Skip advert
Advertisement

Volvo EX30 - Electric motors, performance & drive

The EX30 is surprisingly quick in Twin-Motor form, but an overzealous stability control system curtails the fun

Electric motor, drive and performance rating

4.5

How we review cars
RRP
£32,250 £46,250
Avg. savings
£531 off RRP*
Find your Volvo EX30
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

We’ve only driven the Volvo EX30 Twin Motor Performance Ultra model so far. It takes pretty much the same amount of time to say that name as it does for the car to cover the 0-62mph sprint – a quite ludicrous 3.6 seconds. That’s a little bit swifter than the Smart #1 Brabus, and the same as a Bentley Continental GT Speed, Porsche 911 Carrera 4S, or, to single out a car that was a supercar icon of its day, the Ferrari Enzo. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

This high-performance Volvo offers very few visual clues to its potent acceleration, looking almost identical to the regular model. It could be one of the most unassuming performance cars out there, and will certainly raise some eyebrows if you make a speedy getaway at the traffic light Grand Prix. The fact that the Performance model is available from a little under £42,500 means buyers looking for hot hatch pace in an under-the-radar, ‘Q-car’ package might have found their new hero. 

Fortunately, this Volvo’s chassis has much of the sophistication lacking from the unfinished-feeling Smart. There’s a firmness to the ride quality that doesn’t ever cross the line of being harsh, which means that there’s little pitch or dive under hard acceleration. In the torrential conditions of our first UK drive, it proved possible to still excite either axle with clumsy throttle inputs, but the balance is neat, and once the steering is switched into its heaviest ‘firm’ setting, it feels precise and positive. It's a shame, then, that the stability control cuts in abruptly at the first sign of wheel slip or when the car gets upset by a mid-corner bump.

There is regenerative braking just like most electric vehicles, which is a system designed to generate a little bit of electricity that goes back into the battery when you lift off the accelerator to slow down. It’s not as variable as in the Kia Niro EV, which uses paddles on the steering wheel to adjust the strength of the slowing force. To switch this system on or off in the EX30, you need to go into a systems setting menu buried within the infotainment system, which is highly distracting while driving.

Aside from a little wind rustle at higher speeds, there aren’t many distracting noises inside the EX30. The ride maintains its composure at motorway speeds, while the Twin Motor Performance (as you'd expect) keeps enough in reserve to get past slower traffic.

Model Power0-62mphTop speed
EX30 Single Motor Core268bhp5.7 seconds112 mph
EX30 Single Motor Plus Extended Range268bhp5.3 seconds112mph
EX30 Twin Motor Performance422bhp3.6 seconds112mph
Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Volvo Ex30

Volvo Ex30

RRP £33,060Avg. savings £531 off RRP*
Audi A3

Audi A3

RRP £26,295Avg. savings £1,509 off RRP*Used from £13,195
Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £35,385Avg. savings £2,911 off RRP*Used from £31,499
MG MG4

MG MG4

RRP £26,995Avg. savings £8,094 off RRP*Used from £13,290
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Have you considered?

New Volkswagen ID. Buzz GTX 2025 review: sporty MPV lacks wow factor
Volkswagen ID.Buzz GTX - front

New Volkswagen ID. Buzz GTX 2025 review: sporty MPV lacks wow factor

Road tests
18 Apr 2025
Volkswagen ID.7 Tourer long-term test: simple tasks turn into a tech nightmare
Volkswagen ID.7 long-term test - front cornering

Volkswagen ID.7 Tourer long-term test: simple tasks turn into a tech nightmare

Long-term tests
14 Apr 2025
Renault Scenic review
Renault Scenic - main image

Renault Scenic review

In-depth reviews
11 Apr 2025

Most Popular

New Citroen Holidays 2025 review: a cheaper and cheerful VW California campervan rival
Citroen Holidays - front

New Citroen Holidays 2025 review: a cheaper and cheerful VW California campervan rival

The new Citroen Holidays is the perfect option for those that want to camp on a budget
Road tests
15 Apr 2025
New baby Nissan Juke EV on the way to challenge the Dacia Spring
Baby Nissan Juke exclusive image - rear

New baby Nissan Juke EV on the way to challenge the Dacia Spring

Nissan to fast-track development of new battery-powered city car to take on forthcoming Volkswagen ID.1, and our exclusive images preview how it could…
News
18 Apr 2025
New Subaru Outback morphs into an SUV for Mk7 generation
Subaru Outback New York - front

New Subaru Outback morphs into an SUV for Mk7 generation

The boxer engine and off-road focus has been retained despite the Outback’s new SUV look
News
17 Apr 2025