Mercedes-Benz S-Class W222 Review (2014-2020)

Pros

  • Stupendously comfortable

  • Luxurious and supremely well equipped cabin

  • Elegant and discreet looks

Cons

  • Expensive to buy and maintain

  • Not as opulent as a Rolls-Royce

  • Reliability concerns stand between the S-Class and a five-star rating

4/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
2014-2020 Mercedes-Benz S-Class Generational Review summaryImage

The CarGurus verdict

As luxury saloons go, the S-Class is one of the best. It’s endlessly comfortable, preposterously well-equipped, enormously spacious, and beautifully finished. Few luxury limos come close to beating it.

And while it’s true that you can get an even more opulent four-door saloon, you’ll have to spend a heck of a lot more cash to get it – and you’ll have to live with the fact it’s much more ostentatious to look at. The S-Class’s more anonymous styling is a boon at this end of the market, as it means it’s just that little bit more discreet.

Our only qualm is the S-Class’s mediocre reputation for reliability – not to mention Mercedes’s as a whole. We’d also suggest thinking long and hard about choosing the plug-in version if you don’t have somewhere to charge it up. However, those caveats aside, this is quite simply one of the best luxury cars out there – if not the best.

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It’d be wrong to say it doesn’t get more luxurious than the Mercedes S-Class. But this big four-door saloon has always been renowned for combining luxury, cutting-edge technology and – importantly – discretion like no other car. The W222 reviewed here represents the sixth-generation of S-Class, and thus was the German firm’s flagship saloon between 2014 and 2020.

If you want to be chauffeur-driven in something that’s as plutocratic as they come inside, yet low-key on the outside, the W222 generation of S-Class is still about as good as it gets.

  • The fastest S-Classes are the Mercedes-AMG versions. With thumping V8 engines and trick suspension that lends them physics-defying cornering abilities, these monster machines are capable of obscene speeds and acceleration that entirely defies their size. However, don’t expect the AMG S-Classes to magically transform into sports cars – for all their grip and power, they aren’t as involving as smaller AMG models, and on a tight back road their sheer size can be an obstacle to enjoying them to their fullest. We reckon the less sporting models feel more rounded – the S-Class is a cruiser, not a bruiser, and best served as such.
  • The S-Class saloon is available as a plug-in hybrid. The S560e, as it’s badged, gets a 3.0-litre petrol V6 mated to an electric motor, a 13.5kWh battery and a 7.2kW on-board charger, all of which allows it to offer around 25 miles of real-world electric range when fully charged. Low CO2 emissions figures also make it a tempting choice as a company car, but keep in mind that unless you plug it in regularly, you’ll be driving a 3.0-litre petrol S-Class with a lot of extra weight on board in the form of a heavy battery – and that’s going to make it thirsty. From a practicality point of view, the S560e also has a much smaller boot than the regular S-Class.
  • There aren’t really different equipment levels in the S-Class range as such. Instead, all but the AMG versions are badged Grand Edition, and get a whopping spec list that includes a panoramic roof, adaptive LED headlamps, a Burmester sound system, massage front seats and a 360-degree camera. To this specification you can add a choice of options packages, enabling you to customise the S-Class to your own particular tastes.

  • If you have someone else to drive it: In the S400d L you’ll almost never hear the engine as there’s so much torque on tap low down it’ll rarely have to work hard, while fuel consumption is no worse than smaller-engined models. And it’s a long-wheelbase, so if you have a chauffeur to drive it for you, you’ll get all that extra space in the rear seats.
  • If you’re buying as a company car: The S560e L offers considerable savings on company car tax – even with its high P11D value – which makes it by far the pick of the bunch, and you get the added bonus of whisper-quiet running when it’s on electric power only.
  • If you want a drop-top: The S560 Cabriolet Grand Edition is the one to have. Few convertibles offer its combination of ultra luxury, sublime comfort and a full four seats – and it’ll set you back less than a Bentley Continental GT.
  • If you really want your S-Class to be as fast as possible: May we recommend choosing the AMG S63 Coupe? If you’re going to do it, after all, you might as well do it in style – and the aggressive AMG body styling suits the sleek two-door better than it does the four-door saloon or Cabriolet.
Alex Robbins
Published 8 Sept 2021 by Alex Robbins
Alex used to be the used cars editor for What Car? and Autocar as well as the Daily Telegraph's consumer motoring editor. He covers all manner of new car news and road tests, but specialises in writing about used cars and modern classics. He's owned more than 40 cars, and can usually be found browsing the CarGurus classifieds, planning his next purchase.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Four-door saloon
  • Two-door coupe
  • Two-door convertible