there are decent bins in the doors to supplement the storage cubby under the centre armrest.
The ambient lighting not only adorns the dashboard but also through the cutouts in the suede-trimmed door cards, much like the latest Audi A3 and Q3 – fitting, given the Terramar hails from Audi's Hungarian factory which produces the Q3. There's also Cupra's interesting interactive light under the windscreen that shows indicators as well as alerts for the assistance systems.
The second row is a good size for growing families, with the 2681mm wheelbase affording generous leg and knee room even for taller adults like 6'1″ me. The backs of the front seats are scalloped out to allow for knobbly knees, too.
Unlike the front sports seats, the rear bench is less bolstered, which makes it easier to squeeze three across back there if you need – but I'd only do this for short journeys if you need to. The rear floor is pretty flat, which is a plus, but the protruding rear console eats into rear legroom a little.
Said rear console does, however, house the directional rear air vents, which are also hooked up to a third zone of climate control as standard. A pair of USB-C charge outlets live further down.
As I've found in other VW Group products with chunky sports seats though, forward visibility can be obstructed for shorter passengers, which could be an issue for kids or teenagers prone to motion sickness. The rear windows aren't exactly huge, either.
Interestingly, the Terramar doesn't offer map pockets on the front seatbacks, though there is a fold-down centre armrest with cupholders, and bottle holders in the doors to stow your kids' or passengers' stuff. Further, you get the requisite ISOFIX and top-tether points for child seats.
Behind the second row, there's a 540-litre cargo area with the second-row in its rearmost position (it slides on rails), opening up to a maximum 1415L with the rear bench folded. When in the latter position, the floor is even and mostly flat, which is great if you're stowing longer items after a trip to IKEA.
The rear seats also split 40:20:40 to accommodate skis or the like but still need to use the two outer chairs, and there's an underfloor storage area that houses the space-saver spare wheel. Also worth noting is that if you opt for the $4200 Akebono brakes on the VZ, you remove the spare wheel and sub-in a tyre repair kit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ is the most powerful Terramar variant at launch, featuring the same 195kW 'EA888' 2.0-litre turbo four as mid-tier VW Group performance heroes like the Golf GTI and Skoda Octavia RS.
*Full specifications for Terramar VZe e-Hybrid are yet TBC
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Our launch drive took us from Cupra's Richmond 'Garage' in Melbourne's inner-east out to Healesville and Kinglake in Victoria's southeast, then back into the CBD. As you'd expect, we covered a range of different roads and conditions.
We spent some time in the entry-level Terramar S with its mild-hybrid drivetrain, but for this particular review we'll focus on the VZ in which we spent the most time. Stay tuned for a follow-up article covering the mHEV.
Riding on big 20-inch alloy wheels and relatively low-profile Continental performance tyres, you might expect the Terramar VZ to be a touch terse and unforgiving over pockmarked city streets on patchy B-roads, but you'd be wrong.
Being a Cupra, it leans into the firmer and sportier side of the ride/handling equation, but even in Cupra mode the Terramar VZ remained well sorted and impressively comfortable over a wide range of urban and rural blacktop – which lately has been littered with sections of construction and ripped-up tarmac.
It was a similar story in the passively-damped Terramar S, so I imagine it will be the same for the mid-spec Terramar V, which wasn't available to test for the launch. Insulation from road and wind noise is also good for the segment.
Before long you'll also notice the wonderful feel to the Terramar's steering, which we rate as among the best in this segment – mainstream or premium – in terms of feel and accuracy.
While it's not quite Porsche-good in terms of feedback, there's a wonderful linearity in the way the progressive ratio builds up weight as you increase lock and speed, and the accuracy with which the front wheels respond to your steering inputs.
The Terramar is satisfying just putting around the city or the 'burbs, but really comes into its own when you're carving up a winding B-road like we did ascending up Meyers Creek Rd through the Toolangi Forest.
Hitting the steering-mounted Cupra button (very Audi R8), the Terramar VZ's most aggressive setting really dials up the steering and throttle response without making it too twitchy or tense, as can often be the case with 'sporty' SUVs.
It feels like a very balanced and capable high-riding grand tourer, kind of like a budget Porsche Macan – the petrol one, just to be clear. To be fair, this has basically the same engine as the outgoing Macan and Macan T, but it's quicker.
While not as sharp overall as the old Tiguan R, there's perhaps a more natural and fluid feel to the handling and body control that makes it more fun, more of the time.
In Cupra mode you also get a synthesised engine sound that's meant to enhance the EA888's note to give it a bit more meat. However, it's less of an enhancement of the engine's natural sound a more an overlay of something else.
It's sort of somewhere between rumbly boxer and brassy five-pot, and whether you like it or not is a matter of personal taste. I didn't hate it, but I can understand why some journalists found it a little contrived.
The more spirited stints really showed me that this thing is actually quite quick. All 400Nm comes on song at just 1650rpm, meaning there's heaps of shove from quite low down, and it pulls hard all the way to peak power output at 5000-6500rpm.
If you're in Cupra mode and you pull one of the paddles it'll switch to manual mode as well, allowing you to take full control of the gears yourself. The DSG transmission offers very quick shifts in manual or S mode, with no perceptible interruption to torque delivery under hard throttle applications.
That said, in regular driving you do get the odd occasion where you can catch the DSG out when setting off in first or rolling through a slip lane and getting caught out between second and third. It's not necessarily clunky or unrefined, it can just be a little slow to react even with its plentiful torque.
The all-wheel drive system – which Cupra calls 4Drive – offers good on-demand grip despite its front-end bias, and is very quick to react. Some damp sections of twisty roads through the Toolangi Forest were a good test of the Terramar's ability to detect slip and put its power down, and it did a very clean job of it.
Additionally, the VZ's Continental performance tyres felt more suited to dynamic driving than the standard S's Kumho-branded economy rubber. The base car with FWD felt less confident driving harder, which is to be expected.
The assistance systems are all pretty good, as we've come to expect from VW Group vehicles. Travel Assist – which combines adaptive cruise, adaptive lane guidance and traffic jam assist functions – gives you semi-autonomous highway driving capability and is regarded one of the benchmark systems at this end of the market.
Standard blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts are a handy set of extra eyes given the Terramar's thick rear pillars, as is the standard surround camera system which makes parking a cinch. The Terramar also gets speed sign recognition and speed limit assistance, which can automatically adapt your cruise speed to the signposted limit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ sits above the S and V grades in the local Terramar lineup.
2025 Cupra Terramar S equipment highlights:
Terramar V adds:
Terramar VZ adds:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Several packages and single-item options are offered depending on variant.
Leather & Sound Package: $1600 (S + V)
Standalone options include:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
A total of seven exterior paint finishes are available for the Cupra Terramar, with two commanding price premiums.
Standard: $NCO
Premium paint: $620
Later this year (MY26 production), you'll also be able to opt for Century Bronze or Enceladus Grey matte finishes for $2900.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar has a five-star ANCAP safety rating, based on 2025 Euro NCAP tests.
Standard safety features include:
The Terramar VZ adds Matrix Ultra LED headlights with adaptive high-beam.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Terramar is covered by Cupra's five year, unlimited-kilometre warranty in Australia. 24-hour roadside assistance is also included for the warranty period.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar is arguably the new driver's pick of the hotly-contested medium SUV segment, especially alongside anything priced under the $75,000 bracket.
Not just a sporty looker, the flagship Terramar VZ blends keen dynamics and dialled-in driver controls with brisk performance and good all-round practicality and usability.
Cool colour options and a nicely presented, driver-oriented cabin are also key selling points. Further, it's decent value, lining up well against its Tiguan cousin and sitting somewhere between mainstream and premium rivals in terms of pricing.
The VZ is the Terramar that best embodies the Spanish brand's driver-first ethos, though its solid foundations give even the base mild-hybrid an engaging drive and no doubt sets the tone for the incoming V and VZe models, too.
There's something to be said about Cupra defying the odds and giving Australia the same drivetrains and electrification options out of the European market, whereas its VW and Skoda stablemates continue without hybridised versions of their key models to local buyers for the time being.
The Terramar – and the Cupra brand in general – won't be for everyone. Cupra executives have admitted that themselves, and instead they've really honed in on their target market and really aimed to differentiate their products from the existing cohort.
In the case of the Terramar, it makes a great case for those currently in a Formentor that want more space, as well as mid-size SUV buyers that don't want to sacrifice driver enjoyment or spend over six figures. It's a formula that would previously have required you to visit a BMW or Porsche showroom.
Areas for improvement? The fiddly touch sliders won't be to everyone's taste, nor will the burgundy leather trim. Some plastic trims on the centre console are more mainstream than premium, and the VZ's pricing is a decent ask above even flagship versions of mainstream-branded competition.
It's unclear if there will ever be an even hotter version in the realm of the old Tiguan R's 235kW or even the 221kW Ateca VZx, but as it stands Cupra's new flagship SUV already has a lot to offer keen drivers shopping for a family wagon, for whom the Terramar is most definitely worth a look.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new Cupra Terramar. Click here to get a great deal.MORE: Explore the Cupra Terramar showroom
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
Cupra Terramar Pros
Cupra Terramar Cons
What do you get when you send a Volkswagen Tiguan on exchange to Barcelona? Well, probably the Cupra Terramar.
The performance-leaning Spanish subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group is making strides (globally) with continued growth and is currently in the midst of a big product offensive. Next cab off the rank? A mid-size SUV to indirectly replace the smaller Ateca which is nearing the end of its life.
Cupra has been Hungary (you'll get the pun in a moment) to get in on the action that forms Australia's highest-volume and arguably most competitive new-car segment.
Now, the Hungarian-sourced Terramar (teehee!) has landed in Australian showrooms pitched as a sexier, spicier alternative to the related VW Tiguan and a litany of other competitors in this hotly-contested segment.
The Terramar arrives with petrol and mild-hybrid power at launch, with a 200kW plug-in hybrid (PHEV) variant offering more than 100km of electric driving range due here in November. If you're wondering, that's two more electrified options than Volkswagen has managed to offer locally with the related Tiguan.
Cupra says the Terramar, despite competing in a fairly mundane medium SUV market in terms of design, continues the brand's "focus on style and design, positioning that is neither luxury nor mainstream, and a clear focus on the driver and driving dynamics".
Has the Barcelona-based brand succeeded in offering a fun-to-drive mid-size crossover for the masses? We joined the Australian launch drive in Melbourne to find out.
The Terramar range in Australia opens from $53,990 plus on-road costs or $58,490 drive-away, with the flagship VZ asking for $68,200 plus on-roads or $73,490 drive-away before options.
The Terramar S and VZ have already landed in the country, while first production versions of the V for Australia have been built and are on the water ahead of a scheduled September arrival.
Cupra will complete the range with the VZe PHEV later this year, earmarked for a November launch. Pricing and specifications for the plug-in Terramar are still to be confirmed.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
While you might spot displays and switchgear shared with other VW Group products, the Terramar has a very different look and feel inside to the Tiguan with which it shares its DNA.
Cupra's driver-focused ethos sees the dashboard wrap around the driver, with all displays and key switchgear angled towards the pilot, accompanied by flourishes of the brand's signature copper highlights and Audi-esque ambient lighting details.
In the S and V the standard upholstery is a black Dinamica suede combination, but in the flagship VZ you get this lovely Deep Burgundy leather trim that is unlike anything you'll see at this end of the market. You can option the coloured cowhide on lower grades as part of the $1600 Leather and Sound Package.
The seats themselves are comfortable to sit in, with solid bolstering that doesn't overdo it and allows for different size frames. Full electric adjustment with driver memory is standard, as is heating – but no ventilation, sadly. At least the range of adjustment is great so you can find a tailored driving position for your height and build.
Perceived build quality is very good, with plenty of soft-touch materials and contrast stitching details that make this interior feel a little more special, and the hard silver plastic elements feature parametric details which like the copper bits add a bit of spice and flair, too. It's also good to see tactile, hard buttons on the steering wheel – and I love the satellite buttons.
Displays include a 10.25-inch digital instrument cluster which really apes the old Audi Sport (ie: S and RS) layout with the available centre dial, while the 12.9-inch freestanding touchscreen offers DAB+ digital radio, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, in addition to embedded satellite navigation – but, as yet, no connected functionality.
As we've come to expect from the VW Group, the displays offer crisp resolution and snappy animations. And while Cupra goes for an edgier look and sportier typeface, everything is pretty easy to read. You also get a head-up display as standard, which is clear and simple to keep key information in your line of sight.
Cupra's latest interface also permanently has a toolbar with the climate controls at the base of the screen, augmenting the polarising touch sliders below which now are illuminated – hallelujah! While this will never be as simple and user-friendly as a physical pod of switchgear, this is a big improvement over the original iteration of the company's capacitive touch tech.
The standard Cupra sound system in the Terramar S is already pretty good, but the 12-speaker Sennheiser premium audio is very good, particularly at this end of the market. It offers clear and full sound without shaking the windows or distorting the audio. The bass and subwoofer can be dialled up to concert or nightclub levels of 'doof', too.
Storage is decent, with a pair of toothed cupholders in the centre console sitting alongside a slot for your key. Ahead of that there's a cubby with a phone holder that doubles as a charging pad, and there are decent bins in the doors to supplement the storage cubby under the centre armrest.
The ambient lighting not only adorns the dashboard but also through the cutouts in the suede-trimmed door cards, much like the latest Audi A3 and Q3 – fitting, given the Terramar hails from Audi's Hungarian factory which produces the Q3. There's also Cupra's interesting interactive light under the windscreen that shows indicators as well as alerts for the assistance systems.
The second row is a good size for growing families, with the 2681mm wheelbase affording generous leg and knee room even for taller adults like 6'1″ me. The backs of the front seats are scalloped out to allow for knobbly knees, too.
Unlike the front sports seats, the rear bench is less bolstered, which makes it easier to squeeze three across back there if you need – but I'd only do this for short journeys if you need to. The rear floor is pretty flat, which is a plus, but the protruding rear console eats into rear legroom a little.
Said rear console does, however, house the directional rear air vents, which are also hooked up to a third zone of climate control as standard. A pair of USB-C charge outlets live further down.
As I've found in other VW Group products with chunky sports seats though, forward visibility can be obstructed for shorter passengers, which could be an issue for kids or teenagers prone to motion sickness. The rear windows aren't exactly huge, either.
Interestingly, the Terramar doesn't offer map pockets on the front seatbacks, though there is a fold-down centre armrest with cupholders, and bottle holders in the doors to stow your kids' or passengers' stuff. Further, you get the requisite ISOFIX and top-tether points for child seats.
Behind the second row, there's a 540-litre cargo area with the second-row in its rearmost position (it slides on rails), opening up to a maximum 1415L with the rear bench folded. When in the latter position, the floor is even and mostly flat, which is great if you're stowing longer items after a trip to IKEA.
The rear seats also split 40:20:40 to accommodate skis or the like but still need to use the two outer chairs, and there's an underfloor storage area that houses the space-saver spare wheel. Also worth noting is that if you opt for the $4200 Akebono brakes on the VZ, you remove the spare wheel and sub-in a tyre repair kit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ is the most powerful Terramar variant at launch, featuring the same 195kW 'EA888' 2.0-litre turbo four as mid-tier VW Group performance heroes like the Golf GTI and Skoda Octavia RS.
*Full specifications for Terramar VZe e-Hybrid are yet TBC
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Our launch drive took us from Cupra's Richmond 'Garage' in Melbourne's inner-east out to Healesville and Kinglake in Victoria's southeast, then back into the CBD. As you'd expect, we covered a range of different roads and conditions.
We spent some time in the entry-level Terramar S with its mild-hybrid drivetrain, but for this particular review we'll focus on the VZ in which we spent the most time. Stay tuned for a follow-up article covering the mHEV.
Riding on big 20-inch alloy wheels and relatively low-profile Continental performance tyres, you might expect the Terramar VZ to be a touch terse and unforgiving over pockmarked city streets on patchy B-roads, but you'd be wrong.
Being a Cupra, it leans into the firmer and sportier side of the ride/handling equation, but even in Cupra mode the Terramar VZ remained well sorted and impressively comfortable over a wide range of urban and rural blacktop – which lately has been littered with sections of construction and ripped-up tarmac.
It was a similar story in the passively-damped Terramar S, so I imagine it will be the same for the mid-spec Terramar V, which wasn't available to test for the launch. Insulation from road and wind noise is also good for the segment.
Before long you'll also notice the wonderful feel to the Terramar's steering, which we rate as among the best in this segment – mainstream or premium – in terms of feel and accuracy.
While it's not quite Porsche-good in terms of feedback, there's a wonderful linearity in the way the progressive ratio builds up weight as you increase lock and speed, and the accuracy with which the front wheels respond to your steering inputs.
The Terramar is satisfying just putting around the city or the 'burbs, but really comes into its own when you're carving up a winding B-road like we did ascending up Meyers Creek Rd through the Toolangi Forest.
Hitting the steering-mounted Cupra button (very Audi R8), the Terramar VZ's most aggressive setting really dials up the steering and throttle response without making it too twitchy or tense, as can often be the case with 'sporty' SUVs.
It feels like a very balanced and capable high-riding grand tourer, kind of like a budget Porsche Macan – the petrol one, just to be clear. To be fair, this has basically the same engine as the outgoing Macan and Macan T, but it's quicker.
While not as sharp overall as the old Tiguan R, there's perhaps a more natural and fluid feel to the handling and body control that makes it more fun, more of the time.
In Cupra mode you also get a synthesised engine sound that's meant to enhance the EA888's note to give it a bit more meat. However, it's less of an enhancement of the engine's natural sound a more an overlay of something else.
It's sort of somewhere between rumbly boxer and brassy five-pot, and whether you like it or not is a matter of personal taste. I didn't hate it, but I can understand why some journalists found it a little contrived.
The more spirited stints really showed me that this thing is actually quite quick. All 400Nm comes on song at just 1650rpm, meaning there's heaps of shove from quite low down, and it pulls hard all the way to peak power output at 5000-6500rpm.
If you're in Cupra mode and you pull one of the paddles it'll switch to manual mode as well, allowing you to take full control of the gears yourself. The DSG transmission offers very quick shifts in manual or S mode, with no perceptible interruption to torque delivery under hard throttle applications.
That said, in regular driving you do get the odd occasion where you can catch the DSG out when setting off in first or rolling through a slip lane and getting caught out between second and third. It's not necessarily clunky or unrefined, it can just be a little slow to react even with its plentiful torque.
The all-wheel drive system – which Cupra calls 4Drive – offers good on-demand grip despite its front-end bias, and is very quick to react. Some damp sections of twisty roads through the Toolangi Forest were a good test of the Terramar's ability to detect slip and put its power down, and it did a very clean job of it.
Additionally, the VZ's Continental performance tyres felt more suited to dynamic driving than the standard S's Kumho-branded economy rubber. The base car with FWD felt less confident driving harder, which is to be expected.
The assistance systems are all pretty good, as we've come to expect from VW Group vehicles. Travel Assist – which combines adaptive cruise, adaptive lane guidance and traffic jam assist functions – gives you semi-autonomous highway driving capability and is regarded one of the benchmark systems at this end of the market.
Standard blind-spot and rear cross-traffic alerts are a handy set of extra eyes given the Terramar's thick rear pillars, as is the standard surround camera system which makes parking a cinch. The Terramar also gets speed sign recognition and speed limit assistance, which can automatically adapt your cruise speed to the signposted limit.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The VZ sits above the S and V grades in the local Terramar lineup.
2025 Cupra Terramar S equipment highlights:
Terramar V adds:
Terramar VZ adds:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Several packages and single-item options are offered depending on variant.
Leather & Sound Package: $1600 (S + V)
Standalone options include:
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
A total of seven exterior paint finishes are available for the Cupra Terramar, with two commanding price premiums.
Standard: $NCO
Premium paint: $620
Later this year (MY26 production), you'll also be able to opt for Century Bronze or Enceladus Grey matte finishes for $2900.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar has a five-star ANCAP safety rating, based on 2025 Euro NCAP tests.
Standard safety features include:
The Terramar VZ adds Matrix Ultra LED headlights with adaptive high-beam.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Terramar is covered by Cupra's five year, unlimited-kilometre warranty in Australia. 24-hour roadside assistance is also included for the warranty period.
To see how the Cupra Terramar lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Cupra Terramar is arguably the new driver's pick of the hotly-contested medium SUV segment, especially alongside anything priced under the $75,000 bracket.
Not just a sporty looker, the flagship Terramar VZ blends keen dynamics and dialled-in driver controls with brisk performance and good all-round practicality and usability.
Cool colour options and a nicely presented, driver-oriented cabin are also key selling points. Further, it's decent value, lining up well against its Tiguan cousin and sitting somewhere between mainstream and premium rivals in terms of pricing.
The VZ is the Terramar that best embodies the Spanish brand's driver-first ethos, though its solid foundations give even the base mild-hybrid an engaging drive and no doubt sets the tone for the incoming V and VZe models, too.
There's something to be said about Cupra defying the odds and giving Australia the same drivetrains and electrification options out of the European market, whereas its VW and Skoda stablemates continue without hybridised versions of their key models to local buyers for the time being.
The Terramar – and the Cupra brand in general – won't be for everyone. Cupra executives have admitted that themselves, and instead they've really honed in on their target market and really aimed to differentiate their products from the existing cohort.
In the case of the Terramar, it makes a great case for those currently in a Formentor that want more space, as well as mid-size SUV buyers that don't want to sacrifice driver enjoyment or spend over six figures. It's a formula that would previously have required you to visit a BMW or Porsche showroom.
Areas for improvement? The fiddly touch sliders won't be to everyone's taste, nor will the burgundy leather trim. Some plastic trims on the centre console are more mainstream than premium, and the VZ's pricing is a decent ask above even flagship versions of mainstream-branded competition.
It's unclear if there will ever be an even hotter version in the realm of the old Tiguan R's 235kW or even the 221kW Ateca VZx, but as it stands Cupra's new flagship SUV already has a lot to offer keen drivers shopping for a family wagon, for whom the Terramar is most definitely worth a look.
CarExpert can save you thousands on a new Cupra Terramar. Click here to get a great deal.MORE: Explore the Cupra Terramar showroom
Content originally sourced from: CarExpert.com.au
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  • The Age

AI tells lies, but kindly apologises if found out

Go bold, Albanese Unfortunately for us Labor faithful, Prime Minister Albanese lacks the courage and boldness to lead a government of true reform. He once again ruled out tax reform (″ ⁣Albanese Shies Away from Major Tax Reform ″⁣, 8/8). He's the manager doing things right, rather than the leader who chooses to do the right thing. Significant tax reform might put a few noses out of joint, but with a large majority and political momentum now is the time for some boldness. Governments are elected to lead and make life better, but right now this seems as if it is far from the minds of Australian Labor. Albanese might reflect on the courage of the previous Victorian premier, Dan Andrews, as an example of bold political leadership. Like him or not, Andrews was often courageous and doing the right thing defined his leadership. No one can deny the strength of his government which chose many real tangible actions to improve life for Victorians. They were certainly rewarded at the ballot box. Michael Cormick, Carnegie Defence is everything Italy has showed us the way. Everyone in the world can give Donald Trump a ″⁣win″⁣ on increased defence spending and none of that expenditure will be wasted on actual weapons. Yes, a suspension bridge is defence spending! (″⁣ Italy will build bridge to Sicily ″⁣, 8/8). So how does this work for Australia? Simple. All our expenditure on modernising our electrical grid is strategic – we are protecting ourselves against interdiction of fuel imports. All road and rain infrastructure is defence spending – we need to ensure that our forces can quickly and efficiently get to where they need to be. So is health – we need to have a strong fighting force. And of course, all education spending is defence spending. We need fully rounded people in our defence forces. Foreign aid and foreign embassies are defence spending – soft power is the most effective way to maintain peace. In no time, Australia will be spending 10 per cent of GDP on defence. We should then be able to ask Trump for a 1000 per cent decrease in tariffs. Ken Richards, Elwood What fits the crime After reading the article by Jeremy Pudney about the role James Vlassakis played in the Snowtown murders, I was moved with compassion about a young man manipulated by John Bunting and Robert Wagner (″ ⁣Why it's right to release the youngest Snowtown killer ″⁣, 8/8). Vlassakis is depicted as a troubled teenager who fell under an evil spell. However, I feel for the victims' families who must live with the trauma of losing a loved one to murder. It is an impossible task to meet the needs of both parties, revenge on one hand and forgiveness on the other. The old adage is that the punishment must fit the crime. Life is short and eleven lives were lost, and Vlassakis has lost 26 years of his life. Yes, some will be outraged, but this decision certainly seeks understanding. Julie Ottobre, Brunswick East Call time on pub test Re Letters 8/8. Please let's drop the 'pub test' as a measure of anything. Only a minority of the population are to be found in a pub and most of them will be slightly to fully inebriated and looking for a rest from the worries of the day. If you enter with clipboard and questions you'll probably learn a lot more about expletives than your chosen topic. No-one actually polls a pub. It's on a par with all the other economic nostrums – plucked out of the air. It's guesswork based on the prejudice of the campaigner. John Laurie, Riddells Creek Thank you, Isabel I felt very sick and collapsed while trying to get off at South Yarra station last Friday. A young nurse on her way to work at Cabrini Hospital came over to ask if I was OK, and called the wonderful paramedics who took my blood pressure and took me to the Alfred Hospital. Its staff were kind and professional, and after about five hours involving constant monitoring of my blood pressure, an ECG and a CT of my head, I was cleared to go home. I tried to contact the nurse who helped me on the train to thank her, but I couldn't as I only knew her first name, Isabel. There is a lot in the press about the inadequacies of our health system, but we should be so proud of our frontline health workers, doctors, nurses and paramedics and so grateful for their care. Catherine Needham, Parkdale AFL comedy channel I'm a bit disappointed at Channel 7's lack of imagination in dumping the broadcast of the upcoming Blues v Bombers game for August 21. It could have billed it as a comedy in the tradition of 1960s British Carry On films, featuring slapstick fumbling, dropped marks, missed goals and kicks and Keystone Cops-like packs chasing the ball. What a missed opportunity. Pier Paolo De Carlo, Ascot Vale Docklands mystery It's still a mystery after years of huge investments and planning that at lunchtime I see an empty Docklands. On the north facing boulevard to the library on a perfect, sunny Friday, restaurants are derelict and not one person is on the moored megayachts. Every time a new iconic tower is completed the street life seems to decline. Is this what was planned, and if not what changes are needed? Robert Irvine, Sunbury AND ANOTHER THING Work from home Our roads are in an abysmal state of disrepair, so it will be interesting when those employed to fix the innumerable pot-holes decide to work from home. Helen Moss, Croydon I look forward to train, tram and taxi drivers, ambulance crews, policemen and garbage collectors all working from home. Les Aisen, Elsternwick The sheer scale and volume of the pushback against Jacinta Allan's stance on protecting the current WFH arrangements clearly demonstrates that such protection is needed. Geoffrey McNaughton, Glen Huntly Furthermore It is beyond appalling that Kathleen Folbigg has been awarded a measly $2 million as compensation for being wrongly convicted of killing her children and imprisoned for two decades. Robyn Westwood, Heidelberg Heights Re ″⁣ Talking parrot brings down gang turns stool pigeon ″⁣ 8/8. At last we know why there's a dearth of orange bellied parrots on the Bellarine. They've joined the police force. Margaret Skeen, Pt Lonsdale Geo-politics Australia appears to have an even-handed approach to the war in Ukraine, providing aid to Ukraine while simultaneously buying Russian oil from India, leaving our feet free to kick the Ukrainian people when they are down. Ken Machin, Grovedale Let's say nyet zero to Aussie cars running on crude oil from Russia. Paul Custance, Highett

ASX dips ahead of expected RBA rate cut
ASX dips ahead of expected RBA rate cut

Perth Now

time3 hours ago

  • Perth Now

ASX dips ahead of expected RBA rate cut

A mixed bag has capped the share market's first weekly gain in three weeks, in the midst of reporting season with an expected interest rate cut just days away. The S&P/ASX200 closed Friday with a loss of 24.3 points or 0.28 per cent at 8807.1. Sell offs in financials and healthcare outweighed gains in mining stocks, with six of 11 sectors in negative territory. The All Ordinaries also slipped 0.28 per cent, down 25 points to 9,076.6 while the Small Ords was flat. Daily returns were dominated by earnings results. QBE shares tanked 8.8 per cent (to $21.39) despite the company reporting a 20 per cent jump in half-year profit. Afterpay owner Block rose 9.1 per cent (at $127.09) as second quarter results showed consumers were blowing cobwebs off their wallets. Gains in mining did not offset losses in financials. Gaye Gerard / NewsWire Credit: News Corp Australia Furniture retailer Nick Scali lifted 6.9 per cent (to $20.49) as its Australian and New Zealand orders over the second-half rose 7 per cent. Investors made themselves comfy despite a near 30 per cent slide in profits. 'We're getting better deals … and we are passing that through to the consumer for better prices and that is probably helping us,' chief executive Anthony Scali told investors. 'I think the consumer is a bit more confident.' Other big gainers include finance tech company Iress (up 12.2 per cent at $9.40), Pilbara Minerals (up 9 per cent at $1.93) and AMP (up 7.1 per cent at $1.87). At the other end, GQG Partners was deep in red territory. GQG's share price fell 14.6 per cent (to $1.72), as a funds under management update revealed an exodus. RBA Governor Michele Bullock is expected to announce a rate cut on Tuesday. NewsWire / Nikki Short Credit: News Corp Australia Investors ditched game company Light and Wonder, as the Las Vegas-headquartered firm announced plans to delist from the Nasdaq later this year. Aussie-listed stocks fell 11.2 per cent to $118.75. The RBA is expected to cut the cash rate on Tuesday, and will take heed from London in doing so. The Bank of England cut its main interest rate Thursday by a quarter point to 4 per cent, to spite a lagging economy. In international news, the UK, Switzerland and the US have found themselves in a tussle after a report Donald Trump had imposed tariffs on imports of 1kg gold bars. Independent market analyst Stephen Innes said the US administration was taking a three-pronged approach. 'Weaken Switzerland's refining monopoly. Force London's bullion banks into a defensive posture. Supercharge the fiscal optics by goosing gold's domestic valuation,' he said. 'The optics are unmistakeable. At a time when central banks are hoarding gold to diversify away from dollar risk, Washington is slapping toll booths on the global metal highway. 'Switzerland, the middleman in this high-value supply chain, just became collateral damage.' The news sent gold futures climbing to a record high on Friday, even after a stellar week for the precious metal. The S&P/ASX All Ordinaries Gold benchmark is up 11.5 per cent for the week, including a 2 per cent sweetener on Friday.

Bloomfield's buying spree continues, as it buys land and mining tenure from Yancoal
Bloomfield's buying spree continues, as it buys land and mining tenure from Yancoal

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Bloomfield's buying spree continues, as it buys land and mining tenure from Yancoal

Hunter-based Australian coal mining company, the Bloomfield Group's buying spree continues with the announcement that they have signed an agreement to acquire land and an associated mining tenure from Yancoal. This latest purchase follows their acquisition of the home of the late Wendy Bowman, 'Rosedale' at Camberwell, in February this year for $9 million and their purchase in July of the now closed Integra underground mine near Singleton from Glencore. A number of dwellings in the village Camberwell, near Singleton as well as land and an associated mining tenure for the previously proposed Ashton South East Open Cut project (for which the approval has lapsed), are included in the agreement. Comment has been sought from the Bloomfield Group on the latest purchases, in particular the mining tenure that covers 'Rosesdale', where Yancoal had planned to establish an open-cut mine adjacent to Glennies Creek. It was the Ashton South East Coal Project that brought Mrs Bowman to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She campaigned for decades against the mining of agricultural land in the Hunter Valley establishing Mine Watch in 1991. But it was her decision to fight to protect 'Rosedale' and the nearby Glennies Creek from the proposed Ashton East Open Cut Coal Mine that brought her to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She was involved in a landmark court decision in 2014 against Yancoal's Ashton South East open-cut mine proposal. The decision required the mine to buy her property, Rosedale, to proceed. She refused to sell her property to Yancoal, and which stalled the mine, and its mining licence would eventually lapse in April 2022. Mrs Bowman died in August 2023. Her close friend and fierce supporter and neighbour Deidre Olofsson described the latest news regarding Camberwell and the 'Rosedale' property as devastating. "It marks the end of the village and the harm it will do to Glennies Creek, a major tributary to the Hunter River and the source of water for the vineyards and irrigators below Singleton will be massive," she said. "It is just heartbreaking to see the proposal Wendy and all of us fought so hard to stop may be back again." In a statement to the community, Bloomfield Group said the acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. Securing land adjacent to our existing Rix's Creek Mine operations gives us the flexibility to better plan for future infrastructure, such as the proposed highway relocation to support our Rix's Creek North Continuation Project, they said. The agreement with Yancoal also includes the area of the Donaldson open-cut and Abel underground mines, located east of Maitland and adjacent to The Bloomfield Group's Bloomfield Colliery. Under the agreement, The Bloomfield Group assumes responsibility for the rehabilitation of both the Donaldson and Abel mine sites. The acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. We are also actively exploring future land uses and the necessary approval pathways across all of our Lower Hunter land holdings, including at our Bloomfield Colliery site, where opportunities for industrial precincts and housing aligned with regional planning strategies have been identified, they said. Acquisition of the land includes the current relevant mining tenure associated with each site, such as permits, leases, and licences. Completion of the acquisition is subject to the usual regulatory approvals required for a transaction of this kind. Comment has been sought from Yancoal on the sale of their assets to the Blooomfield Group. Hunter-based Australian coal mining company, the Bloomfield Group's buying spree continues with the announcement that they have signed an agreement to acquire land and an associated mining tenure from Yancoal. This latest purchase follows their acquisition of the home of the late Wendy Bowman, 'Rosedale' at Camberwell, in February this year for $9 million and their purchase in July of the now closed Integra underground mine near Singleton from Glencore. A number of dwellings in the village Camberwell, near Singleton as well as land and an associated mining tenure for the previously proposed Ashton South East Open Cut project (for which the approval has lapsed), are included in the agreement. Comment has been sought from the Bloomfield Group on the latest purchases, in particular the mining tenure that covers 'Rosesdale', where Yancoal had planned to establish an open-cut mine adjacent to Glennies Creek. It was the Ashton South East Coal Project that brought Mrs Bowman to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She campaigned for decades against the mining of agricultural land in the Hunter Valley establishing Mine Watch in 1991. But it was her decision to fight to protect 'Rosedale' and the nearby Glennies Creek from the proposed Ashton East Open Cut Coal Mine that brought her to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She was involved in a landmark court decision in 2014 against Yancoal's Ashton South East open-cut mine proposal. The decision required the mine to buy her property, Rosedale, to proceed. She refused to sell her property to Yancoal, and which stalled the mine, and its mining licence would eventually lapse in April 2022. Mrs Bowman died in August 2023. Her close friend and fierce supporter and neighbour Deidre Olofsson described the latest news regarding Camberwell and the 'Rosedale' property as devastating. "It marks the end of the village and the harm it will do to Glennies Creek, a major tributary to the Hunter River and the source of water for the vineyards and irrigators below Singleton will be massive," she said. "It is just heartbreaking to see the proposal Wendy and all of us fought so hard to stop may be back again." In a statement to the community, Bloomfield Group said the acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. Securing land adjacent to our existing Rix's Creek Mine operations gives us the flexibility to better plan for future infrastructure, such as the proposed highway relocation to support our Rix's Creek North Continuation Project, they said. The agreement with Yancoal also includes the area of the Donaldson open-cut and Abel underground mines, located east of Maitland and adjacent to The Bloomfield Group's Bloomfield Colliery. Under the agreement, The Bloomfield Group assumes responsibility for the rehabilitation of both the Donaldson and Abel mine sites. The acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. We are also actively exploring future land uses and the necessary approval pathways across all of our Lower Hunter land holdings, including at our Bloomfield Colliery site, where opportunities for industrial precincts and housing aligned with regional planning strategies have been identified, they said. Acquisition of the land includes the current relevant mining tenure associated with each site, such as permits, leases, and licences. Completion of the acquisition is subject to the usual regulatory approvals required for a transaction of this kind. Comment has been sought from Yancoal on the sale of their assets to the Blooomfield Group. Hunter-based Australian coal mining company, the Bloomfield Group's buying spree continues with the announcement that they have signed an agreement to acquire land and an associated mining tenure from Yancoal. This latest purchase follows their acquisition of the home of the late Wendy Bowman, 'Rosedale' at Camberwell, in February this year for $9 million and their purchase in July of the now closed Integra underground mine near Singleton from Glencore. A number of dwellings in the village Camberwell, near Singleton as well as land and an associated mining tenure for the previously proposed Ashton South East Open Cut project (for which the approval has lapsed), are included in the agreement. Comment has been sought from the Bloomfield Group on the latest purchases, in particular the mining tenure that covers 'Rosesdale', where Yancoal had planned to establish an open-cut mine adjacent to Glennies Creek. It was the Ashton South East Coal Project that brought Mrs Bowman to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She campaigned for decades against the mining of agricultural land in the Hunter Valley establishing Mine Watch in 1991. But it was her decision to fight to protect 'Rosedale' and the nearby Glennies Creek from the proposed Ashton East Open Cut Coal Mine that brought her to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She was involved in a landmark court decision in 2014 against Yancoal's Ashton South East open-cut mine proposal. The decision required the mine to buy her property, Rosedale, to proceed. She refused to sell her property to Yancoal, and which stalled the mine, and its mining licence would eventually lapse in April 2022. Mrs Bowman died in August 2023. Her close friend and fierce supporter and neighbour Deidre Olofsson described the latest news regarding Camberwell and the 'Rosedale' property as devastating. "It marks the end of the village and the harm it will do to Glennies Creek, a major tributary to the Hunter River and the source of water for the vineyards and irrigators below Singleton will be massive," she said. "It is just heartbreaking to see the proposal Wendy and all of us fought so hard to stop may be back again." In a statement to the community, Bloomfield Group said the acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. Securing land adjacent to our existing Rix's Creek Mine operations gives us the flexibility to better plan for future infrastructure, such as the proposed highway relocation to support our Rix's Creek North Continuation Project, they said. The agreement with Yancoal also includes the area of the Donaldson open-cut and Abel underground mines, located east of Maitland and adjacent to The Bloomfield Group's Bloomfield Colliery. Under the agreement, The Bloomfield Group assumes responsibility for the rehabilitation of both the Donaldson and Abel mine sites. The acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. We are also actively exploring future land uses and the necessary approval pathways across all of our Lower Hunter land holdings, including at our Bloomfield Colliery site, where opportunities for industrial precincts and housing aligned with regional planning strategies have been identified, they said. Acquisition of the land includes the current relevant mining tenure associated with each site, such as permits, leases, and licences. Completion of the acquisition is subject to the usual regulatory approvals required for a transaction of this kind. Comment has been sought from Yancoal on the sale of their assets to the Blooomfield Group. Hunter-based Australian coal mining company, the Bloomfield Group's buying spree continues with the announcement that they have signed an agreement to acquire land and an associated mining tenure from Yancoal. This latest purchase follows their acquisition of the home of the late Wendy Bowman, 'Rosedale' at Camberwell, in February this year for $9 million and their purchase in July of the now closed Integra underground mine near Singleton from Glencore. A number of dwellings in the village Camberwell, near Singleton as well as land and an associated mining tenure for the previously proposed Ashton South East Open Cut project (for which the approval has lapsed), are included in the agreement. Comment has been sought from the Bloomfield Group on the latest purchases, in particular the mining tenure that covers 'Rosesdale', where Yancoal had planned to establish an open-cut mine adjacent to Glennies Creek. It was the Ashton South East Coal Project that brought Mrs Bowman to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She campaigned for decades against the mining of agricultural land in the Hunter Valley establishing Mine Watch in 1991. But it was her decision to fight to protect 'Rosedale' and the nearby Glennies Creek from the proposed Ashton East Open Cut Coal Mine that brought her to national and international prominence as an environmental campaigner. She was involved in a landmark court decision in 2014 against Yancoal's Ashton South East open-cut mine proposal. The decision required the mine to buy her property, Rosedale, to proceed. She refused to sell her property to Yancoal, and which stalled the mine, and its mining licence would eventually lapse in April 2022. Mrs Bowman died in August 2023. Her close friend and fierce supporter and neighbour Deidre Olofsson described the latest news regarding Camberwell and the 'Rosedale' property as devastating. "It marks the end of the village and the harm it will do to Glennies Creek, a major tributary to the Hunter River and the source of water for the vineyards and irrigators below Singleton will be massive," she said. "It is just heartbreaking to see the proposal Wendy and all of us fought so hard to stop may be back again." In a statement to the community, Bloomfield Group said the acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. Securing land adjacent to our existing Rix's Creek Mine operations gives us the flexibility to better plan for future infrastructure, such as the proposed highway relocation to support our Rix's Creek North Continuation Project, they said. The agreement with Yancoal also includes the area of the Donaldson open-cut and Abel underground mines, located east of Maitland and adjacent to The Bloomfield Group's Bloomfield Colliery. Under the agreement, The Bloomfield Group assumes responsibility for the rehabilitation of both the Donaldson and Abel mine sites. The acquisition aligns with our strategy of investing to deliver stability for our existing operations, while at the same time providing business options and growth opportunities for the future. We are also actively exploring future land uses and the necessary approval pathways across all of our Lower Hunter land holdings, including at our Bloomfield Colliery site, where opportunities for industrial precincts and housing aligned with regional planning strategies have been identified, they said. Acquisition of the land includes the current relevant mining tenure associated with each site, such as permits, leases, and licences. Completion of the acquisition is subject to the usual regulatory approvals required for a transaction of this kind. Comment has been sought from Yancoal on the sale of their assets to the Blooomfield Group.

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