What you need to know up front: The CX-60 and CX-70 are five-seat models, while the CX-80 and CX-90 have six or seven seats.


Mazda has acknowledged “some overlap” in its decision to sell the CX-60, CX-70, CX-80 and CX-90 medium-to-large SUV models in Australia.

Mazda Australia managing director Vinesh Bhindi admitted that while the cars could intersect, the decision to sell the CX-60, 70, 80 and 90 was about providing consumer choice.

“When Mazda Corporation announced the Large Platform with four nameplates, the intention was all of the bigger markets really got to pick two,” he said.

“You pair the CX-70 and the CX-90 or the CX-60 or CX-80… US, Canada and Mexico, they get 70 and 90. That’s the main market, and then other markets like Europe and Japan get 60 and 80.

“But Australia, we were privileged enough because I suppose we as a team have requested that I think we can have an opportunity with all four. And here we are, that we will have all four in our portfolio.

The Mazda CX-60 and CX-80 are ‘narrow-body’ models aimed at Europe and Japan, while the CX-70 and CX-90 are ‘wide-body’ models aimed at the North American market.

“What that means is you might see some overlap, but really when you understand our business strategy which always has been to give consumers as many opportunities and options and choice as possible, and let the customer decide. That’s why it makes sense for us to get this,” added Bhindi.

While Bhindi admitted the CX-70 was a two-row version of the 5.1-metre-long three-row CX-90 “on face value”, he said it would appeal to a different customer.

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“If you think of it as kind of a flagship five-seat SUV range and that goes CX-3, CX-30, CX-5, CX-60 and CX-70. All the way.

You can have a life journey with Mazda in that direction if that suits your lifestyle, so really it’s about expanding our range of giving more choices of five-seater is number one,” said Mazda Australia’s marketing boss Alastair Doak.

“In terms of customer in Australia, we don’t see too many buyers who buy a three-row SUV, CX-90 for example, knowing that they’ll never use the third row. That conversation doesn’t really happen too much.

“For us, [CX-70] does offer a new opportunity. Yeah, it might be a reasonably small market, but there is those empty nesters who still want a large car who want to chuck a mountain bike in the back or go surfing or do that kind of lifestyle.

“They want the space, they want the refinement, they want the performance, they want the economy and CX-70 will certainly offer all those as well as dynamics.

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“That’s kind of the philosophy behind it. It’ll be a slightly older buyer than the CX-90 and obviously, they don’t have a small family. They would occasionally use the back seat but really they want that practicality and load space.”

When asked if potential customers could be overwhelmed with the choice of four Mazda SUVs in the $60,000 to $100,000 price bracket in Australia, Doak said the seating capacity of each vehicle would be the differentiator for most buyers.

“If you’ve got a younger family, chances are you’ll then say, OK, well, I need a three-row… then you would be looking at a CX-80 or CX-90 for us. There’s two choices and there’s a very clear differentiation in terms of spec and size on those cars,” said Doak.

“If you were saying OK, well SUV by default is what everybody wants… I want high performance of a reasonably large five-seater. You would say, well, OK, Mazda is on my shopping list.

“You go online and you say, maybe CX-5 is too small for me. I like the [mild] hybrid element of CX-60 or the plug-in, I’ll go to that. If I want actually something even bigger, the flagship model, then I’ve got a CX-70. There’s a very clear differentiation between those products.”

The Mazda CX-60 and CX-90 are on sale now, while the CX-70 – which debuted this week – is expected in Australia at the end of 2024.

While the three-row Mazda CX-80 has not been revealed, it was confirmed for Australia in March 2023 and is also expected to arrive here later this year.

MORE All Mazda CX-60 News & Reviews
MORE All Mazda CX-70 News & Reviews
MORE All Mazda CX-80 News & Reviews
MORE All Mazda CX-90 News & Reviews
MORE Everything Mazda

Snapshot

A recall has been issued for 5257 examples of the 2024 Mazda CX-60 midsize SUV and 2024 Mazda CX-90 large SUV due to a steering defect.

According to the federal government’s Vehicle Recalls database, a manufacturing defect may cause the gear set within the power steering not to operate correctly, which could result in “unexpected increased steering effort“.

Owners of affected vehicles will be contacted by Mazda Australia in writing to advise when a free-of-charge fix is possible.

MORE 2024 Mazda CX-70 five-seat SUV revealed, confirmed for Australia
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Mazda’s recall notice distributed to owners notes that the “power steering gear pre-load spring” will be replaced with a revised part, and the gearset will then be regreased.

The recall also says that this will occur “when parts are available”, though owner’s groups indicate Mazda dealers are in the process of addressing the issue.

A list of affected VINs can be found in this CSV file [↗]

Mazda customer support can be contacted on 1800 034 411, or via email at [email protected].

MORE All Mazda CX-60 News & Reviews
MORE All Mazda CX-90 News & Reviews
MORE Everything Mazda

Formula 1 has formally denied the bid for Cadillac-backed Andretti Formula Racing to become the sport’s 11th team, claiming the new squad wouldn’t “add value” or be competitive.

Snapshot

Andretti was on track to join F1 in 2025 or 2026 after its bid was approved by the sport’s governing body, the FIA, late last year. However the new team had yet to get the green light from Formula 1 itself which holds the category’s commercial rights and had long expressed concerns over expanding the grid.

Formula 1 divides its prize money between its teams, so any additional team would need to provide it would add significant value to ensure the earnings of the existing teams wouldn’t decline.

F1 says its assessment of Andretti, which is backed by 1978 F1 world champion Mario and his son Michael, is that “the presence of an 11th team would not, in and of itself, provide value to the championship.”

“The most significant way in which a new entrant would bring value is by being competitive,” continued F1’s official statement. “We do not believe that the applicant would be a competitive participant.”

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Mario Andretti took to social media to say he’s “devastated” by today’s announcement, although F1 did hint it “would look differently” on Andretti’s bid if it wished to try again for the 2028 season.

The Andretti family is hugely successful in global motorsport and it currently competes in seven different categories around the world, including Australia’s Supercars championship in partnership with Ford and Walkinshaw Racing.

Since Michael Andretti’s involvement, the team has won the IndyCar championship four times and won the iconic Indianapolis 500 five times. It also won last year’s Formula E world championship.

Andretti’s bid to join Formula 1 included a partnership with General Motors, which joined with its Cadillac brand in January 2023. GM announced plans to produce engines for the Andretti team if it was approved to join the grid.

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Andretti has since released its own official response to F1’s rejection, saying it “strongly disagrees” and that work “continues at pace” to join the grid.

“Andretti Cadillac has reviewed the information Formula One Management Limited has shared and strongly disagree with its contents,” they said.

“Andretti and Cadillac are two successful global motorsports organisations committed to placing a genuine American works team in F1, competing alongside the world’s best.

“We are proud of the significant progress we have already made on developing a highly competitive car and power unit with an experienced team behind it, and our work continues at pace.

“Andretti Cadillac would also like to acknowledge and thank the fans who have expressed their support.”

MORE Ford returns to Formula 1
MORE Audi confirms Formula 1 entry

February 1: 2024 Tesla Model 3 deliveries resume, recall issued

Deliveries of the 2024 Tesla Model 3 electric sedan have resumed in Australia with a fix for a child-seat compliance issue.

As detailed below, the delivery pause was due to the Model 3’s lack of an accessible top-tether point in the rear-centre position without tools or modification, which is required under the Australian Design Rule (ADR) 34/03.

To resolve the issue, Tesla will replace the parcel shelf in the affected Model 3 units with a version that has an accessible slot for the centre top-tether anchor point.

A recall has been issued to rectify the 505 affected Model 3 units, including some examples that were delivered to customers in Australia between late December 2023 and 17 January 2024.

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“Tesla will contact affected vehicle owners to schedule a service appointment to carry out a part replacement to provide access to the rear-centre seat top-tether restraint anchorage,” the recall notice states.

“Until this is completed, consumers should not secure an infant or child car seat on the rear-centre seat or otherwise attach an infant or child car seat restraint to the top-tether anchorage.”

A VIN list for the affected vehicles can be found here (.csv file) [↗].

Tesla Australia’s customer support can be contacted directly by calling 1800 646 952 or emailing [email protected] [↗].

Our earlier story, below, continues unchanged.

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January 24: Tesla Model 3 deliveries set to resume in Australia soon

The 2024 Tesla Model 3 will resume deliveries in Australia “in the coming week” after the electric-car brand was forced to pause customer handovers from January 18 due to a compliance issue.

The delivery pause is due to the updated Model 3’s lack of an accessible top-tether point in the rear-centre position without tools or modification, which is required under the Australian Design Rule (ADR) 34/03. The previous Model 3 had access to all three top-tether points in Australia.

ADR 34/03 states: “Clearance shall be provided around each ‘Upper Anchor Fitting’ to allow latching and unlatching, without the use of tools, of the ‘Attaching Clip’ to the ‘Upper Anchor Fitting’ when it is installed in the vehicle.”

“Thank you for your patience as we navigate the technical compliance matter that caused the cancellation of your Model 3 delivery appointment,” said Tesla Australia in a communication sent to affected customers.

“We are pleased to advise that we are finalising this matter by ensuring access to the vehicle’s rear-centre seat top-tether restraint anchorage point.

“At this time, we expect to recommence deliveries in the coming week where your order will be prioritised for delivery. Once again, we sincerely apologise for this inconvenience, and we look forward to getting you behind the wheel of your new Model 3 as soon as possible.”

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Tesla Australia has not officially confirmed how it plans to make the top-tether point accessible for vehicles that have already been produced, including Model 3’s delivered prior to January 18. A safety recall is likely for vehicles that have already been delivered to customers.

However, a recent update posted to the Model 3’s Australian owner’s manual reveals a flap to access the rear-centre top-tether point on the vehicle’s parcel shelf, which was previously absent from the documentation.

While ANCAP has announced the five-star safety rating for the Model 3, achieved in 2019, “cannot be applied to facelifted vehicles at this time” with the latest model currently ‘unrated’, it is unclear if this is related to the child-seat compliance issue.

The latest compliance issue regarding top-tether points for the rear-centre seat position follows similar situations for the BYD Atto 3 and Honda HR-V small SUV models in 2022.

In the BYD Atto 3’s case, the brand was required to temporarily pause sales and perform a ‘voluntary safety recall’ after it was found the model had failed to comply with the Australian Design Rule requiring a top-tether to attach a child seat in the rear-centre seat.

Meanwhile, Honda decided to instead comply the HR-V as a four-seater in Australia, rather than invest in a top-tether point for the rear-centre position to legally sell it with five seats.

MORE All Tesla Model 3 News & Reviews
MORE Everything Tesla

The 2024 Polestar 4 is set to arrive in Australia this year, and when it does the midsize SUV will join the 2 lifted sedan and 3 large SUV on the brand’s website and at its experience centres.

Its main rival will be the popular Tesla Model Y but competition will only hot up with the arrival of new flesh such as BYD’s Sea Lion 07 and Toyota BZ4x and established name plates like the Kia EV6 and Hyundai Ioniq 5.

We’ll be organising a real-world showdown when the Polestar becomes available, but for an early taste we’ve compared the newcomer with the best-seller – and the results are intriguing.

Read on to find out how the Polestar 4 ($81,500-$108,250) stacks up against the Tesla Model Y ($78,400-$92,020).

MORE 2024 Polestar 4: Australian pricing for new Tesla Model Y alternative
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JUMP AHEAD


Pricing

On the face of it, the Polestar 4’s pricing is competitive with the Model Y; the base Long Range Single Motor promises more driving range (though two less driven wheels) than the Model Y Long Range AWD for a $2900 premium.

Of course, there’s also the base Model Y RWD ($65,400 before on-road costs) in the mix, though it features a smaller 57.5kWh battery making it less competitive with the entry-grade Polestar 4.

The base Polestar 4 Dual Motor is even closer to its direct Model Y rival at just $1030 more. However, as with the Polestar 2, there are option packs that need ticking.

MORE 2023 Tesla Model Y vs Tesla Model 3 comparison review
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Polestar’s Plus Pack ($8000) has been very popular on the Polestar 2 – expect that to continue with the 4.

It includes a large head-up display screen, a 14-speaker Harman Kardon sound system, wheel heating and other features detailed below.

There’s the Performance Pack for Dual Motor variants, too, that adds another $7200 to the base price, bringing a well-equipped Polestar 4’s price tag up to $108,250 – not far off a more powerful Hyundai Ioniq 5 N.

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VariantPolestar 4Model Y
EntryStandard Range RWD: $65,400
Mid specLong Range Single Motor: $81,500Long Range AWD: $78,400
Top specLong Range Dual Motor: $93,050Performance AWD: $92,020
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Dimensions and boot space

The Polestar 4 rides on a longer wheelbase than the Polestar 3, though it’s an overall smaller vehicle with a more coupe-inspired aesthetic – the Volvo subsidiary names its vehicles sequentially via release, rather than size as most makers do.

Regardless, the Polestar 4 is a handsome vehicle with crisp lines and confident proportions, more than can be said for the egg-shaped Tesla Model Y.

Inside it’s more personal preference. The Model Y’s airy cabin could be described as cheaply sparse or pleasingly minimal depending on your view. The Polestar’s more cocooning cabin will please those who appreciate quality automotive interior design.

MORE Polestar 3 designer Nahum Escobedo lists ‘potato-shaped’ cars among his pet peeves
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The Model Y’s odd proportions and sparse interior do make for excellent packaging, as the 854L boot space claim (stacked to the roof, as opposed to the Polestar’s VDA measurement) and generous 117L frunk prove.

Tesla has managed to pack more on-paper space into the Model Y’s smaller footprint. The style-forward Polestar 4 isn’t bad, though, with a 526L boot under that practical liftback.

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Dimensions and boot space
SizePolestar 4Model Y
Length4840 mm4715 mm
Width2139 mm*1921 mm
Height1534 mm1624 mm
Wheelbase2999 mm2890 mm
Ground clearance166 mm172 mm
Cargo526 L / 15 L ‘frunk’854 L** / 117 L ‘frunk’
Weight2230-2355 kg (kerb)1909-1997 kg (tare)

* Width including mirrors

** Tesla quotes boot measurements to the roof, covering the window line. The Polestar’s measurement is VDA, to the bottom of the window.

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Performance

Both top-spec medium SUVs are blisteringly quick for family transport, the Polestar 4 hitting 100km/h in a claimed 3.8 seconds just pipped by the 3.7-second Tesla.

If we’re being honest, you’ll struggle to tell the difference between how fast these two are in the real world – anything sub-four is plenty rapid.

At the more affordable end of the spectrum, it’s the Tesla with a significant advantage. An extra 178kW and 150Nm combined with better all-wheel drive grip see the Model Y Long Range hit 100km/h in a claimed 5.0 seconds to the Single Motor Polestar 4’s 7.1 seconds.

Top speed isn’t relevant in Australia, but if you happen to be reading this to select the best Autobahn partner then the Model Y Performance’s ability to hit 250km/h (50km//h faster than either Polestar) will be welcome.

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SpecificationPolestar 4 LR SMPolestar 4 LR DMModel Y LR AWDModel Y Performance
Power200 kW400 kW378 kW*393 kW*
Torque343 Nm686 Nm493 Nm*660 Nm*
E-motor / engineSingle permanent magnet synchronous motorDual permanent magnet synchronous motorsDual AC permanent magnet synchronous motors
Driven wheelsRearAllAllAll
0-100km/h claim7.1 seconds3.8 seconds5.0 seconds3.7 seconds
Top speed200 km/h217 km/h250 km/h

* Figures obtained from EV Database and government data as Tesla does not market certain specifications.

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Driving range and charging

Polestar is questioning Tesla’s place at the top of driving range charts from all angles.

The heavily updated Polestar 2 shifted its more efficient motors to the rear to make it the longest-range EV on sale in Australia.

Now, thanks to a huge 94kWh NCM lithium-ion battery and 0.261Cd, the Polestar 4 outguns its closest rival from Tesla by 14.5 per cent in driving range stakes, with 610km targeted for the Long Range Single Motor in the combined WLTP cycle.

Raw efficiency numbers, though, prove the Tesla is doing more driving with less battery. The WLTP efficiency rating for the rear-drive Polestar 4 is 17.1kWh/100km, while the all-wheel drive Tesla’s is 14.1kWh/100km. Much of this could be attributed to Polestar’s design-forward approach (no potato-shaped cars, for example).

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The Polestar’s SEA underpinnings mean its high-voltage parts are capped at 400-volts, so although it charges rapidly the new 4 doesn’t match the Hyundai Ioniq 5 or Kia EV6’s 18-minute fast-charge times.

Still, at a peak of 200kW DC, the 94kWh battery can be juiced from 10-80 per cent in 30 minutes on an ultra-rapid charger. The Model Y’s peak DC speed of 250kW is better but only improves rapid charging by three minutes.

With the $8000 Plus Pack, Polestar includes a 22kW AC charger for snappier home and destination charging – it’ll go from flat to full nearly three hours faster than a Tesla if you have the infrastructure.

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SpecificationPolestar 4 LR SMPolestar 4 LR DMModel Y LR AWDModel Y Performance
Battery size usable (gross)94 kWh (100 kWh)75kWh*
Driving range (WLTP)610 km**580 km**533 km514 km
Peak DC rate200 kW250 kW250 kW
DC 10-80%30 minutes27 minutes
Peak AC rate22 kW with Plus Pack11 kW
AC 0-100%5 hours 30 minutes8 hours 15 minutes

* Figures obtained from EV Database and government data as Tesla does not market certain specifications.

** Provisional range targets yet to be confirmed in WLTP

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Warranty and servicing

Tesla covers its cars with a four-year/80,000km warranty which falls short of the industry standard in Australia.

The battery is ensured by its manufacturer to stay over 70 per cent capacity for 8 years/160,000km – that’s the same for the Polestar 4.

Polestar’s warranty is more conventional and covers the 4 for five years and unlimited kilometres. The Polestar requires a trip to a service centre every two years/30,000km while Tesla operates on a conditional basis.

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MORE 🧰 The brands with the longest warranties & capped-price servicing period
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Standard specifications

The Polestar 4 has caught up with Tesla’s advanced operating system, with the brand offering digital key functionality, over-the-air software updates, and Android Automotive operating system that obliges wireless Apple CarPlay through a 15.4-inch touchscreen.

Polestar includes the Pilot Pack (adaptive cruise control with stop & go up to 150km/h, advanced lane-tracing, blind-spot monitoring) standard on all Aussie-delivered Polestar 4s.

Polestar 4 key featuresTesla Model Y key features
20-inch alloy wheels19-21-inch alloy wheels
15.4-inch landscape touchscreen15-inch horizontal touchscreen powered by an AMD Ryzen processor
Android Automotive operating system with built-in Google Assistant, Maps, Play Store, with downloadable apps, OTA software updates, and wireless Apple CarplayTesla operating system with built-in Google Maps, music and video streaming, and toybox
Built-in dashcam and 4x USB-C connectorsBuilt-in dashcam and sentry mode recording
10.2-inch digital driver’s displayDog mode
Animal modeHEPA cabin air filter
Cleanzone climate control with heatpumpAnimal-free material interior with suede trim
100% recycled plastic ECONYL textile floor matsTesla mobile app with phone key function
Polestar app with vehicle functionality and smart home integration, digital key, NFC card, key fobDual Qi wireless charging pad
15W wireless charging pad13-speaker sound system
Eight-speaker sound systemFixed panoramic glass roof
LED headlights with active beamFlush door handles
Retractable door handlesLED head- and tail-lights
Illuminated Polestar emblemLED front fog lights (Performance only)
Fully electric front seats with driver’s memoryTrack mode (Performance only)

Both vehicles offer optional extras to tailor them to your fancy.

For the Model Y, it’s pretty simple: any colour bar flat white will cost $1500, white upholstery costs $1500, and you can size the wheels up on lower trims for $2400.

Enhanced Autopilot isn’t something we’ve sampled, but promises automatic lane changes while navigating on adaptive cruise and summon commands for $5100. Full self-driving remains a $10,100 option that Tesla is yet to implement in Australia.

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The Polestar 4 offers a lot more customisation, starting with the Plus Pack that’s likely to prove popular. It adds the below features.

Plus Pack $8000
14.7-inch head-up displayTri-zone climate control with air quality monitoring
14-speaker Harman Kardon premium audioRear climate control and entertainment screen
Pixel LED headlights with Adaptive High BeamHeated rear seats
22 kW AC charging limitHeated steering wheel
Powered steering column with profile memoryAutomatic dimming side mirrors
Easy ingress/egressStar Knit illuminated interior deco
Extended electric adjustment settings for front seatsMicroTech upholstery in Charcoal, or Tailored Knit upholstery in Mist, with Zinc deco
Electric reclining rear seatsHands-free operation for powered tailgate

Then you can build on that with the sporty Performance Pack or luxurious Nappa Pack – both are detailed below.

Performance Pack (requires Plus Pack) $7200
Polestar Engineered chassis tuningBrembo performance brakes in Swedish gold
22-inch Performance forged alloy wheelsSwedish gold valve caps, seat belts
Pirelli P-Zero 265/40R22
Nappa Pack (requires Plus Pack) $7000
Perforated Bridge of Weir Nappa leather, animal welfare-secured, in Zinc or CharcoalRear comfort headrests
Ventilated front seats with massageBrushed textile headliner
Additional headrest speakers for Harman Kardon audio
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And then come the standalone options for ultimate customisability.

Standalone options
Premium metallic paint$2300
Painted body cladding (requires Plus Pack)$1400
21-inch Sport wheels (not available with Pro Pack)$2500
Electric folding tow bar$2900
Electrochromic panoramic glass roof***$2700
Privacy glass for rear side windows$700
AC charging cable$360

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VERDICT: which looks best on paper?

We’ll reserve final judgement until the Polestar 4 has arrived on Australian shores and we’ve driven it back-to-back with its Model Y rival.

The slightly larger Polestar is more expensive across the board, but then it offers greater customisation and a more design-led approach – all without sacrificing the kind of connectivity a Tesla owner would expect.

Polestar isn’t looking to play in the volume segment, so don’t expect sales to overtake the best-selling Model Y any time soon. Instead, think of the Polestar 4 as an intriguing alternative for those with an eye for design – we hope it drives as good as it looks.

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MORE All Polestar 4 News & Reviews
MORE Everything Polestar
MORE All Tesla Model Y News & Reviews
MORE Everything Tesla

The Hyundai Staria Loan entered the Australian market, replacing the iLoad, previously Hyundai’s commercial van.

With stylish looks that make onlookers think “that’s a work van?”, the Staria Load shares a platform with its cousin the Kia Carnival, and naturally the people-moving Staria.

Available in three variants, the model is targeting the segment-leader, the Toyota HiAce which has been a long-time rival.

So let’s take a look at what this newcomer bring in it’s 2024 run.

Pricing and features

The Hyundai Staria Load starts at $46,240 before on-road costs for the two-seater model with dual sliding side doors and a lift-back tailgate.

Additionally, Hyundai offers a ‘barn door’ style, referred to as Twin Swing, at no extra charge.

For the five-seater Crew Van variant, the drive-away price is topped off at $50,140 before on-roads.

In its commercial variant, the Staria is available in either a two-seat Van or a five-seat Crew Van configuration, both powered by a single rear-wheel drive powertrain featuring the 2.2-litre diesel engine borrowed from its SUV counterpart, the Santa Fe.

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The Staria Load Van and Load Crew Van share many similar features, other than their two or five seats. Both offer 17-inch steel wheels, 8-inch touchscreen displays, leather appointed knob and wheel, black cloth seats, a wireless charger, keyless entry and wireless Apple Carplay and Android Auto.

If you’re looking for additional features the Staria Load Premium Van adds an array of convenience and luxury. This includes two 10.25-inch screen, LED lighting, power tailgate, 17-inch alloy wheels, heated and power folding mirrors and push button start.

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The Staria Load boasts a payload capacity of 1072kg and a Gross Vehicle Mass (GVM) of 3020kk. It offers a respectable braked towing capacity of 2500kg, although this is balanced by a modest 100kg ball load rating. The braked Gross Combination Mass (GCM) stands at 5520kg.

Safety

The Staria Load earned a five-star ANCAP rating, when tested back alonside the Staria in 2021.

In crash safety evaluations, the Staria secured scores of 85 percent in adult occupant protection and 86 percent in child occupant protection.

The Hyundai Staria Load comes standard with autonomous emergency braking, speed sign recognition, adaptive cruise control, lane-keep assist, , rear cross-traffic alert, blind-spot warning, front and rear parking sensors and a rear-view camera.

Liftback variants also add a surround view monitor.

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The Staria-Load comes with a five-year/160,000km warranty, applicable for both commercial and private usage. Hyundai also offers capped-price servicing, costing $360 for each 12-month/15,000km service over the initial five years.

Key rivals

A previous segment leader, the Honda Odyssey no longer in the market, paves the way for opportunities with the Staria to shine. It competes against other people movers such as:

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Should I put it on my shortlist?

Despite its futuristic appearance, the Staria-Load functions more like a refined, advanced commercial tool rather than a revolutionary leap in van design. Like a next generation of the iLoad.

While it sets new standards in safety equipment, there are aspects that could benefit from improvement or enhancement.

Its day-to-day experience is enriched by the added comfort, user-friendliness, and a general feel-good factor, which are notable advantages.

MORE All Hyundai Staria-Load News & Reviews
MORE Everything Hyundai
MORE People Mover Buyers Guide

2023 was a record year for Australian new-car sales, which were boosted by significant improvements in supply.

But what were the leading sales performers for each of the major car brands?

Here’s your guide to every car maker’s best-selling vehicle in Australia last year, according to official VFACTS data.

(List excludes brands such as Lotus and Polestar that are currently selling just a single car, as well as those – such as Ferrari – that don’t provide a detailed breakdown of model sales.)

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Alfa Romeo

The Italian brand’s first compact SUV, the Tonale, hit the ground running in its debut year – its 365 sales (from just five months on sale) singularly giving Alfa 25 per cent growth in Australia. Sales of the Giulia sedan and Stelvio midsized SUV dropped 36 and 41 per cent, respectively.

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Audi

Another compact luxury SUV finishing top… the Q3 was Audi’s No.1 again in 2023. The midsized Q5 closed the gap significantly to finish less than 250 units behind (4210 versus Q3’s 4457) where in 2022 the difference was about 1800 units. Other notable performers were the smaller Q2 SUV (up 120%) and A3 small car (up 57%).

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Bentley

As with several high-end brands including Aston Martin, Ferrari and Lamborghini, Bentley doesn’t provide a full breakdown of its model sales. However, unlike those other brands, we can include Bentley here as the Bentayga is listed with the highest sales figure: 107 out of a 229 total for the year.

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BMW

We may as well call 2023 the Year of the Small Luxury SUV as BMW’s X1 ended years of finishing runner up (or third) to the X3 and X5. It was the top BMW sales performer in 2023 with 4644 registrations, with the X3 second at 4002 registrations. The X5’s 3682 sales meant BMW’s main trifecta of SUVs accounted for more than 60 per cent of the brand’s local sales as it took the crown of Best-Selling Luxury Brand. The X1 won our Wheels Best Premium Small SUV award in 2023.

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BYD

With the Dolphin hatch and Seal sedan arriving at the tail-end of the year, it’s no surprise BYD’s debut model – the Atto 3 compact SUV – dominated the Chinese brand’s sales. The Atto 3 accounted for 11,042 of BYD’s 12,438 Aussie sales in 2023.

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MORE Everything BYD
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Chery

In its return to the Australian market, Chery’s Omoda 5 small crossover was the only model offered until the Tiggo 7 Pro SUV joined in December. This is reflected in sales, with a sales split of 5370 versus 520, respectively.

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MORE Everything Chery
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Chevrolet

Chevy sales grew by an impressive 42 per cent in 2023 – primarily driven by the Silverado full-size truck that’s converted to right-hand drive locally. There was a 50 per cent jump for the Corvette sports car, though, which has started to increase the number of variants available.

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Citroen

Another disappointing year for the famous French brand – just 228 sales. For what it’s worth, the top-seller was the C3 small car – making Citroen one of the very rare brand’s to have a No.1 vehicle that isn’t either an SUV or ute.

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Cupra

VW Group’s Spanish brand is making a fast start in Australia. Following a solid debut year in 2022, last year sales leaped by 239 per cent to 3765 units. Leading the way again was Cupra’s excellent Formentor compact crossover – its 2108 sales well ahead of the next model, the Born electric hatch (887 units). The flagship Formentor was our Wheels Best Performance Small SUV in 2023.

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Ford

You should already know the answer to this. The Ranger ute wasn’t just the best-selling Ford last year, it was the most popular vehicle in Australia full stop – finally ending the rival HiLux’s run. The related Everest SUV was a country mile behind but still impressed with a 46 per cent year-on-year increase, to more than 15,000 sales. The Ranger was judged our best ute of 2023.

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Genesis

Hyundai’s luxury spin-off continues to grow in Australia, if not at a pace that will scare the likes of Audi, BMW, Lexus or Mercedes. The GV70, as it has been since it launched in 2021, was Australia’s favourite Genesis in 2023.

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GWM

The company also known as Great Wall Motors was part of the big upward trend for Chinese brands, increasing sales by 45 per cent to more than 36,000 units in 2023. GWM’s best-selling vehicle was the Jolion (11,252) which is sold under the brand’s Haval SUV banner, followed by the Cannon ute (9363).

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Honda

The Japanese brand was one of the brands to suffer a sales decline in a record 2023, if only down by three per cent. A transition of CR-V generations last year didn’t prevent the ever-popular family SUV from retaining its Best-Selling Honda crown. A promising debut year for the ZR-V midsize SUV saw 2282 sales. The new, bigger CR-V won two of our Best Large SUVs segments (see below).

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Hyundai

Big news here: i30’s reign as Australia’s favourite Hyundai was ended in 2023 as the Tucson medium SUV pipped the small car by 21,224 to 20,626 sales. The Kona small SUV, released in second-generation form in the latter part of 2023, took sales bronze with 11,183 registrations.

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Isuzu Ute

A stunning sales year for the brand that offers just two vehicles. The D-Max ute accounted for about two-thirds of Isuzu Ute’s 45,341 sales in 2023, with the other third taken by the D-Max-based MU-X SUV. Both Isuzu models won Wheels Best Value awards for their respective segments (see below).

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Jaguar

Another lamentable sales year for the British luxury brand, with sales down by 17 per cent to just 581 units. The F-Pace midsized SUV was the top cat with 360 sales.

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Jeep

Another brand that disappointed last year, with sales plummeting 30 per cent. Every model lost sales compared with 2022, though the Compass compact SUV remained the most popular Jeep model with 1455 of the total 4634 sales.

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Kia

Outsold its senior stablemate Hyundai for the second consecutive year despite a small year-on-year decrease shrinking the gap to fewer than 1000 units. And mirroring Hyundai, Kia’s biggest-selling model in 2023 was its twin to the Tucson, the Sportage.

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Land Rover

Australia’s love affair with the New Defender continues. With the range bolstered by an even bigger 130 model, Defender registrations comprised more than half of Land Rover Australia’s sales last year. Next in line was the Range Rover Sport, introduced in late 2023 in latest-generation form, with 2224 sales.

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LDV

The Chinese commercial-vehicle brand racked up the sales again in 2023, with 31 per cent growth. The biggest slice of the 21,000-plus sales pie was taken by the T60 ute, with other significant portions taken by the Deliver 9 large van, G10 midsize van, and D90 large SUV.

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Lexus

A record year for the Japanese luxury brand in Australia – at 15,192 units more than double its 2022 total – featured strong sales performances from the RX large SUV, UX compact SUV, and ES sedan. But there was no change to the most popular Lexus – the NX midsize SUV.

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Maserati

The Italian brand’s first midsize SUV, the Grecale, is one of its best. And a far better proposition than the larger Levante. Australians clearly agree, because while the Grecale clocked up 494 sales in its debut year, Levante sales dropped from 436 in 2022 to just 91 last year.

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Mazda

Another mighty 100,000-unit haul for the Japanese brand in Australia, which has become comfortable in its second spot behind perennial market No.1 Toyota. Good sales figures are spread throughout much of Mazda’s extensive line-up, though the CX-5 remained immoveable as its biggest seller – followed by the BT-50 ute and CX-3 baby SUV.

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Mercedes-Benz

GLC wagon sales fell by 16 per cent last year and GLC coupe sales increased by 18 per cent – yet the wagon alone would still have retained its title of Most Popular Mercedes in 2023 – with 3631 sales. The total is nearly 5500 when the two body styles are combined. Next best was the larger GLE SUV, ahead of the C-Class. Not the best year for the German brand, though, with a nine per cent decrease allowing rival BMW to overtake it.

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MG

The MG3 city car and HS midsize SUV continued their popularity, and there were good starts for the new MG4 electric hatch and MG5 petrol sedan, but once again MG sales were dominated by the ZS/ZST compact SUV that accounted for about half of the Chinese brand’s sales.

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Mini

BMW’s British sister brand was another trend-bucker to have a No.1 model that was neither an SUV nor ute. The Mini hatchback’s 2011 sales saw off the 1567 units of the Countryman SUV in a strong year – up 43 per cent.

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Mitsubishi

The Triton struggled relatively in the last year before the 2024 arrival of a new-generation model, resulting in the ute being displaced by the Outlander midsized SUV as the highest-selling Mitsu locally. Outlander sales increased 24 per cent year on year, though Mitsubishi will be hoping the new Triton gives overall sales a big kick in 2024 after 2023’s 18 per cent drop.

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Nissan

It’s amazing what new product can do. After years of coping with an ageing line-up in Australia, Nissan enjoyed 49 per cent growth in 2023 – driven by new-generation versions of the Pathfinder, Qashqai and X-Trail SUVs. The latter, midsized SUV was the Japanese brand’s sales leader with 12,861 registrations, followed by the Navara ute (8499), Patrol (7812), and then Qashqai (6614). The X-Trail won our Medium SUV Megatest in early 2023 (more below).

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Peugeot

Faring far better than sister brand Citroen with 21 per cent growth and more than 2500 sales – if still far behind French compatriot RenaultPeugeot’s most popular model was again the 3008 medium SUV (despite a 19% drop). It wasn’t far ahead of the Partner van (552 units).

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Porsche

No shocks at the venerable sports car brand. The Macan midsized SUV remained rooted to its No.1 position – with 2925 sales comprising virtually half of Porsche’s total 6052 sales. Will a switch to an all-electric version in late 2024 hurt it, though? The Cayenne large SUV was again the second most popular Porsche.

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Renault

Another midsized SUV rules the roost here, with the Koleos commanding the biggest chunk of Renault sales – 2776 out of the total 8024 units. Next best was the Arkana crossover, with 1572 sales.

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Skoda

A strong year for the Czech brand, just one unit shy of 8000 sales – up 23 per cent. The Kamiq small SUV was again the top Skoda (1985 registrations), while the Scala small car was the fastest-growing model with a 115% increase.

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SsangYong

Watch out Hyundai and Kia! The fastest-growing Korean brand in 2023 was SsangYong, with a 51 per cent year-on-year increase. The Musso ute remained the top seller, with 3491 sales.

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Subaru

The Forester was run fairly close in 2022 by the new Outback, but in 2023 the midsized SUV jumped 54 per cent to establish its No.1 status more convincingly – to more than 16,000 sales. The Outback was second again, also growing to 12,903 sales. There’s one other five-figure Subaru if you combine sales of the outgoing XV with its not-hugely-different replacement, the Crosstrek.

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Suzuki

A tricky 2023 for the small-vehicle specialist, with sales down 21 per cent. There was a change at the top, with the Swift city car climbing from 4405 units in 2022 to 6914 registrations last year – overtaking the Jimny baby 4×4 that dropped 12 per cent year on year to 5002 units. A new-gen Swift launches this year, while the Jimny was bolstered last December by the addition of a five-door model.

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Tesla

The remarkable Tesla story continued last year with a giant sales performance – with more than 46,000 registrations produced by just two models. The Model Y SUV turned the tables on its sedan relative last year, with 28,769 units clearly ahead of the 17,347 sales for the Model 3.

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Toyota

A relatively disappointing year for Toyota which finished seven per cent down in a record sales year (though it was still around 115,000 sales ahead of No.2 Mazda) and the HiLux was displaced as the nation’s favourite by its nemesis, the Ford Ranger. The ute was still the most popular Toyota – with 61,000-odd sales more than double the next best seller, the RAV4 (29,627 registrations).

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Volkswagen

Greatly improved local supply for the German brand was reflected in a 42 per cent growth figure last year. The T-Roc small SUV and Tiguan medium SUV were key beneficiaries, occupying the top two sales spots with 8943 and 7298 registrations, respectively. That represented a 175 per cent increase for Tiguan and 147 per cent increase for T-Roc. In third was the new-generation Amarok ute, up 47 per cent to 6626 registrations.

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Volvo

Last but certainly not least, Swedish brand Volvo – with a second consecutive record year racking up 11,128 sales. A significant 35% of those sales were pure electric models. The fastest-climbing model was its C40 electric crossover (up 125 per cent to 1103 sales), though the closely related XC40 small SUV refused to be budged from its No.1 spot, up 14 per cent to 5837 sales.

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The Hyundai Staria made its debut in Australia in mid-2021, marking a significant addition to the country’s automotive landscape. Available in three distinct trims – Standard, Elite, and Highlander – this modern, stylish people mover quickly established its presence.

Each model is configured with eight seats, arranged in a 2-3-3 layout, making the Staria Hyundai’s most spacious offering for families.

The 2024 Hyundai Staria stands out with its striking design and a suite of practical amenities, delivering both a head-turning exterior and a highly functional, comfortable interior for passengers.

However, in a competitive market where both aesthetic appeal and practical utility are prized, the question arises: Does the Highlander variant truly deliver on these expectations?

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Pricing and features

The most premium Staria, the Highlander, comes in at $64,000 before on-road costs. It’s available in either a 3.5L petrol front-wheel drive option or 2.2L diesel all-wheel drive, which adds an extra $3000 to the price.

The exterior of the Staria is characterised by its futuristic and streamlined look, with distinctive headlight designs and a sleek overall profile.

Inside, the Staria is designed with flexibility in mind, featuring a spacious cabin with multiple seating configurations, ideal for both family and commercial use.

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As the top model in the Staria range, the Highlander is full of creature comforts and luxuries. This includes two 10.25-inch screens, a wireless phone charger, leather upholstery, heated and ventilated front seats, a dual power sunroof and a 12-way adjustable drivers seat.

Unfortunately the Highlander misses out on wireless Apple Carplay and Android Auto as is common with Hyundai models.

Convenience all-round is a priority with this variant receiving a whopping 16 cup holders, flat-folding 2nd and 3rd row seats, six USB charge points, two ISOFIX child restraints and power sliding doors as well as a power tailgate.

You’ll also have a rear passenger view monitor so you can see what’s going on the back seats without having to turn your head.

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Safety

The Staria has earned a five-star ANCAP safety rating, attributed to the comprehensive Hyundai SmartSense safety feature suite present across all models.

In crash safety evaluations, the Staria secured scores of 85 percent in adult occupant protection and 86 percent in child occupant protection.

Additionally, the Staria’s automatic emergency braking (AEB) system includes detection features for pedestrians and cyclists, enhancing its safety credentials.

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Hyundai Staria standard safety features
360-degree cameraHigh Beam Assist
7 airbagsLane Following Assist
Adaptive cruise controlLane keep assist
Autonomous emergency brakingLeading Vehicle Departure Alert
Blind-spot assistRear cross-traffic assist
Driver attention warningSafe Exit Warning
Front and rear parking sensorsTyre pressure monitoring

The Highlander adds safety such as Blind-spot view monitor and safe exist assist (also available on the mid-spec Elite variant)

Key rivals

A previous segment leader, the Honda Odyssey no longer in the market, paves the way for opportunities with the Staria to shine. It competes against other people movers such as:

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Should I put it on my shortlist?

Amidst Australia’s preference for SUVs, the enduring appeal of people movers might not be immediately apparent—until you experience the uncompromised space and convenience they offer.

Whether you’re ferrying your family or require a commercial vehicle for larger groups, the Staria ensures a complaint-free journey for all onboard.

For those in search of a vehicle adept at managing everything from the daily grind to family vacations, the Staria stands out as a compelling choice.

And the extra features in the Highlander make this one luxurious people mover.

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Read the news and you’d think petrol is about to run out, everybody’s buying an electric SUV, replacing any overly bright and colourful clothes they own with varying shades of charcoal and slate, and that the rear-drive manual sports car is dead.

It couldn’t be further from the truth.

In 2024, those who love driving – with the unique feeling that only comes with a bit of power, rear-wheel drive and a limited-slip differential – are spoilt. Some of the best vehicles to ever apply this magic formula are on sale right now.

Today, we’re comparing two of them – BMW’s rip-snorting 338kW new M2 against Toyota’s updated 285kW GR Supra. Of course, the Toyota has more than a bit of Bavarian DNA; if it believed it was directly descended from older Supras, it might get a rude shock if it did an ancestry test.

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But while they both have 3.0 turbocharged straight sixes and, as parked before us, are both six-speed manuals, they are still very different cars.

One of the biggest differences, crucially, is price – the GR Supra at $97,000 to the M2’s $121,700, a sizeable $24,700 gap which blows out to more than $45,000 when factoring in on-road costs. Crikey.

The Supra’s BMW engine produces 285kW at 5800-6500rpm and 500Nm from 1800-5000rpm. The M2 makes significantly more power with 338kW at 6250rpm and more torque, 550Nm from 2650-5870rpm.

When comparing power-to-weight, they’re a bit closer. The Toyota’s 1503kg kerb mass gives it a power-to-weight ratio of 190kW/tonne, whereas the portlier 1700kg (DIN) M2 is 199kW/tonne.

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As well as being 197kg heavier, the two-plus-two-seat M2 is a much larger car – 201mm longer, 33mm wider and 109mm taller.

The M2 has drawn criticism for its Need For Speed styling – it sort of looks like it was designed by a 15-year-old – but it looks a lot better in the metal, its low-offset rear 20-inch wheels filling the pumped guards perfectly. The Smurf-like M Zandvoort Blue of our test car also looks ace. To my potentially defective eyes, anyway.

Lower and squatter, the Supra looks faster standing still. Its Japanese manga comic book styling has aged well, even if some of its numerous fake plastic vents are a bit regrettable.

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JUMP AHEAD


Which is more fun to drive?

Both are great fun to drive – and seriously fast – but despite their on-paper similarities, feel very different.

First, the biggest similarity: engines. The 3.0-litre turbocharged inline-six is a beast in both cars, serving up lovely power and torque in a muscular yet beautifully smooth fashion. The Supra, for example, pulls hard from just 3000rpm all the way to 6500rpm and feels nothing but hungry to vaporise its rear tyres.

There’s a delightful turbo whistle as you get into the throttle, which makes up for what is quite a lot of artificial engine noise. BMW has done a much better job of the M2’s engine sound – it’s more believable, snarlier and more satisfying than the Supra’s.

Despite having nearly 20 per cent more power, in a drag race they claim to be about as fast as each other, the Supra at 4.4 seconds from zero to 100km/h against the M2’s 4.3 seconds.

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The Supra uses wide 275-section rear Michelin Pilot Super Sports to transmit its power (255 fronts), not much narrower than the BMW’s rear 285s. Both use the same gear ratios and nearly identical final drives.

Launch control in the M2 is foolproof – pin the throttle and the revs raise to roughly 3250rpm, dump the clutch and let the computer manage the wheelspin. We didn’t get a chance to run numbers but they felt about as fast as each other.

In the corners, the Supra feels smaller, more agile and twitchier, like your hips are much closer to the rear axle. You have to push it hard to get the best out of it, and it can be a bit of a physical car to drive. “The more you drive it, the more you enjoy it,” smiled Wheels Editor Andy Enright.

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The Supra makes you feel like you’re going a bit faster than you are – which is how sports cars should be (rather than the other way around).

You have to dig deep for the Supra to show off its best chassis talents, making it more the car for experienced drivers. Its rear suspension also conceals a bit of a near-limit quirk, like it’s ‘corkscrewing’ ever so slightly over mid-corner bumps, which makes it a bit knife-edge and difficult to trust.

No such issue in the BMW. As well as making you feel more in control, the M2 is much faster and more serious than the Supra – a totally different animal. In fact, it’s a monster. With its 277mm-longer wheelbase, it’s more stable and planted, and is easier to exploit.

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Those who’ve done a few track days will find it almost shockingly fast up a winding road, especially on its sticky Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyres – the fronts of which measure an extreme 275mm.

This is a car that demands exceptionally high levels of concentration and can carry enormous speed into corners, helped by suspension that is night-and-day better for mid-corner compliance than the Supra’s. It would undoubtedly be seconds quicker around a track, especially a bumpy one.

In both cars, it’s easy to tease out a bit of second-gear, corner-exit power oversteer but the BMW, whose snug seats almost bolt your hips to the rear end, is a lot friendlier. If you want a factory drift car, you can’t go wrong with either of these. The M2’s ferocity is such that you’re getting power oversteer in second gear at 95km/h.

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Comparing clutch pedal feels and manual gearboxes, the Supra’s six-speed manual has a slightly nicer shift and we like its small, ball-shaped leather shift knob more – falling to hand in a slightly nicer way.

However, its interior feels designed for an automatic gearbox, like they’ve had to make a manual gear selector ‘work’, as it’s possible to knuckle the air-conditioning controls if shifting from second to third too vigorously.

The Supra’s brakes feel better and its steering is more connected too. The M2’s brake-by-wire system – with no mechanical connection – provides minimal ABS feedback through the pedal which takes some serious getting used to.

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They’re very different for settings to play with, as well. If you miss the days of Nokia 3310s you’ll probably appreciate the Supra, which is old school in that it comes with a singular Sport mode that sharpens up the throttle and pumps in a bit more artificial engine noise, and that’s about it.

BMW, on the other hand, permits adjustability of throttle sensitivity, rev-matching, adaptive dampers, steering, brake pedal feel, electronic stability control and engine sound. Two red M1 and M2 toggles on the steering wheel – like little red Shrek ears – allow you to select two predetermined combinations of settings. There are 864 possible permutations (we added them up) and that’s not counting the adjustable traction control’s 10 incremental settings.

Such is the possible mix of settings you almost get FOMO while driving the M2 that there’s a better combination for your given circumstances, tempting you to fiddle as you’re driving.

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Which is the better daily driver?

The M2. The ride quality is nicer, it’s easier to see out of and it’s more practical with a rear seat you might even put adults in.

A Supra wouldn’t be a bad companion for daily life but it’s just that little bit trickier given the outward visibility of a closed-face helmet (with a much lower roof). Its suspension also feels firmer and sportier, constantly reminding you that you ‘lived a little’ and got the two-seat sports car instead of the anonymous white SUV (a very good decision, might we add).

The BMW’s interior also feels higher-tech with its curved horizontal screen – two screens in one, a 12.3-inch instrument display and a huge 14.9-inch infotainment touchscreen.

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The Supra’s 8.8-inch infotainment touchscreen might be smaller but feels more than big enough for its interior. There’s almost too much screen going on in the M2.

In contrast to how it drives, the Supra’s seats would be better for daily life, softer and a bit flatter.

The BMW’s M Sport seats are beautifully deep and supportive but come with a peculiar plastic crotch mound that can dig into your inner thighs occasionally – especially if you follow the strict nutritional, overly calorific regimen of this chunky-thighed road tester.

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Any other things to consider?

Both come with a five-year warranty and cost about the same to service over five years or five services – the Supra $2075, or $2210 for the BMW.

We didn’t get a chance to test fuel economy but the M2 claims 10.1L/100km on the WLTP cycle. We estimate the Supra would use slightly less. Both have 52-litre fuel tanks.

At 290 litres, the Supra’s boot is only 100 litres smaller than the M2’s – and is quite usable – but annoyingly Toyota hasn’t provided an external boot opening button meaning you always have to find the key fob. Credit to the BMW for its 40:20:40 split-fold rear seats, which make the boot extra usable.

Neither has a spare tyre, providing puncture repair kits only.

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The Wheels verdict

The M2 is the better vehicle for driving thrills and daily living. It’s a lot faster, more practical, more fun, easier to trust and with its myriad modes, there’s more to play with. “I’m amazed at the bandwidth of this car,” said Wheels road tester John Law.

However, if you have a rear-drive sports car itch to scratch, you’d be rapt with the Supra – especially given the $45,000 saving when comparing drive-away prices. Where the M2 feels like a hot-rodded 2 Series, the Supra has a more classic sports car feel, which will appeal to many.

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SCORING

BMW M2Toyota GR Supra GTS
Safety, value and features7.58
Comfort and space7.57
Engine and gearbox99
Ride and handling97.5
Technology97.5
OVERALL8.58

2024 BMW M2

Things we like

  • Seriously fast up a winding road
  • Believable (and good) fake engine sound
  • Excellent adaptive dampers
  • Useable back seats and boot

Not so much…

  • Nearly $150K with on-road costs
  • Styling not to everyoneu2019s tastes
  • Muted brake-by-wire pedal feel
  • Odd seats with raised plastic lump
MORE All BMW M2 News & Reviews
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2024 Toyota Supra GTS

Things we like

  • Ferociously fast; rear-drive character
  • Tonnes of straight-six grunt
  • Classic sports car vibes
  • Significantly cheaper than M2

Not so much…

  • Suspension is a bit bumpy
  • Tricky to trust on the limit
  • Fake vents look tacky
  • Fake engine noise could be better
MORE All Toyota Supra News & Reviews
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There’s something suspiciously Bavarian about the new Mazda CX-90.

Glance around Mazda’s new SUV and there are multiple echoes of BMW. The tail-lights have a hint of BMW XM while G50e, denoting the CX-90 model grade, has a certain Munich ring to it. Mazda’s rotary infotainment controller, meanwhile, is more than a little iDrive; while someone’s plonked a 254kW 3.3-litre turbo straight-six under the bonnet.

Mazda would doubtless appreciate our comparisons to one of the world’s most accomplished premium brands, given that it’s aspiring to a more premium positioning – and price.

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From the outset, there’s no disputing that the CX-90 is one of the more handsome vehicles in its segment – if admired from the correct angle, such as the front three-quarter.

The ‘Kodo’ design language translates well to the large CX-90, with its long wheelbase and generous length between the front axle line and A-pillar base.

The front overhang is also so short, any shorter and it would almost look a bit too blunt, like it’s been driven at low speed into the back of something.

Inside presents just as well – depending on the grade. Our top-spec Azami is lush enough with its black Nappa leather, but at your local Mazda dealer you should avoid sitting in any CX-90 with the Takumi or SP Packs, the latter of which upholsters the cabin with quilted tan leather and suede headlining making for an irresistible option box to tick. (Even if doing so means a $5000-lighter wallet.)

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Even without that, though, it’s a lovely place to be, with its dual 12.3-inch digital displays.

The back seats are also very good, the rear doors opening extra wide, while second row occupants enjoy stadium seating with great visibility and quad-zone climate control with rear seat heaters. The second row itself is tilt-and-slide, while there’s a 220-volt outlet in the boot – so you could sit in the back and use your laptop, while it’s charging, on the fly.

Back in the driver’s seat, that straight-six itself is very likeable. Crack a window and there’s a bit of turbo hiss as it comes on boost, while torque – 500Nm from just 2000rpm – is also delectably meaty.

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Dynamically, too, the CX-90 is very good – and right at the pointy end of its competitor set.

While the ride quality is good in isolation, it’s hardly plush and wafting, and the purpose of its tautness is revealed when you get on a winding road. With simple, direct steering, the CX-90 can carry impressive mid-corner speed for its size – and 2275kg weight – owing also to its generously wide, 275-section tyres.

It’s a pity, then, that the CX-90 feels a bit unpolished. Lift off and the engine shuts off and coasts, but then can feel surprised to be woken back up when you want to go again. A feature will have you immediately hunting for the off button.

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The bigger concern is that the in-house-developed, eight-speed automatic transmission has a personality – when it should probably be invisible.

Feeling oddly highly strung, even occasionally flustered – like it’s had too much caffeine – it can even clunk into first gear so audibly and obviously that you wonder how engineers signed it off.

The CX-90 is a delightful car, but at more than $100,000 drive-away, you’re left wondering if it’s best to wait for the update, where hopefully the few too many minor wrinkles are ironed out.

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