Volvo EX90 Review (2024-present)

3.0

Expert review

Pros

  • Looks good inside and out

  • Excellent refinement

  • Stuffed with equipment

Cons

  • Very expensive

  • Ride isn’t as plush as you might expect

  • Massive over-reliance on touchscreen technology

3/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
Volvo EX90 front driving

The CarGurus verdict

There’s a lot to like about the new Volvo EX90. It looks great inside and out, it’s impressively practical, it’s incredibly refined, it has an overabundance of power and performance, it has very presentable range figures, and the high-spec trim levels in which it’s currently exclusively available are simply brimming with luxury and safety tech.

Having said all that, there are some flaws. It’s very expensive for one thing, while the ride isn’t as cosseting as you might expect for a car of this type. There’s also the fact that the whole thing generally feels less like a feat of engineering and more like a triumph of computer programming, and even those who welcome that will struggle to get their heads around how to use the ridiculously over-complicated infotainment system. Nonetheless, it’s a likeable car that will be a pleasure to own.

Search for a Volvo EX90 on CarGurus

What is the Volvo EX90?

The EX90 is the car that many Volvo fans have been waiting a long time for. This is a large, luxurious seven-seater SUV in the same mould as the Volvo XC90, one of the Scandinavian company’s most beloved models of recent years, but with an all-electric powertrain that’ll see this type of large Volvo into the next generation of motoring.

Fans of the XC90 needn't worry: that model continues in Volvo’s line-up in a heavily revised form, offered exclusively with plug-in hybrid power. That means that the EX90 is there to complement the XC90, rather than replace it.

That won’t stop you drawing parallels between the two, though. Both take up a similar amount of space on the road and have a similar amount of space inside - so expect impressive practicality - while both have cool design and a plush, stylish feel. Both also have an emphasis on luxury kit and safety, too, even if on that score, the new car has its older sibling significantly outgunned from a technology point of view.

To begin with, the EX90 is only available in super-powerful Twin Motor all-wheel drive form, with two power outputs on offer. The regular Twin Motor has 402bhp, while the Twin Motor Performance version has 510bhp. Enough to be getting on with, then. It’s also available exclusively in one top-end trim level with all the bells and whistles provided as standard. Later on, we expect more humble trim levels to become available, along with less maniacal Single Motor powertrains.

In terms or rivals, there aren’t a great deal of direct ones. The Mercedes EQS SUV is an all-electric luxury SUV with seven seats, and the forthcoming electric Range Rover will be, too. The Kia EV9 may not have the badge appeal of these two, but it arguably feels like the EX90’s most direct competition.

Large electric prestige SUVs such as the Audi Q8 e-tron and BMW iX will also be considered rivals, even though they’re not available with seven seats. The same goes for the Polestar 3, which actually shares the EX90’s platform, batteries, electric motors, and pretty much everything else from a mechanical perspective.

  • Volvo is a brand famed for its safety, and the company says that part of the reason for all the EX90’s technical trickery is to make it even safer. As you’d expect, plenty of driver assistance tech is standard, and this includes blind spot information with steer assist, cross traffic alert with autobrake, rear collision warning and mitigation, door opening alert, driver attention monitoring, a lane keeping aid, and intelligent speed assistance. Ultra trim also comes as standard with something called Safe Space Technology, which uses a front-facing roof-mounted Lidar, along with a collection of numerous long-range radars, cameras and sensors, to build up a real-time 360-degree digital picture of the world around you, allowing the various assistance systems to react more quickly and more effectively. The system also constitutes the technological hardware needed for fully autonomous driving, and when that finally becomes legal, the functionality can be enabled using over-the-air updates. There is the slightly strange side-effect, though, that the bump in the roof over the windscreen of the car that houses the Lidar makes the EX90 look a bit like a taxi, albeit a very large, very posh one.
  • Given the array of safety features on board, we’d be absolutely stunned if the EX90 didn’t achieve the full five-star rating in Euro NCAP crash tests. Even more so, because that’s a rating that’s been achieved by every single Volvo model tested by the body since 2001.
  • Aside from safety, another thing that Volvo has become known for in recent years is its interior style and quality, and we can report that both are abundantly evident in the EX90. The minimalist design with almost no switchgear may be catastrophic for ergonomics, but there’s little argument that it looks good, while there are various interesting shapes and contours to look at, and the materials feel top notch. We particularly like the classy-looking birch wood inlays, while the Nordico synthetic leather upholstery - that’s made out of recycled plastic bottles, among other recycled materials - looks and feels convincing.

  • If you want the fast one: There’s currently no version of the EX90 that’s going to leave you feeling short-changed for pace, because both Twin Motor versions are outrageously fast. For ultimate effect, though, the Performance model has the edge, with 510bhp and a 0-62mph sprint time of 4.9 seconds.
  • If you want to save a bit of cash: The regular Twin Motor may not be quite as quick as the Performance version against the stopwatch, but it’s still way quicker than it needs to be, and it still does every bit as well for range and equipment, so save yourself the extra few grand in purchase price.
  • If you want to save yourself a bit more cash: We’d be tempted to wait a while for the inevitable Single Motor versions to come along. These will likely be much cheaper due to their reduced power and drivetrain hardware, and also because they’ll likely be offered in more modest trim levels. Sure, they won’t be as quick as the Twin Motor versions, but we’d argue that a big, lumbering car like the EX90 doesn’t really need such performance anyway, and that the Single Motor model will very likely be quick enough.
Ivan Aistrop
Published 10 Jan 2025 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 SUV