
Cupra Tavascan Interior Layout & Technology
What is it like on the inside?
The drama of the Tavascan's exterior is carried over to the inside of the car, with a swoopy, aggressive, minimalist design that will wow your passengers. That and the gloomy dark colour scheme with copper accents that gives particularly swanky boutique hotel vibes. You half expect to find a Nespresso machine and a sewing kit in the centre console.
Most of the materials don't stand up to close inspection, the Tavascan is more premium in design than it is in execution. The dramatic spar that runs from below the screen down to the console is like a gothic buttress, only made of creaky grey plastic rather than stone.
Advertisement - Page continues below
More troublingly, its shape means there's only a small tray below it, where most EVs can provide a deep and useful storage bin. There is space below the armrest though. Where are all the buttons?
Where indeed. The only button on the central part of the dash is for the hazard warning lights – which you can accidentally turn on if you're trying to rest your arm amid the never-ending task of adjusting anything on the touchscreen.
The Tavascan also gets VW Group's ill-advised. touch-sensitive steering wheel controls with haptic feedback underneath – they mostly work fine, but it's still too easy to press something unintentionally when you're going through an involved corner. Look, we don't mind technology, but only when it actually makes life better. How's the tech overall?
The 5.3in digital instrument panel is a bit small but does the basics. Most action goes on in the 15in centre screen: it works snappily and can be customised with useful shortcuts and widgets. For instance your favoured combo of assist settings (by law they all default to on when you stop the car) can be activated with just one downward swipe plus one jab.
Advertisement - Page continues below
Wireless phone mirroring is included, but this is a rare car where you might consider using the native satnav. Not because it's any good, the map is a bit fussy and washed out. But you do get route instructions on the digi dash and arrows that float around the windscreen thanks to the augmented reality head-up display that comes on V2 models and above.
There's also an LED rail along the base of the windscreen that gives you peripheral vision clues, for instance sweeping left to right as you approach a right turn. What's the space like in the back?
In the back, the outer seats are quite dished, which both supports you and provides a bit more room, but that makes the middle one a booby prize. But there's enough headroom despite the plunging roof line, and plenty of leg space if the front seats are lifted from their very lowest position so you can tuck your feet under.
The sportier buckets feature a hard plastic back, so your passengers' knees will appreciate the extra space. They make it a bit dark in the back, too – the panoramic glass roof that comes on all but the entry model is a welcome addition.
Boot space is deep and fairly tall if you drop the two-level floor, so it's 540 litres under the parcel shelf. There's no seats-down figure from Cupra, but you'd have to assume it's at least 541 litres.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
20 hours ago
- The Independent
Skoda's CEO reveals all on electric cars, petrol cars and sporty Skodas
Klaus Zellmer runs one of Europe's favourite car brands, Skoda. He joins our EV editor Steve Fowler for a drive around London in the new all-electric Skoda Enyaq to talk through the entire Skoda business including new model plans, the challenge faced by Chinese brands, Skoda's role in the VW Group, expansion in India, hot and sporty Skodas and much more. Watch more from Drive Smart on Independent TV.


Auto Express
5 days ago
- Auto Express
If electric car buyers thought they were confused, they ain't seen nothing yet
If you've ever tried reading up on quantum-string theory or simultaneously solving three Rubics cubes while also attempting to juggle, you'll have at least some idea of the brain-scrambling confusion faced by UK electric-car buyers over recent years. Range anxiety, the chip shortage, depreciation, battery life, environmental impact, charging infrastructure, the ICE ban, the ZEV mandate and, of course, government grants - the electric car space has been a storm of complex issues, conflicting advice, and wild opinions. Advertisement - Article continues below Consumers who quite like the idea of an EV have been faced with an almost-weekly reason to seriously doubt that they'd be making the right decision. Meanwhile, the world wonders why the uptake of electric cars by private buyers has been less than spectacular. Ready to make the switch to an electric car? Our nationwide dealer network has thousands of EVs on offer right now with new, used and leasing deals to choose from... There is no doubt that prices for new electric cars were way too high a few years ago, but back then the global microchip shortage meant manufacturers were able to sell every EV they could build. Popular models had long waiting lists. Today, that situation has reversed. The ZEV mandate makes selling EVs a priority, so discounts and incentives were rife in the market even before the manufacturers got the Electric Car Grant they've been crying out for. Skip advert Advertisement - Article continues below Could the new grant be a watershed moment that clears the uncertainty and means more consumers can confidently buy the EV they've been wanting? Yes, and no. There's more choice than ever with some truly outstanding products and prices falling. But the road to going electric remains a confusing one to navigate. It will become clear which cars qualify for which level of EV grant on 11 August, but we've already seen manufacturers that may not make the cut matching the grant with their own discounts. And just because a car is cheaper thanks to a government grant, won't always guarantee it's a good deal. Many EVs on our Find a Car service had discounts bigger than £4,000 before the grant was even announced. To track the latest EV deals, our parent company, Carwow is running a live hub page. Advertisement - Article continues below There are other big questions to answer as well. What will these subsidies of new electric car purchases do to used car values? How will the cost and availability of charging impact life with an electric car over the coming years? Will further advances in EV tech make today's models quickly seem outdated, as has happened to older electric cars? Here at Auto Express we are big fans of EVs and huge advocates of helping consumers make the best car-buying decisions. As ever, you'll find lots of answers to the big electric questions, but we will always strive to give you the informed insight you can trust. Today is a great time to buy an EV, but you must research and shop around to secure yourself the best deal on the right car. Public charging is very expensive, but if you don't do many miles it can work. Yet if you can charge at home there are big savings to be made over an equivalent petrol car. EV tech will continue to advance but pricing levels are equalising with petrol cars, warranties are long and battery failures are rare. Electric-car depreciation has stung a lot of people but the market for used models should settle down, and means there are big bargains to be had on the second-hand market. More than anything though, most people will love owning today's fast, quiet, long-range and easy-to-use electric cars. They're good enough to make a little confusion worthwhile. Find a car with the experts Dacia's baby EV due in 12 months with a tiny £15k price tag Dacia's baby EV due in 12 months with a tiny £15k price tag Dacia's new model will be developed in double-quick time, and it'll be built in Europe to avoid China tariffs MG4 and MGS5 EV prices slashed in reply to Government Electric Car Grant MG4 and MGS5 EV prices slashed in reply to Government Electric Car Grant In order to boost sales, MG is announcing its own a £1,500 grant for some of its EVs Renault will 'stick to the plan' as it hits number 2 in Europe Renault will 'stick to the plan' as it hits number 2 in Europe Renault has no plans to fight Volkswagen for sales supremacy, despite huge growth in EV sales due to new Renault 5


Top Gear
5 days ago
- Top Gear
Cupra Tavascan Driving, Engines & Performance
Driving What is it like to drive? Acceleration is brisk, but not with that step-off jolt some fast EVs give you on the first micron of pedal travel. That's fine. Who wants to be slammed in the back of the skull by the headrest every time a traffic light goes green? More importantly, the acceleration is enough to give decent overtaking gumption, and to give the tyres something to think about on the exit from a corner. In numbers, the AWD version is 5.5 seconds 0-62mph. Advertisement - Page continues below The front motor is called into play when rear traction is close to its limit, but in any case it's the weaker of the pair. Bottom line, this feels rear driven. A point you can emphasise by selecting a sports AWD mode which defers the front motor's arrival, and a sports setting for the ESP. You can also tauten the dampers. We're glad to say there's now a screen shortcut to turn off the electronic assistance features. The lane keep can yank at the wheel when the road lines are inconsistent, and the speed limit warnings are irritating too. On motorways the lane centring and radar cruise work well and smoothly, although the displays could do more to reassure you by telling you what they're up to. What about in the corners? With the right settings, the Tavascan is definitely more amusing than its rivals. You can use the regen paddles to slow it progressively, but even so too much ambition at the start of a tight bend will see you lost in understeer and steering wheel numbness. That's your 2.3 tonnes right there. Advertisement - Page continues below But then when you add the power it feels engaging, giving you a sense of the tyres working for you. The steering is precise and well weighted. The brake pedal is a bit soft underfoot, with a mild sense of delay as regeneration hands off to friction, but which of its rivals isn't like that? I hope they didn't ruin the ride? The Tavascan copes well with bumps, with the caveat that it's a particularly firm ride overall. A button on the steering wheel cycles between drive modes, which affects damping among other things. And a second one shortcuts you to the Cupra mode that puts all settings to their most aggressive. Cupra has lowered the ride height by 15mm compared to the related VW Group MEB crossovers, and made adaptive dampers standard with the AWD version. And done its own software for steering and brakes and damping and ESP. And given the option of light 21-inch wheels. It all helps. What's the charging like? Peak DC recharge rate is 135kW which isn't too fancy, but Cupra says it can sustain that for a long time, so you can make good use of, say, a 150kW charge post and get from 10-80 per cent in as little as 28 minutes. There's three-phase AC charging, but disappointingly it's only 11kW not 22kW, so you're still taking eight hours to fill the battery from empty. That said, 7kW is likely the maximum power your home can deliver anyway. So call it 11 hours on one of those home or street charge ports from dead flat to 100 per cent juiced. And efficiency? How far can I really go on that battery? We drove the range-topping VZ2 AWD for a couple of hundred miles or so round a selection of UK roads during warm weather and got... 3.6 mi/kWh out of it. Not amazing, but we've seen a lot worse. That would make for total range of 277 miles against a promise of 323 – and that'll drop in the winter, especially without the (non-standard) heat pump. If range anxiety is a thing you suffer from, stick with the RWD Tavascan: that'll get close to 300 miles real world. Highlights from the range the fastest 250kW VZ2 77kWh AWD 5dr Auto [Winter Pack] 0-62 5.5s CO2 0 BHP 335.3 MPG Price £62,115 the cheapest 210kW V1 77kWh 5dr Auto 0-62 6.8s CO2 0 BHP 281.6 MPG Price £47,285 the greenest 250kW VZ2 77kWh AWD 5dr Auto [Winter Pack] 0-62 5.5s CO2 0 BHP 335.3 MPG Price £62,115