Peugeot Traveller Review (2016-present)

Pros

  • Massively roomy for a large family

  • Up to eight seats rather than the usual seven of most large MPVs

  • Electric version has no exhaust emissions

Cons

  • Ordinary to drive

  • Thirstier than a smaller, lighter SUV

  • The electric model has a short range

4/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
Peugeot Traveller front three quarters static

The CarGurus verdict

The Peugeot Traveller is a people carrier that fulfils a very specific purpose: making life easy if you need to shift people regularly. You don’t need to fill every one of the eight seats for the Traveller to make sense, indeed, if you’ve an active life and want a vehicle that will ferry family, friends, kit and work as a workplace, changing room or anything else you want it to do, the Traveller will handle all that and more. It's not exciting to drive, but it's a very, very useful tool. That said, if you’re buying new then the fact it’s now only available in all-electric e-Traveller guise does limit its appeal.

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Multi-seat MPVs used to be extremely popular, but the growth of SUVs and crossovers decimated the traditional MPV market. However, it's quite easy for manufacturers to a multi-seat passenger vehicle spin-off of an existing van, and the commercial vehicle equivalent of the Traveller (i.e. the version without seats) is the Peugeot Expert and, along with the name change and the seats, Peugeot added more exterior colour choices, some windows in place of panels, sliding doors on both sides, alloy wheels, and extra equipment to create the Traveller.

It was introduced by Peugeot in 2017, and replaced the Expert Tepee. Like many rivals, the Peugeot Traveller underlines just how far vans have come in the past decade or so. As of mid-2022 Peugeot only offers the car in an all-electric e-Traveller guise, which means that its appeal isn’t as broad as it was.

  • The Traveller’s individual rear seats can all be equipped with ISOFIX child seat mounts and top tether lashing points, which means you could drive around with a veritable nursery load of nippers in the back. Many of its rivals don’t allow ISOFIX mounts on all of their rear seats, so if you’ve a big, young family, the Peugeot might be ideal.
  • The Traveller is related very closely to the Citroen SpaceTourer, the Toyota ProAce Verso and the Vauxhall Vivaro Life. Indeed, they share a production line, and although they vary a little in their specification and badging, they are otherwise all but identical, so shop around and see which one offers the best value for money.
  • Van-based MPVs used to be compromised in terms of safety, but it’s comforting to know that the Traveller was tested by independent crash testing organisation Euro NCAP and scored five-stars (out of five) for its protection rating.

  • The entry-level – The 120bhp Active in its only available standard-wheelbase is as cheap a Traveller as you’ll find, so if your budget is tight and you need a lot of seats and space, then this is the one to pick. You won't get anywhere particularly quickly, nor will you have the luxury of the Allure trim level, but if your needs are simple, then it’ll do the job well enough.
  • The easy access one – Allure trim adds keyless access and go, electric sliding side doors and particularly handy opening rear glass section on the tailgate. All of that makes getting in and out as easy as it could be, so if you value that, don’t settle for anything less than an Allure model.
  • The executive one – Again an Allure, but the full-on 180bhp diesel with the standard eight-speed automatic transmission and the long-wheelbase. Being an Allure, there’s leather, a panoramic roof and convenience galore, while the long-wheelbase means there’s plenty of space to get comfortable in all the rear seats. For the ultimate in luxury, go for the second-row seats as a pair of captain’s chairs instead of the more usual three-seat option.
  • The city-bound short-hop one – If your journeys are short and you want to avoid emissions on the school run, then the e-Traveller is worth considering. Just be sure you can live with its limited 148-mile range, which will be considerably less in reality if you’re in a hurry, or in the colder months, when the battery's range drops. We’d probably opt for the short-wheelbase version here, given the likely urban location, because it’s a bit easier to find appropriately sized parking spaces.
Kyle Fortune
Published 18 Jan 2022 by Kyle Fortune
Freelance journalist Kyle Fortune has contributed to titles including Autocar, Auto Express, Top Gear, The Daily Telegraph and many more in over 20 years of writing about cars. He brings that insight to the CarGurus editorial team, testing everything from superminis to supercars, with the occasional van thrown in, too.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Van-based MPV