Crossover heralds a new look for the British marque, will be available with an electric powertrain from the start
23 June 2020

Vauxhall has gone radical with the second generation of its popular Mokka crossover, with a bold redesign and an electric version available from launch.

Shunning the conventional approach of its predecessor, the new Mokka also ditches the X suffix from its name. Its more expressive look is based around Vauxhall’s new Vizor front-end design, which will be rolled out across the rest of the British brand’s range in due course.

The Vizor forms a distinct frame around wing-shaped LED running lights and ‘glare-free’ adaptive-beam matrix LED headlights, which are claimed to be a first for the segment.

A chrome bar stretching over the side windows visually separates the roof and leads to a rear featuring tail-lights in the same shape as the front running lights.

The Mokka is a substantial 12.5cm shorter than before, which is said to make it “super-easy to manoeuvre and park”. That’s entirely down to greatly reduced overhangs (by 61mm at the front and 66mm at the rear), because the wheelbase is actually 2mm longer, so interior space isn’t impacted while a 350-litre boot remains. The car is also now 10mm wider.

The new Mokka’s interior is dominated by Vauxhall’s new Pure Panel: a Mercedes-style curved binnacle linking the digital instrument display and infotainment touchscreen.

Cheaper variants make use of a 7.0in touchscreen, but that rises to 10.0in on top models, combined with a 12.0in dial display. Tech includes Apple CarPlay and Android Auto with integrated voice control, plus the Vauxhall Connect service with live navigation data and emergency call functions.

Buttons for crucial functions remain, as do physical climate controls, while Vauxhall claims the electronic parking brake and (on automatics) shift-by-wire gear selector ensure “no protruding element disturbs the purity of its design”.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Find an Autocar car review

Driven this week

  • 23 June 2020
    First Drive
    The new CS is a good deal more expensive than the standard M2, but how much...
  • Vauxhall Corsa-e 2020 UK first drive review - hero front
    23 June 2020
    First Drive
    Vauxhall’s first pure-electric car arrives with an impressive spec – but...
  • Volkswagen T-Roc Cabriolet 2020 road test review - hero front
    19 June 2020
    Car review
    Is the compact convertible the next niche to be conquered by the crossover...

Read our review

Car review
Vauxhall Mokka X

Facelifted Mokka, now called Mokka X, gets a much-improved interior but remains average to drive

Back to top

The Mk2 Mokka sits on the same PSA Group-developed CMP platform as the Peugeot 2008. It’s up to 120kg lighter than the old Mokka, depending on specification, while torsional stiffness is improved by 30%.

Vauxhall is yet to detail the Mokka’s new three-cylinder petrol and four-cylinder diesel engines, choosing to reveal it in Mokka-e form. Rivalling electric crossovers such as the Hyundai Kona Electric and MG ZS EV, this shares its 134bhp motor and 50kWh battery with the e-2008. It promises a 201-mile WLTP range and offers 100kW DC rapid-charging to replenish 80% in half an hour. It can also accept single-phase and 11kW three-phase charging.

Prices aren’t yet confirmed, but expect a starting price of around £20,000 and £28,000 for the EV. The Mokka will go on sale in late summer, before its showroom debut in early 2021.

READ MORE

Vauxhall Mokka X taken off sale with replacement a year away 

Vauxhall Vivaro-e Life arrives as flagship EV passenger van 

New Vauxhall Vivaro-e electric van revealed with 188-mile range

Join the debate

Comments
3

23 June 2020

Can't be worse than the last one, so that's a plus. But I'm sure that original Mokka was advertised on the basis of its 'radical' design too. Looks like another unpleasant cabin though. Being inside a Vauxhall is no fun at all.

24 June 2020

Not exciting like a Juke or CH-R but VERY classy and handsome.  I'd be feeling pretty stupid right now If I'd just bought a X1/2 / GLA / Q1.

24 June 2020
Dirty Diesel scrappage scheme time
Bye bye polluting petrol pumpers.
Hello electric ⚡ future

Add your comment

Log in or register to post comments

Find an Autocar car review

Driven this week

  • 23 June 2020
    First Drive
    The new CS is a good deal more expensive than the standard M2, but how much...
  • Vauxhall Corsa-e 2020 UK first drive review - hero front
    23 June 2020
    First Drive
    Vauxhall’s first pure-electric car arrives with an impressive spec – but...
  • Volkswagen T-Roc Cabriolet 2020 road test review - hero front
    19 June 2020
    Car review
    Is the compact convertible the next niche to be conquered by the crossover...