Toyota Proace Verso Review (2016-present)

Pros

  • Enormously practical

  • Very solidly built

  • Comfortable and easy to drive

Cons

  • Infotainment feels very out of date

  • Not cheap

  • Entry model misses some important safety kit

3/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
Toyota Proace Verso Static

The CarGurus verdict

Practicality and versatility are the two areas in which any MPV needs to dazzle, and the Toyota Proace does just that. It’s also solidly made, pleasant to drive and comes with a cracking warranty, and being powered by diesel engines, it has an interesting USP against the equivalent all-electric offerings from Citroen, Peugeot and Vauxhall.

It’s close on price to most of its rivals, although arguably a bit too close to some that will probably be deemed more desirable, which is even less forgivable given that the basic versions of the Verso miss out on some very important equipment. However, choose wisely, and drive a hard bargain, and you’ll be getting yourself a very capable carry-all.

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What is the Toyota Proace Verso?

A quick glance might have you convinced that the vehicle in front of you should be loaded up to the gunwales with Amazon packages, but the Proace Verso is in fact a vehicle designed to carry people rather than parcels.

It’s based on the Proace panel van, but the Verso gets seats and windows to turn it from cargo-carrier into people-pleaser.

The minimum seat count in this huge people-carrier is seven while the maximum is nine, making it an interesting solution for folk who often have a large family - or a small football team - in tow. And the boxy shape means the seats are surrounded by more space than any SUV can muster, too.

  • As is the case with most commercial vehicles – not to mention many passenger cars – the Proace is the result of a joint development project undertaken with other manufacturers, designed to reduce research, development and production costs. As such, the Proace is mechanically very similar to the Citroen Spacetourer, Peugeot Traveller and Vauxhall Vivaro Life. However, the Toyota version has one important difference. With the other three vehicles, the combustion engine choices that were once offered have since been dropped, leaving only electric versions that have less-than-stellar ranges. So, if you’re a high-mileage minicabber, the Toyota is the obvious choice.
  • Like all Toyotas, the Proace Verso potentially comes with one of the best warranty packages in the automotive business. We say ‘potentially’, because it comes with rather a large caveat. If you’re not careful about where you get your car serviced, then you have very run-of-the-mill three-year, 60,000-mile cover, which is the bare minimum you should expect on any new car. If, however, you get your car serviced according to schedule at a Toyota main dealer, then your warranty is automatically extended by a year each time, up to a maximum of 10 years or 100,000 miles.
  • Talking of the servicing schedule, your Proace Verso will need maintenance every two years or 25,000 miles, which is pretty good. However, if you choose a version with the higher-powered 174bhp 2.0-litre engine, those intervals reduce to every year or 20,000 miles.

  • If you want the sensible one: The Toyota is certainly the van-based MPV you buy if you’re choosing with your head. It’s a very impressive all-rounder in terms of practicality and driving manners, it’s very solidly made, as we’ve heard it comes with a tremendous warranty programme, and as we will find out in a moment, cars don’t get much more reliable than Toyotas. It’s enormously difficult to argue with.
  • If you want the funky one: Even though the ID.Buzz has come along to properly recapture the nostalgia and sentimentality left behind by the original Volkswagen camper van, the VW Multivan also manages to retain an element of that residual coolness, and it’s a much more direct rival for the Proace. Definitely the image-conscious choice in the sector.
  • If you want the posh one: The Mercedes V-Class may be based on a commercial vehicle like the rest, but this van-based MPV feels almost as posh inside as any other Mercedes when you’re ensconced in your cushy leatherbound chair. No wonder they’re used to shuttle VIPs and celebs from gala, to premiere, to afterparty.
  • If you want the electric one: Like we’ve said, courtesy of the joint development project that spawned the Proace Verso, there are several all-but-identical alternatives that now run solely on electric power, those being the Citroen Spacetourer, Peugeot Traveller and Vauxhall Vivaro Life.
Ivan Aistrop
Published 15 Sept 2023 by Ivan Aistrop
Ivan Aistrop is a Contributing Editor at CarGurus UK. Ivan has been at the sharp end of UK motoring journalism since 2004, working mostly for What Car?, Auto Trader and CarGurus, as well as contributing reviews and features for titles including Auto Express and Drivetribe.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Five-door MPV