Our Rating

4/5

BMW X1 Estate

The X1 is one of the best-handling crossovers on the market, but some peculiar slips in quality.

We say

The X1 is one of the best-handling crossovers on the market, but some peculiar slips in quality.

Performance

201bhp diesel is the best performer, but the less powerful 140bhp and 175bhp diesels are flexible and will handle everyday duties with ease. All engines are strong though. sDrive models are two-wheel drive, while xDrive adds four-wheel drive.

Emissions

Emissions are low at 136 – 167g/km on the bulk of the X1 range, but fuel economy and emissions are as good as 124g/km and 62.8mpg on the EfficientDynamics model.

Driving

The X1’s firm ride may be a bit uncomfortable for some people, but the steering is very responsive and involving, while handling is sharp.

Feel

You’ll hear the engines at high speeds but external noise is kept out of the cabin and the X1 provides a smooth ride.

Space

There’s not much space in the back – legroom is especially poor – and the boot is fairly small at 420 litres too, though the rear seats do fold down.

Equipment

17-inch alloy wheels, dual-zone aircon, a multi-function steering wheel and rear parking sensors are standard on all models. There’s only one specification but xDrive models get hill descent control and the xDrive23d, notionally the range-topper, gets some more baubles.

Price

It’s not cheap to buy but running costs are appealing as all models are diesels. Residuals values should be good.

Quality

It’s reliable but the cabin is home to some tinny plastics - disappointing considering the price.

Safety

Stability control and six airbags come as standard – four-wheel drive models are the safest choice and boast hill descent control. All models boast stability control, traction control, ABS and cornering brake control.

Pros

Great engines, low running costs.

Cons

Not as spacious as it ought to be, firm ride may off put buyers, cheap interior a letdown.

Alternatives

Audi Q3, Volkswagen Tiguan