RE: New VW ID. Polo takes to the road...
RE: New VW ID. Polo takes to the road...
Yesterday

New VW ID. Polo takes to the road...

... and upcoming GTI confirmed as more powerful than an Alpine A290


Volkswagen has announced some key details of the upcoming ID. Polo, ahead of what’s set to be a big year for EV VWs: six new battery powered models are coming in 2026. Whatever they turn out to be, the Polo feels like one of the most significant; as one of VW’s most recognisable and successful nameplates, of course, but also as a competitor in the small EV market that’s growing by the month. 

Based on the front-wheel-drive MEB+ architecture that will also be underneath the Cupra Raval (both will be built at SEAT’s plant in Martorell), the ID. Polo will be 4,053mm long, 1,816mm wide and 1,530mm tall. So not a million miles from the existing combustion engined car, pleasingly, yet with some useful gains in interior space. The boot now measures 435 litres (up from 351), while passengers are said to benefit from extra shoulder, head and legroom. All very pragmatic Polo. 

While exact specs on the GTI are to follow, VW has announced that it’ll have 226hp - just a tad more than the Alpine A290, if behind high voltage hot rods like the Mini JCW and the Stellantis machines. Still, outright power has never been the GTI USP; VW is also promising ‘first-class driving characteristics.’ The rest of the ID. Polo range will be made up of 116hp, 125hp and 211hp versions; the lower powered models will use a 37kWh lithium iron phosphate battery that can charge at up to 90kW, while the more potent Polo will use a 52kWh nickel manganese cobalt lump that can accept up to 130kW. It should also mean a range of up to 280 miles, though that’s still to be confirmed. 

As for how the ID. supermini is going to look, there’s not a whole lot more to tell from these latest prototype pics against the last ones. But there are some familiar cues from the rest of the electric VW family, the rear light bar with a bit of Buzz to it and a front end almost directly descended from the ID. 7. Apparently this Polo is the first example of design boss Andreas Mindt’s ‘Pure Positive’ language, so get used to what’s seen here. Maybe the smaller, Twingo-rivalling electric city car to be a bit bolder with its design; this is just the next Polo, after all, albeit one with the power source under the floor rather than the bonnet.

VW CEO Thomas Schäfer said: “The ID. Polo marks the beginning of a new generation of Volkswagen: with fresh design, intuitive operation, top quality and first-class driving characteristics – and finally with a proper name again. With an entry-level price starting at 25,000 euros, we are making electric mobility accessible to many people in Europe.”

Volkswagen are nothing if not fully committed to the electrification of their core models. And if next year is too long to wait for a smart, stylish electric runaround with a VW badge on it, don’t forget the E-Up happened - it’s now from £6,000…   


Author
Discussion

je777

Original Poster:

779 posts

124 months

Yesterday (13:29)
quotequote all
But if it doesn't look weird nobody will know I'm driving an EV, so what's the point?

I thought that VW learned this with the e-Golf, hence the ID3 and 5.

andrewpandrew

1,609 posts

9 months

Yesterday (13:31)
quotequote all
I’ll seriously look at the GTI when it comes out, however I was hoping it might be on a RWD platform.

fooman

460 posts

84 months

Yesterday (13:34)
quotequote all
AWD FWT

Twinair

976 posts

162 months

Yesterday (13:44)
quotequote all
I can probably see lower price point EV’s making for OK sales volumes…

This always seemed the sensible end of the market to start at - not the 3t supersized EV depreciation disaster zones…?!

Whilst not for me - maybe this starts to fill the hole of deleted small ICE’s..?

Who knows?

ChrisCh86

1,074 posts

64 months

Yesterday (13:51)
quotequote all
37kWh battery!?! hehe (yes I know there is also a 52kWh version too)

Can't wait to see the (terrible) range on that. Why would you get this over a Renault 5?

Doesn't seem to move the game on at all. Come on VW, you can do better

SDK

2,360 posts

273 months

Yesterday (14:03)
quotequote all
ChrisCh86 said:
37kWh battery!?! hehe (yes I know there is also a 52kWh version too)

Can't wait to see the (terrible) range on that. Why would you get this over a Renault 5?

Doesn't seem to move the game on at all. Come on VW, you can do better
It's a small city car, designed for people who don't need 600 miles of daily non-stop range, whilst towing a caravan, up a hill, in Winter smile

je777

Original Poster:

779 posts

124 months

Yesterday (14:06)
quotequote all
ChrisCh86 said:
37kWh battery!?! hehe (yes I know there is also a 52kWh version too)

Can't wait to see the (terrible) range on that. Why would you get this over a Renault 5?

Doesn't seem to move the game on at all. Come on VW, you can do better
If you want longer range, there's the other option. It's not suitable for me - no driveway, lots of driving in rural Scotland - but it will be for many.

I'd say this moves the game in the right direction - away from massively over-sized, ridiculously fast tax-break cars.

andrewpandrew

1,609 posts

9 months

Yesterday (14:10)
quotequote all
ChrisCh86 said:
37kWh battery!?! hehe (yes I know there is also a 52kWh version too)

Can't wait to see the (terrible) range on that. Why would you get this over a Renault 5?

Doesn't seem to move the game on at all. Come on VW, you can do better
Well I'm guessing the entry level 37kWh car will compete against the 40kWh R5...

Dale487

1,466 posts

143 months

Yesterday (14:21)
quotequote all
Not the most PH car every made but the GTI sounds interesting for an EV & the 435litre boot beats the iD3, Born & Golf to name a few

Sheepshanks

38,555 posts

139 months

Yesterday (14:40)
quotequote all
ChrisCh86 said:
37kWh battery!?! hehe (yes I know there is also a 52kWh version too)

Can't wait to see the (terrible) range on that. Why would you get this over a Renault 5?

Doesn't seem to move the game on at all. Come on VW, you can do better
Wife never drives more than 20 miles - and that's with us living in a semi-rural area - so she'd still only need to charge it now and again.

I think once you get past the cute hype of the R5 people are having a lot of niggling issues with it. It's also not really suitable for carry rear seat passengers. Wife's friend has one that died on the road last month, got recovered, and the dealer can't look at it until February.

silvermog

75 posts

159 months

Yesterday (15:09)
quotequote all
So this is the VW platform that Ford evaluated to build their "small" car on and subsequently passed it over for entering into a new partnership with Renault to take the (by release time) one generation old (approx 4-5yrs) R5/R4 platform … hmm, doesn't make me too much of a believer in the VW promo that this will be much of a leap in EV platforms.

Now, maybe they'll have sorted their woeful UI and cabin tech and brought it somewhat back to ~10yrs ago (ie. Golf Mk 7/7.5 standard), but it'll need to be good to steal sales from the R4/R5 which seem to have the small compact pretty much sewn up.

Have to wait and see.

Otispunkmeyer

13,475 posts

175 months

Yesterday (15:13)
quotequote all
I'd have it in that jazzy camo as well. Should be an option for proper 80s looking Filofax graphics.

andrewpandrew

1,609 posts

9 months

Yesterday (15:16)
quotequote all
silvermog said:
Now, maybe they'll have sorted their woeful UI and cabin tech
I think it's been much improved. I drove an ID.7 a few months ago and I honestly couldn't find much fault with it.

Carl_VivaEspana

15,448 posts

282 months

Yesterday (15:25)
quotequote all
Sheepshanks said:
I think once you get past the cute hype of the R5 people are having a lot of niggling issues with it. It's also not really suitable for carry rear seat passengers. Wife's friend has one that died on the road last month, got recovered, and the dealer can't look at it until February.
wow.


nismo48

5,901 posts

227 months

Yesterday (15:33)
quotequote all
Sheepshanks said:
ChrisCh86 said:
37kWh battery!?! hehe (yes I know there is also a 52kWh version too)

Can't wait to see the (terrible) range on that. Why would you get this over a Renault 5?

Doesn't seem to move the game on at all. Come on VW, you can do better
Wife never drives more than 20 miles - and that's with us living in a semi-rural area - so she'd still only need to charge it now and again.

I think once you get past the cute hype of the R5 people are having a lot of niggling issues with it. It's also not really suitable for carry rear seat passengers. Wife's friend has one that died on the road last month, got recovered, and the dealer can't look at it until February.
That doesn't inspire much confidence frown

Mr. Potato Head

1,173 posts

239 months

Yesterday (15:56)
quotequote all
Otispunkmeyer said:
I'd have it in that jazzy camo as well.
Me too. I like it. rotate

fooman

460 posts

84 months

Yesterday (16:07)
quotequote all
Mr. Potato Head said:
Otispunkmeyer said:
I'd have it in that jazzy camo as well.
Me too. I like it. rotate
Indeed, in a world where most cars are a similar shape this really stands out and IMHO the pattern they have used looks great

dxg

9,848 posts

280 months

Yesterday (16:09)
quotequote all
This guy seems to like it:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NP635Rk3T3M

But the range, though. c. 100 miles.

Kawasaki2000

80 posts

11 months

Yesterday (16:15)
quotequote all
After the thread re the EU 'roll back' on a complete ban on fossil fuel cars, this is an interesting counterpoint.

It looks like a car we'd consider for a second car when we retire, particularly the GTi. For all the noise around EVs in both directions its only once polo and golf size cars come fully on stream that we will see the true market. When I bought this time I went petrol, the amount of choice was still limited in the EV space and I disliked the Tavascan interior. Next time? I imagine I'll probably be going electric. We have the money to either keep the 128 or to buy a weekend car, although as much as I enjoy a v8 or great inline 4 the engine noise has never been the draw for me. If an EV can put the power down the right way (any ive driven so far do) I'll not be crying too much.

Kawasaki2000

80 posts

11 months

Yesterday (16:21)
quotequote all
Twinair said:
I can probably see lower price point EV s making for OK sales volumes

This always seemed the sensible end of the market to start at - not the 3t supersized EV depreciation disaster zones ?!

Whilst not for me - maybe this starts to fill the hole of deleted small ICE s..?

Who knows?
Small cars equals small profits. People tend to forget in all the handwringing over the end of the Fiesta Ford didn't want to build it in the first place. Manufacturers started big because they could make money there. Small cars? Much harder.