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Toyota Yaris Hybrid review

21 December 2011

The Toyota Yaris Hybrid will compete with Honda’s Jazz Hybrid and a host of diesel models when it goes on sale next summer.

Impressively, Toyota has managed to package the hybrid powertrain within the car without sacrificing any interior space. This has been achieved by extending the nose by 20mm, downsizing the engine from the 1.8-litre unit in the Prius to 1.5 litres, and engineering a lighter, more compact hybrid system.

Toyota hasn’t announced prices yet, but looking at the difference between the regular Auris and its hybrid spin-off, a minimum purchase price of £16,000 seems likely.

What’s it like to drive? The electric motor can power the car without the help of the engine for just over a mile and it provides some welcome extra thrust away from rest. However, the Yaris Hybrid is generally a sluggish performer, offering inferior acceleration to both the Yaris 1.4 D-4D diesel and 1.33 petrol model.

Understandably, Toyota says that performance is not what this car is about, and instead points to an estimated fuel consumption figure nudging 80mpg that would translate into CO2 emissions below 85g/km. As impressive as these numbers are, though, they’re only in line with those of eco diesels such as the Volkswagen Polo Bluemotion and Kia Rio 1.1 Ecodynamics.

Turn into a bend and the Yaris is grippy enough, but there’s a fair amount of body roll and the steering is disconcertingly numb. To make matters worse, the ride is unsettled on scruffy surfaces and there’s a considerable amount of road noise at higher speeds.

What’s it like inside? While there’s some soft-touch plastic on the dash, it’s no more than a sticking plaster on a cabin whose quality is a long way from the class best, let alone good enough for a car that’s likely to cost as much as a lower-end VW Golf.

On the upside, there’s plenty of space for four in the cabin and a decent-sized boot, despite the fact the latest Yaris misses out on its predecessor’s handy sliding rear bench.

Should I buy one? This hybrid system is more sophisticated and efficient than the one on the Jazz Hybrid, and if it were attached to a class-leading car, there might be grounds for saying that certain people – company car drivers and urban dwellers – should consider one. Unfortunately, the latest Yaris is actually pretty poor by the standards of modern superminis.

Unless Toyota prices the Yaris Hybrid to undercut its diesel rivals – which seems very unlikely – it will be impossible to recommend.

Rivals:
Honda Jazz Hybrid
VW Polo Bluemotion

What Car? says…


Andrew Frankel