Skip advert
Advertisement

Suzuki Swift Sport – Ride and handling

A competent and reasonably comfortable thing, if not as exciting as Swift Sports of old. Hybrid steers and rides better

Evo rating
  • Composed chassis, decent refinement, lots of kit
  • Lacks adjustability, old-school Swift Sport character dulled

The suspension set-up is a fairly familiar combination of struts at the front and torsion beam at the rear. However, the Sport benefits from a 15mm lower (compared to the standard Swift) ride height, plus the adoption of Monroe gas dampers. At the front are heavier duty anti-roll bar mounts, while the wheel hub and bearings have been combined into a single unit, with a greater width between the bearings for a 15 percent increase in camber rigidity. At the rear there are bespoke trailing arms, but the rest of the set-up is carried over unchanged.

Advertisement - Article continues below

On introduction to it in 2018, we found the Swift Sport had ‘lost some of its raw charm and appeal’ and that ‘the fun factor has been diminished.’

‘Where the old car revelled in being taken by the scruff of the neck, the new version is a more measured machine, favouring a less energetic and engaging approach. It’s technically more accomplished, but it raises fewer smiles per mile.’

In the slightly heavier (by 55kg) mild hybrid, we found the accompanying chassis refinements worked to the car’s benefit, with a calmer ride and more intuitive steering. 

In 2024? Being a bit of a novelty, it’s unsurprising the little Swift got a warmer reception. Its diminutive dimensions allowed you to exploit its appetite for a flowing progression. The bump to over 1000kg once hybridised might have made it the heaviest Swift yet but in its final days, it was an outlier featherweight. The suspension – with UK-tuned, Europe specific tuning – is well judged and the steering nicely resolved.

It does run out of grip on its soft-sidewall Continental tyres quicker than you were possibly expecting, but fling it around and its supermini objectives gently bubble to the service, although there’s never an explosion of fizz to keep you on your toes.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Porsche 718 Cayman GTS 4.0 (2020 - 2025) review – a near-perfect mid-engined sports car
Porsche Cayman GTS 4.0 – front
In-depth reviews

Porsche 718 Cayman GTS 4.0 (2020 - 2025) review – a near-perfect mid-engined sports car

Porsche has killed the 718, and with it the sublime Cayman GTS 4.0. It goes out as one of the best all-round sports cars ever made
26 Feb 2026
They might be cheap, but Chinese cars may carry an expensive catch for UK buyers
Xiaomi SU7
News

They might be cheap, but Chinese cars may carry an expensive catch for UK buyers

The rapid expansion of new Chinese cars on sale in the UK is causing problems for insurers with uncertainty over parts availability and repair costs c…
26 Feb 2026
Still want that Singer? Evoluto’s Ferrari 355 restomod is finally ready
Evoluto Ferrari 355
News

Still want that Singer? Evoluto’s Ferrari 355 restomod is finally ready

Evoluto’s reimagined and modernised Ferrari 355 is here, with a new 3.7-litre 9000rpm V8 option
24 Feb 2026