Toyota Corolla review

An all-new Toyota Corolla has gone on sale in Ireland - the 11th generation of one of the world's best-selling cars.

While we realise that thousands of buyers loved the Corolla of old, we found it hard to get excited about. Now there's a new one and it's considerably more interesting. Not that it'll alienate its core customer base...

Key Facts

Model driven: Toyota Corolla 1.4 D4-D Luna
Pricing: €24,550 as tested (Corolla starts at €20,995)
Engine: 1.4-litre four-cylinder turbodiesel
Transmission: six-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Body style: four-door saloon
Rivals: Ford Focus saloon, Opel Astra saloon, Volkswagen Jetta
CO2 emissions: 102g/km (Band A3, €190 per annum)
Combined economy: 72.4mpg (3.9 litres/100km)
Top speed: not quoted
0-100km/h: 12.5 seconds
Power: 90hp at 3,800rpm
Torque: 205Nm at 1,800- to 2,800rpm

In the Metal: 4/5

The outgoing Toyota Corolla wasn't interesting looking the day it was launched and it never changed much. Thankfully, the 11th generation model adopts the company's new look and, though clearly from the same school of design as the new Toyota Auris, it's quite different in the detail. Unsurprisingly it's still a conservative design, but no more so than most cars of this type. We do like the treatment of the chromed grille and headlights with LED daytime running lights fitted as standard.

Inside, the Corolla is even more spacious than before, more so in the rear. Along with a (nearly) flat floor across the whole width there's more legroom than in many cars a class above. Toyota claims that the Corolla has more rear knee room than any car in the segment and we're not disagreeing. The design of the dashboard is much more modern than before too, if not quite as avant-garde as that in the Auris. As ever though, it feels hewn from solid and highly durable.

Driving it: 3.5/5

We agonised over what to score the Corolla in terms of driving. After all, it ticks all the boxes that its prospective buyers want ticking, and it's improved considerably over its predecessor. Some might say that's a five-star rating right there. However, we don't rate cars in isolation and the Toyota has to be compared to alternatives such as the Focus saloon and Jetta. The new Corolla majors on comfort and refinement, which combines with the huge space to make it feel like a genuine competitor for the class above. Nonetheless, it also feels slower and less agile than the Toyota Auris, which is a little surprising. Overall, it's highly competent, refined and comfortable.

What you get for your Money: 4/5

Prices for the new Corolla actually undercut the outgoing model at the lower end of the range. First up is the 1.33-litre petrol model in Terra grade. That's €20,995. Add €2,000 to step up to Aura and another €895 for the Luna model. The sole diesel engine offering is the 1.4-litre unit tested here. Prices for that are €21,995, €23,730 and €24,550 for the Terra, Aura and Luna versions respectively.

In entry-level Terra specification Toyota includes seven airbags, split-fold rear seats, USB and aux-in ports, remote stereo controls on the steering wheel, electric windows all-round, VSC stability control, heated electric door mirrors and LED daytime running lights.

The best-selling Aura grade adds air conditioning, 16-inch alloy wheels, Bluetooth, leather for the steering wheel and gear lever and a few other bits and pieces. Luna specification further adds the second generation of the Toyota Touch system (6.1-inch touchscreen, rear-view parking camera and more), front fog lights and a choice of Ivory or Black interior trim.

For the record, the 1.4-litre diesel engine in the Terra model emits only 99g/km for annual road tax of just €180. All versions of the petrol car are in Band B1 for tax (€270 per year) with emissions of 129g/km.

Toyota finance packages for the Corolla start at €225 per month.

Worth Noting

Petrolheads may not get very excited about the Toyota Corolla, but it's a major part of the motoring world. In 1966 Toyota opened its first factory to produce the K10 saloon (the only version never sold in Ireland) and its capacity was just 30,000 units per year. Forty million Corollas have since been built and Toyota reckons one is sold every two minutes around the world. In Ireland alone 200,000 examples have found homes, 50,000 of those in the past decade. Toyota reckons it should sell 2,500 more in 2014.

Summary

Toyota has done a good job on the new Corolla. It's highly competitive in terms of pricing and specification; it's simply massive inside, comfortable, economical and better looking than before. That it's a little unforgettable to drive will matter little to the target audience and we have no doubt that Toyota will continue to sell them by the bucket load.

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