Volkswagen ID.Polo new car review

£21,000 - £35,000
7.1out of 10
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10 Second Review

Volkswagen reinvents the Polo supermini for the electric era - as it reinvents the way its products meet the needs of long-standing customers. The ID.Polo is practical, frugal - and accessible to people yet to be converted by the idea of an EV. It's a very important small car indeed.

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Detailed ratings

Compact Full Electric Cars
Overall
71 %
Economy
7 / 10
Space
8 / 10
Value
7 / 10
Handling
7 / 10
Depreciation
7 / 10
Styling
7 / 10
Build
7 / 10
Comfort
7 / 10
Insurance
7 / 10
Performance
7 / 10
Equipment
7 / 10

Background

'True Volkswagens are back' - or so the brand tells us with this car, the ID.Polo.
If you find that difficult to believe, given that this, the Wolfsburg maker's smallest EV yet is built in Spain and shares 80% of its components with two other members of the VW Group's 'Urban Electric Family', the Skoda Epiq and the CUPRA Raval. Despite all of this, the ID.Polo has its own very distinct 'Volkswagen' look. And has been engineered to drive in a manner recognisable to loyalists of 'The Peoples' Car' brand who may have been put off by the abrasively futuristic ID.3.
Mentioning that EV reminds us that throughout most of its development, this car was slated to be named 'ID.2' - until that plan was abandoned as part of the 'True Volkswagen' programme's bid to make the marque's models feel friendly and familiar again. In many ways, this is the most important EV the brand has launched yet, paired with the identically-engineered ID.Cross small electric SUV and sitting alongside the old (and continuing) combustion Polo supermini. Let's take a closer look.
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Range data

MinMax
Price2100035000
Max Speed (mph)9999
0-62 mph (s)7.17.1
MinMax
Length (mm)40534053
Width (mm)18161816
Height (mm)15301530
Boot Capacity (l)441441

Driving experience

You might think that this could be where the 'true Volkswagen' mantra somewhat falls apart. Design, after all, is relatively easy to brand-personalise. But it's less easy for Wolfsburg to convince potential ID.Polo customers that this is more than just a badge-engineered CUPRA Raval (or indeed the Skoda Epiq small crossover) when all the engineering seems just the same.
The drivetrains are, there's no getting away from that. But Volkswagen says it set its own distinct parameters for suspension, chassis tuning and refinement. Which broadly means that you can expect an ID.Polo to be more comfort-orientated and less sporty than a Raval; the differences against an Epiq are less easily defined.
As for those drivetrains, well the volume sales are focused around a rather small-sounding 37kWh LFP battery with a choice between two front-mounted motor variants, one with 116PS, the other with 135PS. If you want more than the modest 186 miles of range that package will give you, you'll be directed to the ID.Polo with the larger 52kWh NMC battery, which works with a 211PS motor and offers up to 280 miles of range. The same bigger battery is used by the top ID.Polo GTI, paired with a 226PS motor. 0-62mph with the GTI takes just 6.8s.
The motor used across the mainstream ID.Polo line-up is the VW Group's latest-generation APP290 unit, notable because its advanced power electronics make it so light. This contributes to handling agility and is a key reason why the car tips the scales at no more than around 1,500kg, notably light for an EV. All ID.Polos get brake regen steering wheel paddles, with near 'one-pedal' driving possible on the fiercest setting. Towing capacity is up to 1,200kg.
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Design and build

If the ID.Polo already looks familiar, that's because it's supposed to. Designed by ex-Bentley stylist Andreas Mindt in just a few weeks over Christmas 2022, it sets the visual tone for a whole new generation of Volkswagens with what the brand hopes are 'friendly eyes and a likeable smile'. At 4.05-metres long, it's basically the same size as a combustion Polo and uses the classic angled VW C-pillar, a styling cue that goes all the way back to the Golf MK1.
There's a long wheelbase and short overhangs for extra cabin space. And wide tracks and large sculpted wheelarches housing rims from 17 to 19-inches, all giving a stable, planted look. That shouldn't date too quickly, though the in-vogue badge lighting theatrics front and rear might. The rear light signature is inspired by whiskey glasses.
Inside up-front, the brand hopes you'll agree that the true spirit of Volkswagen has returned to the company's cabin design. Instead of the cheap-feeling tech-led vibe of early ID models, there's a solid familiar-feeling button-led interior. There are no silly sliders or haptic switchgear and nothing feels particularly cheap, with fabric dashboard inserts and subtle interior lighting offering a welcoming ambiance.
There's even a nod to the past from the 11.25-inch instrument screen, which can display with a recreated set of dials from an early '80s Polo. And from the 13-inch landscape central infotainment monitor, which nostalgic folk can set to show with a graphic of an old cassette tape. As in the ID.3 Neo, beneath the screen is a row of physical controls, mainly for climate functions. There's also a rotary dial situated between storage compartments on the centre console, this able to control audio volume or change tracks or radio stations. The new-shape wheel has welcome physical buttons too.
As with all the MEB+ platform models, rear seat space is notably more generous than you'd expect from a car of this size - it's nearly as roomy as a Golf. A tall adult could easily sit behind a tall driver. The real benefits of this advanced platform though, are found in the huge 441-litre boot (61-litres bigger than a Golf). So the pram or stroller that wouldn't fit in the back of a combustion Polo (which offers 350-litres) will fit here, helped by a false floor under which you can store bulky items like that - or maybe plants or a case of drinks. You will also have to fit the charging leads under here though because no under-bonnet 'frunk' space is provided for them.
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Market and model

Thanks to all the engineering commonalities across the VW Group MEB+ platform models (which apparently unlocked 650 million euros of development saving), Volkswagen says it's been able to keep ID.Polo prices low. Expect the asking figures to begin in the £21,000-£25,000 bracket for the more affordable trim levels. That's just above a Fiat Grande Panda Electric but at above the same level as a Renault 5 E-Tech. An upper-spec ID.Polo will be in the £25,000-£30,000 bracket. And you'll need closer to £35,000 for the ID.Polo GTI.
Most sales will be of 'Life' or 'Style'-spec variants and there are safety features like lane assist and blind spot warning. 'Life' spec includes features like a rear parking camera, adaptive cruise control and a wireless 'phone charging mat. Plusher 'Style'-spec adds LED matrix headlights, sport comfort seats and climate-control.
Luxury options include features like a panoramic glass roof, electrically-adjustable front seats and a 10-speaker Harmon Kardon audio system upgrade. If you've enough in your budget, you can add equipment items that you might not expect to find in this class of car. Like Volkswagen's semi-autonomous 'Connected Travel Assist' drive system (which can even bring the car to a halt at red traffic lights); and massaging front seats. There's also lots of auto-parking tech, including a set-up that learns previous manoeuvres (say into your tight garage) and can automatically repeat them; and one allowing you to stand outside the car and park it with your smartphone.
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Cost of ownership

DC charging speed is one area where this ID.Polo isn't particularly advanced. The smaller 37kWh battery DC-charges at only 90kW. Even the larger 52kWh pack can only DC-replenish at a maximum of 130kW. It seems disappointing that sensible DC-replenishment speeds are still restricted to pricier cars. Still, a 10-80% DC-charge of the smaller battery can be done in 27 minutes; it's 24 minutes with the larger battery. Home AC charging from a single phase 7.4kw wallbox takes around 6 hours with the smaller battery and about 8 hours 30 minutes with the larger one - that's for a full charge. With the 37kWh ID.Polo, you can reduce your full charge time down to about 4 hours if you're able to AC charge using a three-phase 11kW wallbox. With that 11kW AC wallbox, the full charging time for a 52kWh ID.Polo would be about 5 hours 30 minutes. As you'd expect, these are the same figures as you'd get with the equivalent CUPRA and Skoda versions of this MEB+ design. As usual, charging can be controlled via the centre screen or by using the company's smartphone app.
The ID.Polo can also offer bi-directional charging to feed energy back into the grid (though we can't really imagine many occasions on which you'd want to). And this Volkswagen can be specified with a V2L charger to power up your gadgets from the car's drive battery. The Wolfsburg maker says that its aim is to make sure that the battery pack lasts as long as the car and, sure enough, that battery pack is warrantied to have at least 70% of its usable capacity after eight years or 100,000 miles.
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Summary

No other electric Volkswagen has been designed so specifically around the way it will be used. If you've owned or used a Polo in the past, liked it but ultimately wanted something a bit more, then the ID.Polo might be just about perfect, provided of course that you're prepared to make the seismic switch to EV motoring.
Unlike with the original ID.3, it's not necessary to explain what this car's about; you can see and feel it's a Volkswagen. And it represents 'just the beginning' of a huge reinvention for the company's EV line-up.
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