Skip advert
Advertisement
In-depth reviews

Toyota Yaris - Engines, performance and drive

The Toyota Yaris should be quick enough in city traffic, plus it’s easy to drive. Look elsewhere for fun, though.

Overall Auto Express Rating

4.0 out of 5

Engines, performance and drive Rating

3.9 out of 5

Find your Toyota Yaris
Offers from our trusted partners on this car and its predecessors...
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Customers got an average £1000 more vs part exchange quotes
Advertisement

The Toyota Yaris is a competent all-rounder, offering a reasonable drive on a variety of roads. But it’s around town where the hybrid supermini shows off the best of its talents. The steering feels precise, and the Yaris is easily manoeuvred around the tightest of turns, so parking up in narrow spaces should prove to be straightforward.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Although largely untroubled by higher speeds, the Yaris feels a little strained when on the motorway, and the CVT transmission isn’t the most involving when pressing on through twisty B-roads – becoming quite noisy under hard acceleration due to the revs flaring as you build speed. The setup is better suited to more measured inputs, which makes for a relaxing and smooth drive.

The Yaris suspension arrangement is a very typical layout compared to the sportier GR Yaris, comprising MacPherson struts at the front and a torsion beam at the rear. It’s pretty agreeable, but it does crash through the worst of potholes, and becomes unsettled over uneven, broken surfaces.

​Like its Honda Jazz and Renault Clio E-Tech rivals, the Yaris can drive on electric power alone for short periods of time during low-speed urban runs, although we’ve found you need to be really gentle with the accelerator to achieve this.

A key advantage of the Toyota hybrid system is that you don’t have to stop to plug in and recharge, or trail an extension cord to your car to top it up overnight. Instead, the Yaris’s battery pack is ‘refilled’ by a regenerative braking function, which produces electricity when you brake or coast. Excess power from the engine is also used to charge the battery.

0-62mph acceleration and top speed

The Yaris’s hybrid system delivers a total of 114bhp and, combined with a relatively low kerb weight of 1,085kg, manages the 0-62mph sprint in a reasonable 9.7 seconds. Top speed is 108mph, but that’s not a figure many Yaris customers will be actively trying to match. It’s not that kind of car.

We mentioned above that a more powerful 128bhp version will be coming. We know it’ll drop the acceleration time down to 9.2 seconds, but Toyota has also told us it’ll improve acceleration times once on the move, so we take it that this version will make overtaking easier.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New 2024 Cupra Formentor gets fresh look and power boosts to keep hot streak going
Cupra Formentor facelift 2024 - front
News

New 2024 Cupra Formentor gets fresh look and power boosts to keep hot streak going

Cupra’s sporty SUV now produces up to 328bhp, while plug-in hybrid boasts 62-mile EV range
30 Apr 2024
Renault Megane E-Tech gets extra kit but is now cheaper than ever
Renault Megane E-Tech - front tracking
News

Renault Megane E-Tech gets extra kit but is now cheaper than ever

An energy-saving heat pump is now standard on every model, plus all but the base trim benefits from a larger 12-inch touchscreen
29 Apr 2024
Car Deal of the Day: only £120 a month to put a Suzuki Swift on your driveway
Suzuki Swift - front cornering
News

Car Deal of the Day: only £120 a month to put a Suzuki Swift on your driveway

The latest Suzuki Swift offers generous standard kit along with impressive fuel economy; it’s our deal of the day for 29 April at £120 per month
29 Apr 2024