Site icon The Daily Drive | Consumer Guide®

Quick Spin: 2020 Volvo XC90 T8 Inscription

2020 Volvo XC90 T8
2020 Volvo XC90 T8 Inscription in Birch Light Metallic (a $645 option)

2020 Volvo XC90 T8 Inscription

Class: Premium Midsize Crossover SUV

Miles driven: 295

Fuel used: 9.9 gallons

Real-world fuel economy: 29.8 mpg

Driving mix: 55% city, 45% highway

CG Report Card
Room and ComfortA-
Power and PerformanceB+
Fit and FinishA
Fuel EconomyB
ValueB+
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide's impressions of the entire model lineup.
Big & Tall Comfort
Big GuyA
Tall GuyA
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. "Big" rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, "Tall" rating based on 6'6"-tall male tester.
Drivetrain
Engine Specs400-hp 2.0-liter
Engine TypeTurbocharged, supercharged, 4-cyl plug-in hybrid
Transmission 8-speed automatic
Drive WheelsAWD

EPA-estimated fuel economy: 55 MPGe combined, 27 mpg combined

Fuel type: Premium gas required

Base price: $67,500 (not including $995 destination charge)

Options on test vehicle: Inscription Features ($6300), Advanced Package ($2450), Luxury Package ($3100), metallic paint ($645), Bowers and Wilkins premium sound system ($3200), Park Assist Pilot ($200), 4-corner air suspension ($1800), 21-inch multi-spoke wheels ($800)

Price as tested: $86,990

 

Quick Hits

The great: Luxurious, beautifully finished cabin; impressive acceleration with potentially outstanding fuel economy

The good: Classy exterior styling, occupant space in first- and second-row seats

The not so good: Some tedious infotainment controls; third-row seats can be cramped for adult passengers

More XC90 price and availability information

 

CG Says:

If you’re not a newcomer to The Daily Drive, then you may know our high regard for the Volvo XC90: Consumer Guide has named the 3-row premium midsize crossover a “Best Buy” ever since the vehicle’s 2016 redesign. (If you are a Daily Drive newbie, consider yourself now caught up on this point.) A roomy, high-style interior, and performance that’s pleasantly surprising given that it’s based on a turbocharged 4-cylinder engine are things that have impressed us.

Volvo made a few subtle updates to the XC90’s exterior styling for 2020; it’s still one of the classiest vehicles in its segment.

Since the XC90’s last redo, Volvo has improved it in steps, adding a feature or trim variation here and there. The same measured change is carried out for 2020. There are some appearance tweaks—notably a concave-surface grille—and the Excellence model, with a 6-figure starting price that vastly outreached the rest of the lineup, has been dropped. That leaves the Inscription models at the head of the line, and it was one of those that CG editors tested.

We’re hardly strangers to XC90 Inscriptions, having sampled them as 2017 and 2019 models. We’ll direct your attention to those reviews for deeper discussion of road manners, accommodations, and features. But the ’20 Inscription we drove was equipped with an engine we had not previously tried out (at least not in the XC90), and it came with a new seating arrangement.

Test Drive: 2020 Lexus RX 350 F Sport

All XC90s have nicely finished cabins, but the $6300 Inscription Features and the $3100 Luxury Package add several trim upgrades and premium features that make for a truly regal ambiance.

The T8 plug-in-hybrid powerplant in the latest test car develops a maximum of 400 horsepower from a 313-horse turbocharged and supercharged 2.0-liter gas-fed four paired with an 87-horsepower electric motor. (The T6 version of the engine without the electric assist makes 316 horsepower and the turbo-only T5 variant is rated at 250.) It is paired with an effective 8-speed automatic transmission, and subject to six selectable driving modes.

The default position is “Hybrid,” which toggles between gas and electric power as needed. The 5100-pound Inscription, which comes with standard all-wheel drive, gets around just fine in this setting, and transitions between the power sources are utterly unobtrusive. “Power” is the maximum-strength formula, so to speak, calling into play both power sources for a livelier driving experience that you can feel at the accelerator, certainly, but also in crisper steering. With “Pure” mode the XC90 can be driven solely on electric power for a limited time. The battery powers the rear axle’s electric motor and conserves juice by reducing certain climate functions. With battery capacity newly boosted to 11.6 kWh (from 10.4 kWh), the 2020 XC90 T8 is projected to go up to 18 fully electric miles; when one of our testers motored off with a full charge, he covered 16.9 miles—more than half his evening commute—before the hybrid battery was drained and the gas engine took over.

Test Drive: 2020 Mercedes-Benz GLC 300

Second-row captain’s chairs are newly available for 2020; they make access to the third-row seats a bit easier, but drop overall seating capacity to six occupants instead of seven.

As a hybrid, the XC90 can return some charge to the battery through regenerative braking. Most hybrids have a lazy brake-pedal feel until near the end—a side effect of the regenerative capture—but the 2020 XC90 has switched to an electronic brake-control system that delivers more “natural” brake performance. With instruments showing about one eighth of charge capacity (gained through regen), the vehicle needed one hour, 45 minutes to fully charge on a 240-volt “level 2” charger. EPA estimates for gas-engine operation are 26 mpg in the city, 30 on the highway, and 27 combined. Though CG testers’ overall high percentage of highway driving barely cracked 23 mpg, one editor achieved 32.7 mpg on 55 percent city use.

Test Drive: 2020 Lincoln Aviator Reserve

There’s decent space for a grocery run behind the XC90’s third-row seats, and both the second- and third-row seat backs fold flush to create a cavernous cargo area with a smooth load floor.

The remaining drive modes are more situational in nature. Traction-boosting “Off Road” is restricted to speeds less than 25 mph; “Constant AWD” is designed to address slippery conditions mainly at lower speeds; and “Individual” allows for customization of any of the other modes.

Inscription and Momentum models are newly available with adjustable second-row captain’s chairs, and our 2020 test model had them. The seats are comfortable (and were heated, thanks to the Luxury Package option), but lack inboard flip-up armrests—a detail we typically associate with captain’s chairs. Second-row legroom is as ample with the individual seats as with the alternative bench. A center seating position is sacrificed, but pass-through to the two third-row seats is easy. For the sake of adding cargo capacity, the captain’s chairs fold utterly flat, as do the third-row seats, but there are gaps behind and between the second-row seats that will require care for certain loads.

Test Drive: 2020 Cadillac XT6 Premium Luxury

Volvo’s T8 powertrain is a 2.0-liter 4-cylinder that’s both turbocharged and supercharged, and paired with an electric motor to produce a total of 400 horsepower. Twenty-inch wheels are standard, but this design is unique to the Inscription.

With a thorough complement of options applied, the test truck came in at $86,990, and price is one of the few things about we’ve had reason to question about some XC90s. (The tester was nicely turned out from headliner to carpets.) At least we went a whole review without mentioning how annoyed we are with the Sensus infotainment system.

Quick Spin: 2019 Land Rover Range Rover Sport HSE

There’s a lot of, uh,  range in the Volvo XC90’s price range. Base models start out at just under $50K, while an optioned-up T8 Inscription like our test vehicle here comes in just under $87K. Even at that premium price level, the T8 Inscription offers impressive levels of luxury, performance, and fuel economy.

Consumer Guide Car Stuff Podcast episode index

2020 Volvo XC90 T8

Share this:
Exit mobile version