Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Daily Record
Daily Record
Lifestyle
Ian Donaldson

Toyota Corolla Excel 1.8 Touring Sports review – Estate's a real smoothie

THE most successful car model name in history is back – after being hidden away for years. So, give a big welcome back to the new Corolla, the 12th generation with that badge on the back and approaching 50million sales worldwide.

But, unlike the VW Beetle whose shape stayed recognisably familiar throughout its 21million production run, the only obviously consistent feature of all those Corollas from Japanese marque Toyota was the name.

Actually, there’s a much deeper link than that. Over the decades since that first Corolla appeared in 1966, the name has come to mean family transport that won’t break the bank – or break down.

If you think that sounds a bit dull, well that might explain why we lost the Corolla name for a few years as Toyota tried to add a bit of pep to its family car line-up, giving us the Auris instead.

The Toyota Corolla Touring Sports (Toyota)

But now comes a car (built in the UK for Europe) that simultaneously brings back the badge and tries to inject a bit of pizzazz into a market where some rivals are proper fun to drive.

The new Corolla starts at £21,305 for a 1.2-litre petrol manual hatchback and tops out with the £30,345 Excel Touring Sports (estate) with 2.0-litre petrol hybrid powertrain and automatic gears.

However, the most popular engine is going to be the smaller 1.8-litre petrol hybrid, which saves £1725 over the bigger unit and produces gently better economy at the expense of some performance.

The Toyota Corolla Touring Sports (Toyota)

And that brings us to the heart of this new Corolla, whatever is under the bonnet. Yes, this latest one is a perfectly decent drive, with enough eagerness to let longer journeys pass without complaint but it doesn’t feel a bit sporty.

You will soon come to relish this fact, especially as the car dispatches that nasty bit of road on the way to work with barely a tremor and all in the sort of hush that makes for family peace as the long journey to your holiday hotel grinds on.

This latest Corolla is a genuinely calming place to pass the miles. The fact that it feels solidly put together in a gently polished fashion only adds to the allure.

A fuel consumption readout of 53.6mpg after more than 500 miles of mixed use was pretty calming, too, producing the sort of diesel-like economy that a petrol engine with some gentle help from a self-charging battery hybrid system can provide without the downside of that fuel.

The Toyota Corolla Touring Sports (Toyota)

Take the estate version (called the Touring Sports in typical marketing speak) and for £1270 more than the five-door hatch you add a thoroughly versatile load space that offers a generous 596 litres of luggage room with the rear seats in use and a van-like 1725 litres with them folded flat.

Take a posh Excel spec car and you won’t want for kit, with dual-zone climate control, LED headlights, 17in alloys. heated front seats, part-leather upholstery and cruise control as standard.

Also standard on every new Corolla is the warming feeling that it’s going to go on delivering on its promise of fuss-free transport for a very long time.

Factfile:

  • Model: Toyota Corolla Excel 1.8 Touring Sports
  • Engine: 1.8-litre petrol/electric hybrid
  • Power: 122hp
  • Top speed: 111mph
  • 0-62mph: 11.1 seconds
  • Average mpg: 55.3-57.6mpg
  • CO2 emissions: 83g/km
  • Warranty: Five years/100,000 miles
  • Price: £28,620
Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.