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Skoda Superb Estate (2019-2023) Review & Prices

The Skoda Superb Estate offers masses of boot space and a high-quality feel for a keen price. A Passat has a nicer interior, though, and the Superb doesn鈥檛 exactly get your pulse racing on the road

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wowscore
9/10
Reviewed by 莲花直播 after extensive testing of the vehicle.

What's good

  • Colossal boot space
  • Roomy for passengers
  • Competitive prices

What's not so good

  • Pretty bland to drive
  • VW Passat Estate is plusher inside鈥
  • 鈥nd slightly more comfortable

Find out more about the Skoda Superb Estate (2019-2023)

Is the Skoda Superb Estate a good car?

Estates are primarily about boot space, and on that front, the Skoda Superb has its alternatives well and truly beaten 鈥 cars like the estate versions of the Volkswagen Passat, Mazda 6 and Vauxhall Insignia Grand Sport as well as newer, less direct rivals such as the Citroen C5 X.

So, while Skoda daring to name its car 鈥楽uperb鈥 may seem a bit like Starbucks declaring it makes the best coffee (a bold claim, and up for serious debate), the big Skoda really lives up to the billing.聽

In fact, to further cement just how roomy it is, it won the carwow Best Estate Car in our 2021 Car of the Year Awards.

The Superb Estate is strong on the quality front, too; inside it鈥檚 extremely close to a Passat when it comes to look and feel. Close enough, in fact, that most people wouldn鈥檛 really notice the difference. Being picky, the lower half of the Superb鈥檚 cabin does have more scratchy plastics, but everything inside is impressively well screwed together and there are enough gloss black and chrome accents to lift the mood.聽

The Superb Estate gets at least an 8.0-inch infotainment system with DAB radio, Bluetooth and built-in sat-nav, although you can upgrade to a 9.2-inch version. Both look great with their glass front when switched off, but also display pin-sharp graphics once on and are nicely responsive to prods, pinch and zoom. All models also come with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.聽

Cars don鈥檛 come much bigger inside than this. There鈥檚 a huge amount of room around the front seats and the driver gets generous seat and wheel adjustment, whether it be of the standard manual kind or electrically operated higher up the range. In the back it鈥檚 the same story 鈥 tall adults will have an almost comical amount of knee room in the outside seats and their heads will be well south of the ceiling.

Buy the 1.5 petrol if you're often in town, or a 2.0 diesel if you're not. SE-L trim is the best bet in either case. Head to our deals page to see what you could save on one!

Furthermore, at 660 litres, the Skoda Superb Estate鈥檚 boot is the biggest amongst its alternatives. The closest challenger is the VW Passat Estate with 650 litres, but a Mazda 6 is further off the mark. It鈥檚 not just bigger 鈥 the Superb鈥檚 boot is cleverer too, with lots of handy hooks, nets and cubbies.聽

Although there are more powerful petrol options, the entry-level 1.5 with 150hp never leaves you wanting when accelerating and is pretty smooth and quiet. If you do most of your driving in town on shorter journeys, it鈥檚 a great choice. Given the Superb is a popular company car, diesel is likely to remain a significant option. You鈥檙e best off with the 2.0 150hp, with its great get-up-and-go yet still-impressive fuel economy making it the best all-rounder. That said, there鈥檚 also a company-car-friendly plug-in hybrid.聽

The Superb Estate is a big car but it鈥檚 easy to drive in town. It has light, precise steering and good visibility for breezing tight town manoeuvres. The only black mark is that it struggles a little over sharp bumps compared to the Volkswagen Passat.聽

Head to the motorway and the Superb comes into its own, though. Its soft, wafty gait makes it great for covering long distances and its cabin stays really quiet whichever engine you go for. It does a decent job of going around corners, too. OK, it鈥檚 no sports car, nor as outright agile as a Mazda 6, but you always have confidence when driving it hard.

You鈥檒l notice, then, that there are few negatives when it comes to the Superb Estate. If you want lots of space, none do it better for such a keen price. However, see how keen you can get it over on our Skoda Superb Estate deal pages. To check out our used Skoda Superb Estate deals head over to our used page.

How much is the Skoda Superb Estate?

The price of a used Skoda Superb Estate (2019-2023) on 莲花直播 starts at 拢14,500.

Being a Skoda, you鈥檒l be expecting the Superb Estate to be pretty cheap. But it鈥檚 not鈥 It is good value, clocking in at just under 拢30,000 for the most basic version, which is still pretty well-equipped to be fair, but it鈥檚 actually more expensive 鈥 if only slightly 鈥 than a Mazda 6 Tourer. The Mazda isn鈥檛 quite as big inside, but it鈥檚 prettier and sharper to drive.

Equally, the most basic Citroen C5X is actually slightly cheaper to buy, and while it 鈥 again 鈥 isn鈥檛 quite so massive as the Skoda inside, it is somewhat more stylish on the outside and has a cabin that looks and feels a bit more luxurious. It is, obviously, a bit more affordable than the similarly-sized VW Passat estate (well, there wouldn鈥檛 be much point in the Skoda existing otherwise) and significantly cheaper than the swoopier VW Arteon Shooting Brake, a car which if anything has more mechanically in common with the Superb than the Passat does.

The Superb is also a good foil to the likes of premium models such as the Audi A4 Avant, Volvo V60, BMW 3 Series Touring and even the mighty Audi A6, offering as it does a cabin that鈥檚 high in quality and comfort and 鈥 we can鈥檛 emphasise this enough 鈥 a boot that鈥檚 just truly enormous. Go for a pricey Laurin & Klement version (named after the founders of the Skoda brand) and you might just end up asking: 鈥Audi 飞丑辞?鈥

Performance and drive comfort

The Superb Estate is a big smoothy, but it leans a lot in corners and its natural home is cruising quietly on the motorway. A standard reversing camera would really help in town

In town

The Superb Estate is really easy and pleasant to drive around town, and the suspension 鈥 for the most part 鈥 just easily soaks up the sorts of bumps, lumps, and speed humps that populate UK streets. While you don鈥檛 feel the bumps very much, you can hear them quite a bit as the suspension tends to react with a very audible 鈥榳hump鈥 which you wouldn鈥檛 get in, say, the VW Passat. Visibility is good though, especially when you remember that the Superb Estate is a very big car. Skoda鈥檚 decision not to use pointlessly sporty rising window lines pays big dividends, and you very easily get a sense of where all the corners of the car are. You do get standard front and rear parking sensors too, which is a big help in something this long. The steering is nice and light, but the turning circle 鈥 11.7-metres 鈥 is a bit canal-barge-spec. A reversing camera is available, but it鈥檚 only standard on the expensive Laurin & Klement model.聽

It鈥檚 certainly not too big to drive in town, so don鈥檛 go thinking that but do watch for the DSG dual-clutch automatic gearbox being a bit sleepy when pulling away from a stop, and then suddenly jerking into life. That鈥檚 especially noticeable with the 150hp 2.0-litre diesel model.聽聽

On the motorway

The motorway is the Superb鈥檚 natural environment. It鈥檚 just built for long journeys and putting lots and lots of miles in the rear view mirror in one go. If you鈥檙e doing that, you鈥檙e probably going to want one of the diesels, but don鈥檛 discount the 1.5-litre turbo petrol, which is surprisingly economical on longer runs, although it鈥檚 a bit short of grunt for long inclines. The plug-in hybrid iV model gets a bit too thirsty when you鈥檙e doing big miles. In the 2.0-litre 150hp diesel you should easily get better than 40mpg, and 50mpg is do-able. The DSG gearbox feels better up on the motorway too, responding quickly when you need to kick down and overtake something. Radar-guided cruise control is standard on everything but the base model, and it鈥檒l keep you a safe distance from the car in front, and brake when they brake, which is handy on long runs. However, if you want the helpful lane-keeping steering, you鈥檒l have to buy an upgrade pack, which seems a little stingy.聽

On a twisty road

When the road gets challenging, you鈥檒l find the trade-off for the Superb鈥檚 softly-softly approach to comfort. The Superb leans quite a bit through corners, and the light steering doesn鈥檛 offer you much in the way of fun. Sportline models only look more sporty, incidentally 鈥 they鈥檙e no more sporty to actually drive. Adaptive suspension is available as an option though, and that allows you to firm things up a bit in sport mode, but really the Skoda is a car that prioritises comfort and practicality. Having a sport mode or adjustable suspension is really a bit pointless. If you want an estate car that鈥檚 fun to drive, go for a Mazda 6 Tourer.

Space and practicality

This is basically the most practical car you can buy. That鈥檚 it. That鈥檚 the headline. Biggest complaint is that you have to lean in to drop the rear seats

Practicality

Lift up the front armrest of the Superb Estate and you鈥檒l find a massive storage bin which is also cooled by the air conditioning system, so it鈥檒l keep your cans of Coke (other fizzy drinks are available鈥) nice and cold. There鈥檚 a USB port in there too. In front of that, there鈥檚 a three-part cupholder, the central part of which is sized for narrow cans or bottles, and the bottom of the cupholder has little rubber studs. These grip your bottle of water and hold it so that you can twist the top off without using both hands. Clever, and safe too. There鈥檚 a lidded storage bin in front of the gear shifter, which will even swallow the latest big-screen phones. There鈥檚 another USB socket in there too, as well as a 12-volt socket. The glovebox is a good size, and it鈥檚 also cooled by the aircon. There鈥檚 a big storage area under the front passenger seat, and the door bins 鈥 almost as big as the boots in some cars鈥 鈥 are lined with felt so that things don鈥檛 rattle and slide around. You also get a sunglasses holder in the roof, and a little pop-out drawer by the driver鈥檚 right knee which is ideal for loose change and keys. There are even little soft storage pockets built into the sides of the front seats, ideal for stashing a mobile phone or media player. And, of course, there鈥檚 the famous Skoda umbrella, which is stored in a little compartment inside the door and which is a really high-quality item.聽

Space in the back seats

Space in the back of the Skoda Superb Estate is almost comically good. It鈥檚 not officially a stretched limo, but it might as well be given how much legroom and headroom there is for even the tallest of back seat passengers. There鈥檚 even space to stretch out and stick your feet under the front seat, while some models actually get a nice little foot-rest built into the floor in the back. You can pretty easily fit a third passenger in the middle seat, and the only drawback is that the transmission tunnel is a bit on the big side, although the generous footwells mean that鈥檚 less of a problem than it otherwise would be. You get ISOFIX points in the back seats and they鈥檙e optional for the front passenger seat. There鈥檚 so much space that fitting even the biggest and bulkiest of child safety seats is an utter doddle. The rear door bins are huge, there鈥檚 a little pop-out storage tray in the middle with a 12-volt socket (which looks suspiciously as if it was designed as an ashtray), and the door bins in the back are huge. You get a nice big armrest in the middle, which comes with fold-away cupholders so you don鈥檛 end up putting your elbow in the cup-hole. The rear passenger windows go all the way down, and there鈥檚 a great view out, plus the rear doors get electronic child locks, controlled from the front seat, which is really handy if you have growing kids.聽聽

Boot space

This is why we鈥檙e here 鈥 for one of the biggest and most useful car boots in all creation. Behold the 660-litre majesty of the Superb Estate鈥檚 boot, which is about as big an estate boot as you can buy, and certainly as big as you might need. What does 660 litres actually mean? It means you can fit ten 鈥 yes, ten 鈥 airline-style carry-on luggage cases in the boot, without folding down the back seats and without loading above the luggage cover. That is properly massive. You get the expected hooks (some of which fold away), tie-down points and 12-volt socket, plus some useful under-floor storage space. Fold down the back seats and you get a massive 1,950 litres of space, but there are some shortcomings.聽

First off, an adjustable boot floor costs extra, and without that you end up with a bit of a load-lip at the back, and a step in the floor if you fold down the rear seats. There鈥檚 also no handle in the boot to fold the back seats, so you either have to lean in through the massive boot (which is only an option for the very tall) or go around to the back door to fold them yourself. The VW Passat estate gets those as standard, but Skoda asks you to pay extra for those handles.

Interior style, infotainment and accessories

Cabin still looks stylish, but the infotainment is falling behind

For what was once a budget model, the Superb Estate feels pretty premium inside. Most of the surfaces are either squidgy soft-touch plastic or nice leatherette, and even when you look further down into the cabin the cheaper plastics look and feel more robust than merely cheap. The trims on the centre console look a little smarter than they used to, and if you upgrade to the Sportline model, you get fabulously comfortable high-backed bucket seats with Alcantara (fake suede to you and me) trim and Bentley-style diamond-stitching. It all looks and feels pretty high-end.聽

All models now come with digital instruments (what Skoda calls a 鈥榁irtual Cockpit鈥) as standard, and while they鈥檙e a little bit plain to look at, you can twiddle the layout around to suit what information you want to see. In the centre of the dash is a standard 8.0-inch touchscreen, which optionally expands to 9.2-inches on more expensive models. It鈥檚 a good screen, and it looks expensive, and better yet it still uses the older Skoda software (not the new stuff that鈥檚 in the Octavia and the Enyaq) so it鈥檚 easier to use and much more intuitive. Thankfully, the Superb also hasn鈥檛 fallen prey to the dreaded touch-sensitive climate controls, and instead you get nice big buttons and rotary controllers which make sense and are far easier to use on the move. The screen can be upgraded to built-in sat-nav, but to be honest it鈥檚 not really worth it, as all models get wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connections so you鈥檒l probably just end up using the navigation app on your phone. The basic eight-inch screen is a little easier to use as it keeps a physical stereo volume knob, but the larger screen is still pretty simple, even if it鈥檚 not quite as good a system as you鈥檒l find in the BMW 3 Series Touring.聽

You鈥檒l easily find your ideal driving position thanks to seats and steering wheel that have lots of adjustment, and on everything but the base SE version, you get electrically-adjustable seats too, which makes things even easier.聽

Overall quality levels are excellent, although some of the fixtures and fittings aren鈥檛 quite as slick as you鈥檒l find in an equivalent Volkswagen Passat, and the cabin鈥檚 style isn鈥檛 quite as easy on the eye as you鈥檒l find in the Volvo V60.

Emissions, fuel economy and tax

Most Superbs will probably be bought by company buyers, which means many heading straight for the iV plug-in hybrid version. This uses a 1.4-litre turbo petrol engine and big battery and electric motor for a combined 218hp and a claimed 232mpg. You won鈥檛 manage that, of course, but as long as you charge it up loads and make full use of the circa-30-mile real-world electric range, you might get close, and the Superb iV should do around 40mpg on a long run. Plus, it will have an unbeatable Benefit In Kind tax rate thanks to the 26g/km CO2 figure, which should keep the company accountants happy.聽

For seriously long-haul drivers, either the 150hp or 200hp diesels are the best choice (they鈥檙e basically the same engine with two different power outputs) and both should crack 50mpg if you drive them gently. They鈥檙e also the best engines for towing, and the Superb is a hugely popular tow-car, able to haul as much as 2,200kg of braked load, depending on the model. The 150hp diesel has CO2 emissions starting from 129g/km which means 拢190 for the first year鈥檚 road tax. The diesel engines are a bit noisy though, and they鈥檙e noticeably louder than the same engines in the VW Passat. Almost as if Skoda was told to make them deliberately noisier鈥

Don鈥檛 discount the 150hp 1.5-litre turbo petrol. It may seem like an engine that鈥檚 only suitable to low-mileage drivers but it鈥檚 a better all-rounder than you鈥檇 think. True, it doesn鈥檛 have the low-down lugging power of the diesels, but it鈥檚 smooth and pleasant to drive, and capable of 45mpg on a long run. It鈥檚 not even too bad in terms of CO2 鈥 141g/km, meaning a 拢230 road tax bill in year one.

Safety & security

The current Superb hasn鈥檛 been independently crash-tested by Euro NCAP since 2015, which means that there鈥檚 a 鈥榯est invalid鈥 mark next to the result as the criteria by which the tests are judged has moved on since. For the record, the Superb achieved a five-star score, with an 86% rating for adult occupant protection, and 86% for child occupant protection.

The Superb鈥檚 standard safety equipment isn鈥檛 great. You do get radar-guided cruise control on everything but the basic SE model, but pretty much everything else aside from lots of airbags and automated emergency braking is on the options list. If you want lane-keeping aid, blind spot warning, traffic jam assist, a parking camera, or traffic sign recognition, then you鈥檒l have to pay extra 鈥 between 拢500 and 拢1,000 depending on the pack you want.

Reliability and problems

Skoda has a truly impressive reputation for reliability and quality. In fact, in general, Skodas tend to do better in reliability surveys than their Volkswagen cousins. While that may be because buyers still have a slightly lower expectation of Skoda 鈥 given its 1990s bargain-basement roots 鈥 it still speaks highly of the quality that the brand鈥檚 Czech factories turn out. The current Superb has had a small number of recalls; one for loose covers in the engine compartment, one for a faulty emergency call service function, and one for a faulty fuse in the plug-in hybrid version.

Buy or lease the Skoda Superb Estate (2019-2023) at a price you鈥檒l love
We take the hassle and haggle out of car buying by finding you great deals from local and national dealers
莲花直播 price from
Used
拢14,500
Ready to see prices tailored to you?
Compare used deals