
Buy Skoda Kodiaq Price, PPC or HP
Buying
What should I be paying?
Prices now start at £38,140 for a base Kodiaq SE in 148bhp petrol form. Add £860 if you want this to have the third row of seats, or £2,290 if you'd rather have an identically powered diesel engine. Lease costs start at £380 and £415 respectively.
The more powerful Kodiaq 4x4 variants require you to step up to SE L trim, and cost from £46,350 in petrol and £48,120 in diesel guise. There you're looking at an extra £135 and £100 in monthly repayments over the same four-year term.
Advertisement - Page continues below
Meanwhile the plug-in hybrid (which is available in base SE trim) will set you back from £42,045, but company car drivers will love it for its six per cent BIK rate. Less so much the vRS, which starts from £53,650. Yikes. What's the kit list like?
Equipment is strong. The 13in central touchscreen, 10.25in digital dash and tri-zone climate control are all standard, as are heated front seats and keyless start (if not keyless entry, weirdly). You get 18in alloys and front and rear LED lights, too, as well as a tonne of active safety stuff.
Optional are a host of smart parking systems that will remotely park the car via an app, as well as remember common manoeuvres at places it recognises.
Upgrading to SE L spec brings larger 19in wheels, keyless entry, multi-talented LED matrix lights up front, leather seats inside plus electrical operation for the driver's seat and boot opening, while one above Sportline trim comes with 20in wheels, upgraded suspension, sportier body kit, adaptive cruise control and microsuede interior trim.
Advertisement - Page continues below
The top level vRS gets a front light strip, gloss black body detailing, 20in black alloys, two-piston gloss red calipers and stainless steel exhaust tips. Step inside and you'll find sporty vRS-branded steering wheel and seats, black upholstery and headlining, much red stitching and stainless steel pedals.
Which one should I pick?
The UK is the Kodiaq's second most voracious market behind Germany and ahead of Skoda's Czech homeland. The pressures of company car schemes suggest many buyers here will go for the plug-in hybrid.
As a private buyer, we'd be tempted to stick to simple internal combustion to save money and weight. The 148bhp mild-hybrid in SE trim ought to be enough while the diesels feel right on point for comfort and ease of use.

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


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
Baggies in talks to appoint Spurs coach Mason
West Bromwich Albion are in talks over appointing Tottenham Hotspur coach Ryan Mason as their sources have told BBC Sport the ex-England midfielder, who is working under Ange Postecoglou at Spurs, is emerging as the Championship club's first-choice candidate to replace Tony Mowbray, who was sacked in are well under way and continuing amid positivity from all parties that Mason will accept his first managerial contract at Spurs expires at the end of June so there are unlikely to be lengthy negotiations over the 33-year-old's release, though Tottenham are aware of the Baggies' Albion want Mason to start work immediately, which is expected to be the case, the Midlands club will be required to make a formal approach to Tottenham to release him from the final weeks of his contract - but that is not expected to create any obstacles towards the deal. There is a possibility that Mason takes members of Spurs' coaching team with him to The was forced to retire from professional football in 2018, aged just 26, on medical advice after suffering a fractured skull in a clash with Chelsea defender Gary Cahill in 2017 that required the Tottenham academy graduate to have emergency joined Tottenham's coaching team in April 2018, playing a key role in the club's academy before becoming interim first-team manager following the sacking of Jose Mourinho in has been part of Tottenham's senior set-up ever since, becoming acting head coach for a second time following the departure of Antonio Conte in 2023.


BBC News
17 minutes ago
- BBC News
Have your say on Rangers takeover
A new era has begun at American consortium, led by Andrew Cavenagh and 49ers Enterprises, has taken control of the Ibrox club and promised £20m of investment in football operations this health tycoon Cavenagh is now the Rangers chairman, with 49ers Enterprises president - and Leeds United chairman - Paraag Marathe joining as say the new consortortim's vision for the club will prioritise "on-pitch performance and long-term financial sustainability".Rangers fans, what is your initial reaction to the takeover? Pure positivity or are there any reservations? And what should the new owners' priorities be this summer other than appointing a manager?Share your views here.


BBC News
17 minutes ago
- BBC News
Decision on major Holyport Studios pushed back by government
A decision on whether one of the UK's biggest film and TV studios is granted planning permission should be made next company Greystoke Land submitted plans to build sound stages, offices and workshops near the village of Holyport, near Maidenhead, Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead refused the application last year, citing its impact on the green on behalf of Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said a decision on the plan was delayed until on or before 26 June. It had been expected by Thursday. The project, first announced in 2022, could create 1,500 would extend over 43 hectares (106 acres) of land on Gays Lane in three sound stages, workshops and offices would allow multiple film and TV productions to be shot on the same day and at the same time.A "media village" would include a virtual reality studio offering CGI creation, augmented and virtual reality and gaming, while there would also be an area for open-air Land appealed to the government's planning inspectorate after the council dismissed its application. The council previously said that the case for the studios was "overstated" as a number of others have already been built in the south east of cited statistics from the British Film Institute that film and TV production volumes fell by 25% between 2022 and 2024. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.