Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

ALL GROWN UP

If you’re willing to spend big dollars on a little car, this hatch is a sweet drive

- DAVID MCCOWEN

Like the sport it is named after, Volkswagen’s Polo is not a budget option. The baby VW has always been a costly choice compared with budget brands, delivering high-tech engines and premium materials for those prepared to pay extra.

Volkswagen has doubled down on that stance, ratcheting up the price of the car dramatical­ly over the past five years.

The cheapest Polo now costs $25,250 plus on-road costs (about $29,300 drive-away) with a manual transmissi­on, or $28,250 as an auto (about $32,500 drive-away). Back in 2017, the entry-level Polo was $16,990 drive-away.

Michal Szaniecki, brand director of passenger vehicles for Volkswagen, says Polo customers “have typically selected heavily optioned variants” and that the new model pushes the car “further from the sticker-driven rat race into its most premium form to date”.

The brand claims there is no “base model” in a range that starts with the Polo Life.

It comes with alloy wheels, LED headlights and tail-lights, front and rear parking sensors and a reversing camera cleverly tucked behind the rear emblem. Tech toys include a customisab­le digital dash, wireless phone charging, USB-C power outlets and an 8-inch touchscree­n with smartphone mirroring.

Safety gear includes a new centre-mounted airbag wedged between the driver and passenger, auto emergency braking and lane keeping assistance, though adaptive cruise control, rear cross-traffic alert and blind-spot monitoring are part of a $1700 tech pack.

Polo Style models priced $3000 upstream have those safety features as standard while adding a bigger digital dash, ambient lighting, dual-zone climate control, Matrix LED headlights, front fog lights and better seats. Our test example had a $1900 package delivering wireless smartphone mirroring, an impressive 6-speaker Beats stereo and smart keys. You can also add a sunroof ($1500) and metallic paint ($600) to push the drive-away price beyond $40,000.

Those are big dollars for a little car, even if it is the nicest little car you can buy.

The cabin has a wide array of adjustment for both the seat and steering wheel that lets small and tall pilots find a comfortabl­e posture. The seats are well bolstered, controls are well weighted and its refinement is a step beyond mainstream rivals.

The Polo is also sweet to drive. A turbocharg­ed 1.0-litre, three-cylinder engine serves up 85kw and 200Nm in automatic models, accompanie­d by an endearingl­y grumpy growl when you push it – not the uncouth racket you might hear from non-turbo rivals.

The seven-speed dual-clutch auto is a winner and steering engineered for autobahns lends rare precision at modest speeds.

The Polo has a slightly firm ride that returns superior control when cornering and the sort of agility many people look for in an inner-city runabout.

Built in South Africa, the Polo matches the quality of bigger VW machines – and shouldn’t suffer from production delays that have cruelled the latest Golf.

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