IT’S no secret that generally the more expensive something is, the higher quality it is, or at least one would hope.
But is the Subaru XV worth the steep price tag?
Our resident motoring expert Neil Briscoe has done all of the leg work for you as he takes an in depth look at the every inch of the XV.
Check out this week’s issue ofย The Clare Echoย for the full review, but hereโs a little snippet to get you started:
THERE’S an appeal in redundancy.
That sense of knowing that your expensive wristwatch can cope with the pressure of 300-metres of seawater, so itโll be grand to wear it while doing the washing up.
That knowledge that your jacket has been designed for, and worn by, Antarctic explorers and scientists, so itโll certainly keep you warm if itโs a bit nippy out.
Thatโs the appeal of the Subaru XV โ knowing that whatever this capricious world may throw at you in terms of weather or road surface (or a total lack of road surface) youโll be fine.
Youโll get home.
That should, in theory at least, help you to get your head around its price tag.
Subaruโs XV is roughly the same size as a Nissan Qashqai, but it costs rather a lot more.
Youโll spend, at minimum, โฌ33,495 on one, and our test car โ a range-topping SE Premium model with the CVT automatic gearbox โ clocked in at โฌ38,495.
Which is whatโs known as quite a bit, really.
The good news, though, is that you do get a lot of equipment included in that hefty price tag (not always the case with the competition).
As well as the CVT gearbox, there are part-leather seats, a big eight-inch touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto (good luck getting either of those from, say, a Land Rover) and crucially the EyeSight system.