Dacia Sandero 2013-2020 review | A cheap and robust used supermini

Pros

  • Very cheap to buy

  • Roomy and practical cabin

  • Affordable to fuel and insure

Cons

  • Modest safety standards

  • Stingy list of standard kit

  • Basic fit and finish

3/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
2013-2020 Dacia Sandero Generational Review summaryImage

The CarGurus verdict

Judged on its own merits, there are a number of superminis that you would buy before the Sandero. The Ford Fiesta and Seat Ibiza are more fun to drive; the Skoda Fabia is more practical; and the Kia Rio and Hyundai i20 have stronger reputations for quality and reliability.

But the Sandero has its own USP: it's cheap and cheerful, and there’s a lot to be said for those low prices in these straitened times. If you want or need a car, and have a limited budget, you could do a lot worse than pick up a Sandero. True, it isn’t as good in most departments as more established rivals, but being inexpensive and reliable – which the Sandero is – it still has a lot going for it.

And it's not as if you have to hold your nose while driving it, either (which we wouldn’t recommend from a road safety point of view). It performs perfectly well, is comfortable enough to travel in and is spacious enough for most owners’ needs. It’s not going to win any engineering or styling prizes, but the Sandero is no joke.

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What is the Dacia Sandero?

The Dacia Sandero is a joke. Or, at least, it was for many years on a certain popular TV car show. A supermini that would be the cheapest new car on sale in Britain? Built in Romania? Laughable.

But dismissing this second-generation Sandero is a fool’s errand. First off, Dacia is owned by Renault, which, it's fair to say, knows a thing or two about building cars. Secondly, Dacia took tried and tested technology to use as the basis for the Sandero.

The result is an inexpensive budget supermini that offers straightforward, accessible motoring to many drivers. Sure, rivals like the Ford Fiesta, Skoda Fabia might come with more toys, slicker styling or higher-quality materials – but the Sandero’s twin USPs are value and practicality, and if those are your priorities, it’s hard to match.

  • The Dacia Sandero was once the cheapest new car on sale in the UK, with a starting price of less than £7,000 in Access spec. However, don’t expect to find many of these cars on the used car market: British buyers like a few creature comforts in their cars and the Access model has few of these. The fact that the windows are not electric might baffle some children who have never seen winders, for example, and you don't even get a stereo, let alone a touchscreen.
  • The Dacia Sandero uses engineering technology that dates back to the early 2000s that was developed by the Renault-Nissan Alliance and used as the basis for a number of popular models. Think of the Sandero has a rehashed and mildly rejigged mk3 Renault Clio – the model that went on sale in 2005 – and you’ll have some idea of its origins.
  • When it was crash-tested in 2013, the Sandero only managed a Euro NCAP score of four stars, which wasn’t too far behind the best in class at the time. It was given a score of 80% for adult occupant protection and 79% for child occupants. However, it’s worth keeping in mind that safety standards moved on rapidly in the ensuing years, so by the time it went out of production in 2020, this second-generation Sandero will have gone from being a bit behind its rivals, to well behind them. Just something to keep in mind if you’re comparing later examples with their contemporaries.

  • If you want a budget option (of the supermini class’s budget option): try and find a Sandero in the entry-level Access trim. It is really basic, though; it was only available with white paint and black plastic bumpers, and you didn’t even get a radio – so only buy one if you’re prepared to make your own entertainment on longer drives.
  • If you want the cheapest Sandero to run: the most economical version is the diesel-engined 1.5-litre dCi 90. It doesn’t exactly make for quick progress, with 0-62mph taking 11.8 seconds, but it should return around 60mpg in the real world.
  • If you want the plushest Sandero around: Go for the Laureate (or Comfort after 2018). These were priced at £2,000 more than the base-spec model when the Sandero was new, but proved popular nonetheless, and as a result, there are plenty of examples floating around on the used market.
  • If you want a fast Sandero: well, you’re fresh out of luck. None of the Sandero variants offer anything that could be considered strong performance, but the ‘quickest’ is powered by Renault's TCe 90 petrol engine that produces 89bhp and eventually finds its way to 62mph from a standing start in 11.1 seconds.
Craig Thomas
Published 8 Sept 2021 by Craig Thomas
Craig Thomas is a motoring journalist with over 15 years' experience, writing for magazines, national newspapers, websites and specialist automotive publications. London-based, so EVs are a particular area of interest. And fast estates. Always fast estates.
Alex Robbins
Updated 10 Feb 2026 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

  • Five-door hatchback