The petrol Exeo appeals, but the diesels are better

What is it?

The 2.0 TSI version is going to be as sporty as the new Seat Exeo gets. It features the familiar 197bhp direct-injection 2.0-litre turbocharged engine, as used by other members of the VW family. And it gets sports suspension as standard, which means it sits 20mm closer to the ground and has springs and dampers that are said to be 20 per cent stiffer than the standard items.

What’s it like?

We already know what a good engine this is, and that remains true when it’s slotted in the Exeo saloon. Slightly shorter gearing would make it better still, but it’s flexible, free-revving and turns Seat’s Mondeo rival into a swift car that’s rarely wanting for power.

Being based on the last Audi A4 has its drawbacks, though, and they comes with the chassis. The sports suspension means that this car lacks a lot of the bounce and some of the pitching of lesser Exeos. It also leans less roll through bends and mildly more precise steering. But too many thumps find their way into the cabin and it’s only averagely good at coping with scarred road surfaces. So the best family saloons will serve you better.

The upside to the Exeo’s Audi heritage is to be found inside the cabin, though. The high quality and great functionality of the interior, and its fit and finish, are easily the Seat’s highpoint.

Should I buy one?

If the Exeo appeals - and there’s lot of appealing things about it - then yes, but even so, we’d still recommend one of the diesels above this petrol model. Either way, although they’re good value cars, they’re certainly not cheap. And looking towards the likes of the Honda Accord and Ford Mondeo is going to get you more car and a better car for less.

Chas Hallett

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ThatOne 27 August 2010

Re: Seat Exeo 2.0 TSI Sport

Seat should have taken a trip to see Skoda, who do a pretty good job at making VAG chassis efficient and comfortable. That's what friends are for. Great comment about the pointlessness of Seat in the VAG line-up. Has anyone read a blurb from the VAG PR folk on this subject, apart from the first ones after the takeover about Seat being the "young and sporty" member of the family?

Lee23404 20 February 2009

Re: Seat Exeo 2.0 TSI Sport

Dan McNeil wrote:
Yes, it'll no doubt depreciate faster than an Audi, but that'll be great news in two years for these who want Audi quality but not Audi secondhand prices.

It may not hold it's value as well as an Audi but Seats usually do pretty well. My wife traded her Ibiza in last year and after 5 years (30k) got 40% of its original value back. Better than most and well ahead of Fiesta/Corsa/Clio.

SDR 20 February 2009

Re: Seat Exeo 2.0 TSI Sport

I think the last line of the conclusion says it all. There's no compelling logical reason to buy this over a Mondeo or an Accord, an Insignia, or probably several others if I thought about it - all are better cars.

I hope and expect this cynical effort will meet with little success - platform sharing is one thing, taking somebody else's cast-off, nailing a different badge to the front, then trying to sell it for as much or more than its more modern, capable competition is a pretty grim business plan.

I've no doubt the interior is great but nothing else is, and the image, depreciation and arguably styling are all worse than the car on which it is based... so why not save a few thousand and buy a nice two year old A4?!

Madness, VW... madness. It's long struck me that SEAT is a misfit in the group, it serves no purpose, has no USP (don't give me sporting - look at this thing!) - sell it, close it, just stop messing around with it - it's an unnecessary distraction. Spend the time you put into inventing things for SEAT to do on working out how to make an A4/A5's clutch pedal appear where my leg ends, and working out why an A3's steering is not as pleasing as a Golf's. Thank yooooooooou!