Mazda CX-5 long-term test: report 1
Our sub-editor wants a car that's relaxing on the motorway, capable on tricky terrain and fun to drive elsewhere. Can this family SUV deliver?...
The car Mazda CX-5 2.5 AWD GT Sport Auto Run by Chris Haining, sub-editor
Why it’s here To see how a traditional, petrol-powered, four-wheel drive large SUV fits in with daily life today
Needs to Shrug off rough roads and tough weather, soothe in motorway traffic, entertain on a twisty road
Mileage 1585 List price £38,905 Target Price £37,484 Price as tested £39,485 Test economy 38.5mpg Official economy 35.3mpg Options fitted Snowflake White metallic paint (£580)
12 September 2022 – Tradition takes a stand
And now for something completely different. The Mazda CX-5 is an example of an increasingly rare breed; a family SUV that isn’t electric or even hybrid powered. It relies solely on petrol for motivation, with a big engine connected to all four wheels via an automatic gearbox, and with no steering wheel paddle shifters in sight.
Not exactly clutching the zeitgeist, then, but while cars are developing at a breakneck pace, not everybody wants their wheels to be perched on the bleeding edge of technology. Some would rather buy something that’s been proven by time, particularly if it has a specific job to do. And I’m looking forward to seeing whether Mazda’s family SUV still makes sense in progress-obsessed 2022.
Updated this year with styling and tech tweaks, the Mazda CX-5 range is pretty broad, and the front-wheel drive versions account for the lion’s share of sales. You can have petrol or diesel power and manual or automatic gearboxes, and the CX-5 makes for fine, practical and comfortable family transport with any combination of the above. Its four-star What Car? rating puts it towards the top of the family SUV class, even though it does without the third row of seats that some rivals offer.
The version I’ve gone for, though, sits at the more specialised end of the CX-5 lineup. With its four-wheel drive system, it should make easy work of damp slipways and muddy tracks, as well as affording that last degree of security in treacherous road conditions when winter rolls in. The four-wheel drive system comes exclusively with an automatic gearbox, and while you can team this set-up with petrol or diesel power, I’ve gone for the former.
Why’s that, then? Well, I’m hoping for a bit of sportiness. While most people in the market for a large four-wheel drive SUV plump for diesel power, which typically serves up the lazy low-down grunt that you want if you’re towing a heavy trailer or caravan, I have no such haulage ambitions. What I do have, though, is a network of very enticing country roads on my doorstep, and a 2.5-litre 197bhp petrol engine should – in theory – be just the job for squeezing as much fun out of the CX-5 as possible.
The racy theme continues in the trim level I’ve gone for, but while the GT Sport grade brings colour-coded bumper mouldings and wheelarches as well as adding a bright finish to the 19in alloy wheels, it’s more than just a package of cosmetics. In fact, it promotes the CX-5 from generously equipped to unashamedly opulent, with soft dark brown Nappa leather upholstery, front seats that are ventilated as well as heated (the outer rear seats being heated, too), and wood trim on the dashboard. I’m a sucker for a bit of wood trim, I don’t mind admitting.
GT Sport also brings a hefty roster of driver assistance and convenience tech. In the former category, I’ve got adaptive LED headlights, driver attention monitoring and automatic emergency braking when reversing as well as going forwards. This all comes on top of the blind spot monitoring, lane-keeping assistance and adaptive cruise control that all CX-5s are equipped with, and the 7.0in digital instrument panel and colour head-up display that you get with Sport trim and above.
The price for all this? Well, after adding £580’s worth of smart Snowflake White metallic paint, my CX-5 tips the scales at £39,485. That’s a sizeable chunk of change for a family SUV, not least when the bigger Ford Kuga and Nissan X-Trail cost less, as does a similarly equipped Skoda Karoq – although that car is slightly smaller than the CX-5. Still, premium alternatives, such as the Audi Q3, will set you back even more, spec for spec.
Over the coming months, my car can expect to face a varied programme of long-haul commuting and dirt-track exploring, as well as being asked to entertain me when I’m in the mood to just go out for a drive. Basically, it needs to fit in with my life; yes, the CX-5 could be accused of not moving with the times, but I, too, am a creature of habit.
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