We love the Citroen C5 X. It’s a great car to just jump in and drive on long or short journeys. It feels solid and comfortable, with impressive safety and tech features. We are just hoping for improved fuel-economy figures.
After nearly three months testing our Citroen C5 X, it’s fair to say that I’m still smitten. In fact, my initial draft of this report sounded so positive that it read like I’d switched into car sales. That was until I did some last-minute MPG number crunching.
In my first report I’d mostly been driving around South London while enjoying the head-turning hatchback’s warm, enveloping interior. With a surprising level of comfort and bags of tech to play with, all was good. However, I needed to get away and add in some proper motorway mileage.
That chance came with a trip up north to visit some universities with my youngest son Harry and wife Dawn. We also planned to visit Harry’s grandparents in Lincolnshire.
Motorway driving proved even more warm and soothing than urban motoring. Those super-comfy electrically adjustable heated leather seats (a £1,600 Hype Black Ambience option) really take the weight off.
The C5 X seems designed to do that across all aspects of driving. The adaptive cruise control is easy to operate from the buttons on the steering wheel and gives clear readings in the head-up display (along with speed, speed-limit signs and lane assist). The car adjusted position to the vehicle in front, slowing and speeding up to my set speed. I would have eaten up much of the trip using cruise control, but we don’t live in France and drivers on our packed UK roads seem incapable of overtaking and maintaining speed or just moving from the middle lane, which makes it redundant much of the time.
Our journey was a well trodden regular route up the A1, so I decided to spice it up by throwing the sat-nav a mid-trip curveball by taking us off across to the east onto some smaller A-roads. It quickly picked up a route, selecting some surprisingly small lanes. We were also given the opportunity to switch from our current route (clearly marked in blue) to alternative green-coloured detours that promised to shave off a few minutes of travelling time here and there.
Merely following a green route switched it to the ‘new’ blue route. Some detours involved changing to roads running parallel to existing routes just to avoid traffic-light junctions. I’m never in that much of a hurry, so that novelty quickly wore off.
Other handy technology worth noting includes the wireless phone charger and connection to Apple CarPlay. I love listening to my music playlists through the Citroen’s cracking audio system.
Harry also rates the rear-seat comfort and legroom. He’s six feet, two inches tall, but still has decent headroom despite the fact the C5 X has quite a raking roofline. He is happy enough with the two USB-C changing points in the back and can wirelessly play his own music to mix up the ambience.
One big thing the Citroen has going for it is curb appeal. It looks different and turns heads, and both Harry’s grandparents commented on the car during our visit.
Everything sounds great until we totted up the recent economy figure, which was a disappointing 32.2 mpg. A couple of times I’ve been surprised by how quickly the petrol seems to have disappeared after the gauge dips below half full. The dash displays the range, but it can go from 150 miles down to less than 100 in just a few short urban trips.
I live in a hilly part of London and do many short trips in traffic, but it’s not like I’ve been blasting around in Sport mode. The C5 X mainly sits in the Eco drive setting, so the 1.2-litre engine should be doing better.
One thing that’s great about south London is testing safety tech. People are always strolling out in front of you. The C5 X has advanced driver-assistance systems, such as radar-controlled active safety brake. This has enhanced pedestrian and cyclist pick-up and works at night. It also has forward-collision warning and lane-keep assist, and all of these features have kicked in at some point.
The brake warnings are slightly sensitive, but not too intrusive, and the braking system has prevented a possible shunt at low speed.
The rear-view camera has parking guides and surround sensors to make it easy to fit in the tightest of spaces. It gives an overhead view of the C5 X’s position that should help save the 19-inch alloys from being kerbed, while the sensors make it almost impossible to reverse into anything.
The latest journey was a holiday airport run. The car was simple to load, with lots of room for our small cases and an extra child’s car seat. There’s no big lip to lift items over and the rails make sliding in weighty bags that bit easier. The C5 X really came into its own on the trip back from our break. It was truly joyful to get into the car after a long early-morning flight with teenagers and toddlers. It was effortless to drive home, cocooned in comfort to our beds.
Cold snap and comfy cabin mean we’ve quickly warmed to our Citroen C5 X
The last time I got behind the wheel of a Citroen, it was our e-Berlingo back in June 2022. It took a while for that boxy electric MPV to win me over, although it did. This time it’s been love at first sight, though.
The C5 X instantly stands out. It looks different and, in my opinion, lovely and sleek, with lots of swooping lines and great incorporation of the classic chevron design into the front lights. The unusual shape hints at both saloon and estate models, looking sporty without being aggressive. I’m not sure which angle I like best, but it’s fair to say the car has head-turning appeal.
The inside is equally inviting and then enveloping. I took delivery of our C5 X Shine PureTech right at the beginning of the pre- Christmas cold snap, and within days the car was covered in frozen snow. As a quick experiment I brushed off the top layer of powdered snow then timed how long it took to defrost the car to a level of visibility safe to drive. Using the heated rear windscreen and climate control (no ice scraping) it took just six minutes, and in that time I was able to fire up the heated steering wheel to warm my frozen hands.
Luckily for me, the C5 X has also been specified with the Hype Black Ambience (£1,600) option. This features heated leather front seats, along with memory settings for the driver seat, and wood-effect dashboard trim. The latter looks nice enough, but the seats are the next level in comfort, with soft-padded support and electric adjustment. I’m finding the memory setting is very helpful, too, with a 30cm height difference between my wife and me.
One-touch seat settings might sound a bit unnecessary and coming from a six-month spell in our Dacia Jogger fleet car into this level of comfort is somewhat mind-blowing. To be fair, the Jogger was almost half the price of our C5 X £31,740 OTR test car. But that doesn’t mean the standard price of £29,290 is expensive for this level of comfort or refinement. Our example is clearly more affordable than the plug-in hybrid version, which would set you back an extra £10,000.
The car is packed with loads of technology as standard. The screens are crystal clear, with a head-up display giving speed information via a road-sign symbol plus digital readout, with options to use the cruise-control settings. The Citroen also has a seven-inch digital dashboard that can give sat-nav directions. The 12-inch touchscreen infotainment system mounted on top of the dash is huge and impressive, but more complex than expected.
I had to watch the Auto Express C5 X test video online to discover that swiping was the way to change the radio stations and I’m still working my way through the functions. To be fair, though, it does come with an on-screen system guide.
I’ve used the sat-nav a few times and it’s wonderful and intuitive, with directions on both screens so you can’t go wrong. It also shows the price of petrol at fuel stations en route, plus red and amber lines to highlight the traffic ahead. Many of the audio sounds in the Citroen are well thought out, too. The indicator tick and speed camera warning alerts are calming, and even the sat-nav’s voice direction has a relaxed tone.
One rush-hour trip across London turned out to be very chilled. The cabin’s warmth and comfort combined with the simple route instructions and smooth ride to slow everything down, including my heart rate.
I find the Citroen glides along, despite this petrol-powered C5 X not getting the same active suspension set-up as plug-in models. That tech scans the road ahead and adjusts the dampers to suit the surface.
Our Citroen comes with a 1.2 litre three-cylinder engine that has plenty of power for town. It has a lovely tone and probably hints at more performance than it actually delivers, but I need to get it out onto some faster open roads to get that information, along with some non-urban mpg figures. A trip up north to see family in Lincolnshire will soon will help fill in those gaps.
Model: | Citroen C5 X Shine PureTech 130 S&S EAT 8 auto |
On fleet since: | December 2022 |
Price new: | £29,290 |
Engine: | 1.2-litre 3cyl turbo petrol, 128bhp |
CO2/tax: | 136g/km/£230 (Y1) |
Options: | Metallic paint (£650), Roof bars (£200), Hype Black Ambience: Mistral Black Paloma leather Advanced Comfort seats, with heated front seats and wood-effect dashboard trim (£1,600) |
Insurance*: | Group: 20E, Quote: £1,028 |
Mileage: | 3,391 |
Economy: | 32.2mpg |
Any problems? | None so far |
*Insurance quote from AA (0800 107 0680) for a 42-year-old in Banbury, Oxon, with three points.