Skip advert
Advertisement

Toyota RAV4 Hybrid SUV 2016 review

Toyota RAV4 facelift brings new hybrid version with nearly 200bhp

Overall Auto Express rating

2.0

How we review cars
Find your Toyota RAV4
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

Unless you’re a die-hard hybrid fan or need to save a few pounds on your Benefit in Kind bills, then the conventional diesel RAV4 makes more sense than the petrol-electric model. It doesn’t drive as well, while its powerplant hurts refinement and tech trails that of more modern plug-in rivals. The claimed efficiency figures look good, but you’ll struggle to match them in the real world. Plus, at £30,795, this Excel- spec model is expensive.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Few manufacturers have the hybrid history of Toyota, which launched its first petrol-electric Prius back in 1997. Since then, the brand has slowly rolled the tech out across its range, meaning it’s now possible to drive a dual-fuel version of the Yaris supermini, Auris hatchback and, of course, the recently launched Mk4 Prius. However, this is the first time Toyota has given its rugged RAV4 SUV the hybrid treatment.

Best hybrid cars

Sister firm Lexus donates the drivetrain from its NX 300h, meaning the RAV4 gets a 2.5-litre four-cylinder petrol engine, electric motor, continuously variable automatic transmission and a relatively old-fashioned nickel metal hydride battery pack. Entry-level Business Edition models are front-wheel drive, yet all other versions feature an extra electric motor connected to the back axle to deliver four-wheel drive. Yet while the technology isn’t exactly cutting edge, the Toyota’s figures look good. For instance, our flagship four-wheel-drive Excel car claims 55.4mpg economy and CO2 emissions of 118g/km. But is the on-road reality a match for the on-paper promise?

Prod the RAV4’s starter button, and the dashboard lights and instruments burst into life with no engine sound coming from under the bonnet. Gently squeeze the throttle, and the Toyota moves silently away on battery power alone. It will maintain this neat trick for around a mile at speeds of up to 40mph, before the petrol engine fires. At this point, the electric motor is there to provide extra muscle until the battery regains its charge.

That’s the theory, anyway. Accelerate hard, and you very rarely feel the electrical assistance; instead, the CVT gearbox sends the engine revs soaring, which results in an unpleasant, coarse racket in the cabin. And while Toyota says the RAV4 delivers 195bhp and will cover 0-62mph in 8.4 seconds, it never feels as fast as those figures suggest.

This can partly be explained by the car’s hefty 1,785kg kerbweight, which is 175kg heavier than the equivalent petrol model. You can feel this extra mass through a series of corners, too. Where the petrol and diesel-engined RAV4s are surprisingly poised and agile, the hybrid feels ponderous and quickly runs out of grip. The ride isn’t as composed as the conventional versions’, either, and it crashes into potholes and jolts uncomfortably over sharp ridges.

Toyota RAV4 diesel review

At least the rest of the car benefits from the same updates as the standard RAV4, so you get sharper styling, tweaked instruments and more standard kit. It’s still not as stylish or upmarket as models such as the Renault Kadjar, but it does benefit from a roomy interior, large boot and a generous five-year warranty.

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Dacia Spring

Dacia Spring

RRP £14,995Avg. savings £4,463 off RRP*
Nissan Juke

Nissan Juke

RRP £19,785Avg. savings £4,081 off RRP*Used from £9,800
Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £35,385Avg. savings £2,919 off RRP*Used from £30,233
Vauxhall Corsa

Vauxhall Corsa

RRP £19,200Avg. savings £4,715 off RRP*Used from £14,628
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

2026 Land Rover Defender updates look subtle, but they fix one huge annoyance for owners
Land Rover Defender MY26 updates - front

2026 Land Rover Defender updates look subtle, but they fix one huge annoyance for owners

Land Rover has introduced new, larger white-painted steel wheels for models with big brakes, fixing one massive irritation with the previous generatio…
News
30 May 2025
Electric car drivers won’t ever go back to petrol or diesel
Opinion - VW ID.7 GTX

Electric car drivers won’t ever go back to petrol or diesel

Editor Paul Barker thinks the EV transition is coming whether we like it or not
Opinion
28 May 2025
Car Deal of the Day: Hit the road in style with the electric BMW i4 for only £344 a month
BMW i4 - front cornering

Car Deal of the Day: Hit the road in style with the electric BMW i4 for only £344 a month

It may be a little overlooked these days, but the i4 is still a fine electric saloon. It’s our Deal of the Day for 30 May
News
30 May 2025
OSZAR »