Skip advert
Advertisement

DS 7 Crossback review – a genuine rival to premium alternatives? - Performance and 0-60 time

The DS 7 Crossback offers much in the way of luxury, space and moderately quirky design but it’s not an inspiring drive

Evo rating
RRP
from £28,050
  • Luxury trappings, good ride, well-equipped
  • Expensive, uninspiring engines, dull handling

Performance and 0-60 time

It’s no exaggeration to say that the DS 7 isn’t going to set the world on fire when it comes to its performance figures, even when the 296bhp Hybrid comes on line in 2019. The launch line up comprises three engines, BlueHDi diesels in both 130 and 180 guises as well as a PureTech 225 petrol model. All are four-cylinder units and while they all pass muster as far as emissions and economy figures are concerned they lag behind the competition in performance terms.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The manual only BlueHDi 130 (1499cc, 128bhp) saunters to 62mph in 11.7sec while the auto only BlueHDi 180 (1997cc with 178bhp) isn’t massively faster with a claimed 9.9sec 0-62mph time. To put that into perspective an Audi Q3 2.0 TDi with 181bhp bests that by 2.0sec, although the German does have four-wheel drive to help get it off the line.

> Jaguar E-pace review

For the time being the only petrol model is the PureTech 225 with 222bhp and while its claimed acceleration figure from rest to 62mph of 8.3sec sounds a little bit more like it, a BMW X1 20i with 189bhp covers the same increment in 7.4sec.

On the road the HDi 180 does feel stronger than its vital stats suggest, no doubt assisted by its 295lb ft of torque that’s developed at 2000rpm. Pop it into its Sport mode and the engine feels moderately enthusiastic if a little more gruff than the class-leading 2-litre diesels. Conversely the 225 petrol doesn’t imbibe the same feeling although to be fair to DS, it did say it’s still fine-tuning the transmission software for this model. While it was smooth enough in Normal mode it was far too eager to kick down in Sport, which constantly took the engine out of its torque-rich mid-range.  

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Aston Martin Vantage S review – does it offer enough to take on Porsche's 911 Turbo S
Aston Martin Vantage S front
Reviews

Aston Martin Vantage S review – does it offer enough to take on Porsche's 911 Turbo S

Tweaks to the chassis and aero, plus more power and attitude – in S form, one of our favourite Astons promises even bigger thrills
15 Apr 2026
Citroën C5 Aircross review – quirky, honest SUV offering Range Rover comfort on a budget
Citroën C5 Aircross
In-depth reviews

Citroën C5 Aircross review – quirky, honest SUV offering Range Rover comfort on a budget

When is a generic family crossover not the dullest thing on Earth? When it’s a comfy Citroën glazed in weirdness
9 Apr 2026
The Porsche 911 GT4 Challenge is coming, and it might be the most confusing model ever
Porsche 911 GT4 Challenge
Spy shots

The Porsche 911 GT4 Challenge is coming, and it might be the most confusing model ever

Porsche is readying its replacement for the Cayman GT4 Clubsport racer, the 911 GT4, and we’ve spotted it completing its final testing ahead of its la…
14 Apr 2026