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James heads to Barcelona, the home of Cupra, to try the all-electric Tavascan VZ. Does this performance EV perform best on home soil?



Marketplace Editor

Marketplace Editor


Marketplace Editor

Marketplace Editor
Where expert car reviews meet expert car buying – CarExpert gives you trusted advice, personalised service and real savings on your next new car.
In online media, do you ever really switch off?

The answer is usually no, not really. My recent self-funded trip to Europe embodied that somewhat, given I ended up getting a last-minute ticket to the Goodwood Festival of Speed with Aston Martin, and then booked myself a press car for review while I visited family in Spain.
Said car was a familiar one – the Cupra Tavascan VZ. It’s always been a goal of mine to drive different vehicles in their home regions, to see how they behave in their natural habitats, and to get a feel for differences in calibration or specification relative to the Australian market.
The Cupra team greeted me at their very grand head office in Martorell, just outside of Barcelona, giving me a quick tour of their media function space as well as a presentation of the Spanish Tavascan range as if I was attending a local media launch.
I didn’t realise this until it was mentioned in the presentation, but the Cupra ‘VZ’ badging is short for the Spanish word ‘veloz’, which means ‘fast’. Fitting.

While it's manufactured at the Volkswagen Group’s Anhui facility in China, the Tavascan was designed and engineered in Barcelona, for Europe. Being Chinese and Catalan myself, I guess we have something in common.
Its design is unmistakably Cupra, and it draws upon the same MEB toolkit as a number of other Group EV products – like the VW ID.4 and ID.5 electric SUVs, as well as the related Skoda Enyaq.
The biggest difference between the car I drove in Barcelona and the one you can buy here was really only the position of the steering wheel – it's on the opposite side in Spain – as well as the inclusion of Cupra Connect services, which adds online functionality for the infotainment and navigation systems, as well as enabling remote functions via a smartphone app.
So how did the Spanish brand’s driver-focused rival to the Tesla Model Y fare on home soil? Well, read on and you’ll find out!
As with other parts of the world, the Tavascan is available in two distinct trim levels in Australia – Endurance and VZ.

| Model | Price before on-road costs |
|---|---|
| 2026 Cupra Tavascan Endurance | $60,990 |
| 2026 Cupra Tavascan VZ | $74,490 |
Pricing is unchanged for 2026, meaning the single-motor Endurance starts from $60,990 plus on-road costs, while the VZ spec on test here sells in Australia for $74,490 before on-roads.
For reference, the Tavascan starts from €44,010 (A$76,449) in the Spanish market, with the as-tested VZ spec kicking off from €53,080 (A$92,205) before options and on-road costs – and the standard spec is lower than here.
As tested, the car I drove was closer to the €60,000 (A$104,226) mark, which really puts into perspective how cheap cars in Australia are relative to the rest of the world when you take our weak currency into account.
That said, the Tavascan’s Chinese production makes it subject to import tariffs in Europe, which isn’t the case here.
To see how the Cupra Tavascan lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
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Find a dealCupra’s design team went to town with the Tavascan’s cabin, with eye-catching details and interesting colour flourishes that make it truly unique in from an aesthetic perspective.

Our VZ test car was finished with the ‘Dark Night’ microfibre trim that comes standard in Aus-market Tavascan VZs. It adds dark blue accents for parts like the door armrests and centre console, rather than the standard grey.
I love the skeletal-like central motif on the dashboard, which extends towards the doors like ribs. Cupra’s signature copper accents likewise add some razzle-dazzle, augmenting the rib cage-effect design as well as punctuating the doors including the door handles.
On first impressions, it’s lovely. Poke and prod a little closer though and some of these trimmings – namely the sternum’s textured plastic – feels a little cheap and brittle for a vehicle posing as somewhat premium.
I also found the dual-lidded centre console bin had a mechanism that tended to squeak and shift when leaning on it, which doesn’t scream €60,000 or around $75,000 in Australia.

Gripes aside, it’s certainly one of the more visually engaging cabins in the mid-size electric SUV segment, which tends to trend more towards minimalism and sparseness by comparison. The Tavascan does fall slave to the trend of tacked-on iPad-style multimedia displays though, with its massive 15-inch touchscreen sitting proudly in the centre of the dash, angled towards the driver.
The Spanish model I drove had a fully featured infotainment system compared to Australian models, boasting online navigation and connected car services. While the VW Group in Australia has historically struggled to make a case with its global parent for investing in connected services Down Under, Cupra is looking to fix that.
“We feed back a lot of the local market needs [to HQ] and what we hear from customers. It’s an issue that exists at a Group level, not just a Cupra level, but we’re pushing really hard. I don’t have timing I can share right now, but things are moving in a positive direction,” Cupra Australia product chief Jeff Shafer told CarExpert in August 2025.
“We’re definitely looking to go with a factory-backed solution – it’s a really hot topic.”

Now, while these features would be good to have – and I know there’s a lot of debate in various comments sections on this website about it – I spent my entire time with the Tavascan using Apple CarPlay, which in itself brings connected navigation, music streaming and so on.
Like we’ve said before, the central touchscreen boasts Cupra’s latest software, which keeps the digital climate controls permanently at the base of the screen, and touch sliders for temperature and volume are illuminated at night – unlike in early versions of Volkswagen’s ID models.
It’s well thought-out, offers attractive graphics, and generally responds quickly to inputs. Then again, I personally would prefer physical switchgear for key functions like climate control and infotainment volume, especially when the steering wheel buttons are fiddly touch-capacitive ones.
Unlike some rivals, the Tavascan has an (admittedly small) 5.3-inch digital instrument cluster which shows vehicle speed, driver assist functions, navigation and trip computer information as desired. Our test car also featured the trick head-up display with augmented reality graphics, with cool animations for turn-by-turn navigation prompts or assistance features.
Other cool details include the copper-coloured perforations in the seats, as well as the perforated ambient lighting patterns in the doors, which complement the almost organic lighting that peeps out the air vent slats in the dashboard. At night or in tunnels, the Tavascan’s configurable lighting adds a really cool, space-age vibe.


Storage is decent, with a deep cubby under the aforementioned centre armrest lids, large-ish door bins and a slot behind the central sternum for your phone with a wireless phone charging pad.
Further back, the Tavascan offers good room for at least two adult occupants, with sufficient head, leg and knee room for six-footers despite the sloping rear roofline. I had two average-sized adults back there a number of times and they quite enjoyed it, complimenting on the space on offer.
The dedicated EV platform provides for a flat floor in the rear, and there’s a third zone of climate with air vents and digital controls at the rear of the centre console.
Our test car’s fixed panoramic sunroof let plenty of light in from the Spanish summer too, which added to the feeling of airiness and space in the back, and the retractable shade is a nice touch given we were enjoying a hot summer in Spain – it was mid- to high-30 degrees for the entire time.
As you’d expect, there are things like ISOFIX child seat anchors and a fold-down centre armrest with cupholders, in addition to door bins and pockets behind the front seats. It’s worth noting the chunky front buckets can obstruct forward vision from the rear bench, meaning nausea-prone kids (or adults) may not love it.


Despite its ‘coupe SUV’ silhouette, the Tavascan offers a healthy 540 litres of boot space with the rear seats in use, which was more than enough for my partner’s and my luggage heading from Barcelona to the airport.
You can fold the second row down to create more space and an almost flat load bay, though Cupra doesn’t quote a total capacity figure with the rear seat backs down.
| Dimensions | Cupra Tavascan |
|---|---|
| Length | 4644mm |
| Width | 1861mm |
| Height | 1597mm |
| Wheelbase | 2766mm |
| Cargo capacity | 540 litres |
To see how the Cupra Tavascan lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
There’s no ‘frunk’ storage in the Tavascan – or any other MEB-based models, for that matter – with power in the VZ coming from a pair of electric motors (one front, one rear) fed by a 77kWh lithium-ion battery.

| Specifications | Tavascan VZ |
|---|---|
| Drivetrain | Dual-motor electric |
| Battery | 77kWh lithium-ion |
| Power | 250kW |
| Torque | 545Nm |
| Drive type | All-wheel drive |
| Weight | 2284kg (tare) |
| 0-100km/h (claimed) | 5.5 seconds |
| Energy consumption (claimed) | 17.4kWh/100km |
| Energy consumption (as tested) | 19.8kWh/100km |
| Claimed range (WLTP) | 505km |
| Max AC charge rate | 11kW |
| Max DC charge rate | 135kW |
To see how the Cupra Tavascan lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
Funnily enough, this was my first time driving a production-spec Tavascan on public roads – having tested a pre-production VZ with Extreme Package in Sydney in 2024.

Spain’s hot and dry summer conditions were a good test of the Tavascan’s overall performance in the sort of heat we regularly get during Aussie summers, and the country's very varied road network was also a great test bed for the Tavascan’s high-speed performance and efficiency, as well as how it handles city traffic in a major European city.
Most of my time was spent on the highway, given my relatives live in a town called Balsareny, which is about an hour inland from coastal Barcelona. To get there, there are a mix of speed zones typically ranging from 80 to 130km/h, with sweeping bends thrown in as well as plenty of gradual uphill ascents.
Leaving Cupra HQ in Martorell, the Tavascan VZ had more than enough grunt to briskly make it to the signed freeway speeds, and once there it happily settled into a quiet, planted cruise. The VZ’s massive 21-inch alloys and thin rubber let in a bit of road noise on rougher road surfaces at higher speeds, but it was otherwise very calm.
The Tavascan maintains Cupra’s excellent steering feel, which is very quick and direct, helping this near 2.3-tonne EV to shrink around you and feel more wieldy than it ought to, while being very secure on the straight-ahead.

At 130km/h the ride settles beautifully, with our test car’s adaptive dampers offering a taut but composed ride in all modes – from Comfort through to Cupra.
Rolling response at these speeds is also good, particularly when you have it in Cupra mode. Quick overtakes are a cinch, and the suite of assistance systems mean you can lean on the Tavascan to do the heavy lifting on the highway, while also lending an extra pair of eyes if you’re trying to make a gap in traffic.
Another thing I noticed was the performance of the VZ’s matrix LED headlights, which out where my family lives came in very handy. At night the high-speed freeways offer no illumination, meaning the adaptive high-beams got a regular workout when heading out to dinner in neighbouring towns.
Speaking of, navigating regional Catalan municipalities made me realise how ‘big’ the Tavascan is relative to the Spanish car fleet. Parking one in Australia would usually be a non-event, but European parking spaces and adjusting to a left-hand drive vantage point occasionally proved challenging.

Surround cameras helped (though the resolution isn’t as good as I’d like), as did the surround parking sensors, so I didn't have to resort to the European touch parking method... Part of the challenge was my aversion to kerbing those big 21-inch alloys, which I managed to keep scuff-free. Phew.
Visibility is alright out the front and sides, and the big mirrors also help, though the coupe-like roofline, rising shoulder line and chunky pillars mean you will lean on the camera and sensors when parking, as well as the blind-spot monitor for over-the-shoulder visibility when rolling.
That tight steering I mentioned earlier does, however, help the Tavascan feel smaller than it is during general driving in town, and in Barcelona’s CBD it helped it make the big Cupra feel easily manoeuvrable.
I also got the chance to give the Tavascan a more spirited run up and down Montserrat, the famous picturesque serrated mountain range just out of Barcelona.

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The Tavascan certainly lives up to its driver focus in these sorts of conditions, with that lovely steering tune really dialling up in Cupra mode, and instant torquey response from its powerful dual-motor drivetrain. It sits surprisingly flat in corners too, despite lateral forces trying to shift its 2.3-tonne weight.
On this sort of tight, twisty mountain road, I felt the standard front buckets could use more bolstering. You can option the racier Cup Bucket seats with the Extreme Package, but that costs another $8000 in Australia – plus it adds forged alloys with performance tyres that kill range.
Also, Cupra hasn’t done much from an ‘engine’ sound perspective with the Tavascan, meaning unless you enjoy the soft whirring sound of electric motors, there’s not a whole lot of audible drama to go with the handling and pace. This will be down to personal preference, but I kind of wish it gave me a bit more in this regard.
Many of you will comment on the brake package too, given the ventilated front rotors with two-piston calipers are combined with drum rears. Given the weight, I would have liked more bite from the VZ’s stoppers in dynamic situations, but in normal driving they’re fine and it doesn’t feel like it's underbraked, like some EVs do these days.

While my time with the Cupra was enjoyable, and a good demonstration of its all-round abilities, it confirmed why I tend to gravitate towards non-performance electric SUVs rather than dual-motor go-fast ones.
After driving a standard Tavascan Endurance back in Melbourne some months later, the base package retains the sweet steering and dynamics of the VZ while offering more range and a little less weight. The rear-drive layout also offers more of that classic sports-luxury feel and lightens up the front-end.
And, while the ‘Veloz’ version is pretty quick, it’s not quite fast enough given the price positioning and the straight-line performance on offer from numerous rivals – think Tesla Model Y Performance and Zeekr 7X Performance, for example.
I know some will disagree, but I really don’t see the need for anything more than the base car with the Interior Package box ticked, which gives you the same interior as the standard VZ.
To see how the Cupra Tavascan lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool




2026 Cupra Tavascan Endurance equipment highlights:
Tavascan VZ adds:
Each trim level in Australia is available with one optional package.

Interior Package: $4500 – Endurance
Extreme Package: $8000 – VZ
Additionally, the VZ in Australia can now be had with Century Bronze matte paint for $3150. Metallic finishes incur an $800 upcharge.
One thing I’d like to see Cupra do is offer the Adrenaline Package that's offered in its home market, which effectively lifts the Endurance to VZ specification minus the drivetrain – namely by adding Matrix LED headlights and DCC adaptive dampers.
Given the wide berth between the two trim levels, I imagine there are plenty of potential customers that would happily take a fully loaded single-motor Tavascan rather than shelling out for the VZ.
To see how the Cupra Tavascan lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
While the Cupra Tavascan achieved a five-star Euro NCAP rating, it was only rated four stars by ANCAP due to the omission of some features in local vehicles.

| Category | Cupra Tavascan |
|---|---|
| Adult occupant protection | 89 per cent |
| Child occupant protection | 87 per cent |
| Vulnerable road user protection | 80 per cent |
| Safety assist | 67 per cent |
ANCAP dinged the Cupra for the lack of an intelligent speed assistance system or speed limit information function, which saw it miss out on the five-star rating given to it by sister authority Euro NCAP in 2024.
Vehicles must receive 80 per cent in adult and child occupant protection, and 70 per cent in the vulnerable road user protection and safety assist categories to get a five-star rating from the independent auto safety authority.
“Speed sign recognition and an intelligent speed limiter are standard in European models but have not been made available to current Australian Tavascan buyers,” said ANCAP CEO Carla Hoorweg.
“While some improved performance across the Safety Assist pillar could have enhanced its score, the absence of an advanced speed assistance system primarily contributed to this four-star result.”
Standard safety equipment in Australia includes:
To see how the Cupra Tavascan lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
The Tavascan is covered by Cupra Australia's five-year, unlimited-kilometre new vehicle warranty, while the lithium-ion battery pack is covered for eight years or 160,000km.

| Servicing and Warranty | Cupra Tavascan |
|---|---|
| Warranty | 5 years, unlimited kilometres – vehicle 8 years or 160,000 kilometres – EV battery |
| Roadside assistance | 5 years |
| Service intervals | 24 months or 30,000km |
| Capped-price servicing | Up to 10 years |
| Total capped-price service cost | $2190 – 10 years |
To see how the Cupra Tavascan lines up against the competition, check out our comparison tool
It was good to try the Tavascan properly on its home turf, and it remains a solid option in the sprawling mid-size EV SUV segment, if not quite a standout in VZ trim.

Both in Spain and in Australia, the Tavascan VZ is priced in line with a Tesla Model Y Performance, which is both much quicker in a straight line and also offers around 80km more driving range per charge.
Those metrics aren’t the be-all and end-all, but in the EV space many buyers are focusing a lot on these numbers, particularly the enthusiasts. However, the Tavascan isn’t trying to cater to the broader EV market.
Cupra has always been a brand that focuses on driver enjoyment and design, and the Tavascan goes hard on exactly those attributes. It looks and feels like a flagship Cupra product that just happens to be electric, and it’s a fun and engaging drive despite the absence of a combustion engine under the bonnet, and surprisingly practical.
That said, it could be better value both back home in Europe and here Down Under, and some of the quality niggles we had in our test cars (the squeaks were in the local-spec Endurance too) aren’t great in a model that's pitched as premium-leaning.
We also hope Cupra Australia can bring native connectivity to its models soon, so that Aussies can get the same featureset as overseas customers, and buyers of rival EVs.

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Where expert car reviews meet expert car buying – CarExpert gives you trusted advice, personalised service and real savings on your next new car.
James Wong is an automotive journalist and former PR consultant, recognised among Australia’s most prolific motoring writers.


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