The Range Rover is one of those vanishingly rare cars that defies the industry’s traditional product cycle. The current model arrived in 2012 and even in these unpredictable times it’s still hitting the spot with its high-end client base. But then you see the new one – only the fifth generation in 51 years – and you realise that there are some things even the Range Rover can’t out-run forever. Namely, the march of technology and connectivity, and more pressingly the need to future-proof it as climate change ceases to be a debate and becomes a genuine existential emergency.
This is an all-new car in every aspect with a critical reappraisal of its place in the world. Key here are two plug-in hybrids, badged P440e and P510e (that equates to a 434 and 503bhp power output respectively). These combine Land Rover’s 3.0-litre six cylinder petrol engine with a 105kW battery feeding an electric motor with a useable capacity of 31.8kWh, to deliver ‘up to 62 miles’ of pure electric driving with CO2 emissions around 30g/km. We’d say 50 miles in the real world is more plausible. Land Rover reckons that typical Range Rover customers will be able to complete 75 per cent of their journeys without ever bothering the internal combustion engine. Not quite a ‘get out of jail free’ card, but a big improvement.
WHAT’S NEW?
Everything. The outgoing car remains such an archetype that the scale of the challenge here is substantial. Not that you’d ever get even a whiff of self-doubt from the company’s chief creative officer, the formidable – and gleefully opinionated – Gerry McGovern. (He doesn’t wade in water, he walks on it.) There are five fundamental visual pillars on the Range Rover: the falling roofline, pronounced waistline, the rising sill, clamshell bonnet and floating roof. They’ve all been reimagined here, although you need to see new and old side-by-side to grasp just how ingeniously nuanced the changes are. The panel gaps and shutlines are fabulously tight, and the flush glazing abuts the bodysides in memorable fashion. The rain guttering is hidden, too. Design pushed engineering – and vice versa – and the result is as much an ode to metal-beating and manufacturing technique as it is aesthetics.
This is a car that will be at its imperious best sweeping along the motorway like an automotive super-yacht. The car’s rear end taps into that idea, and is the area of the car that’s most obviously different. Check out the vertical tail-lights, and the way the whole thing resolves. It’s also notably aerodynamic for a big SUV, with a drag co-efficient of 0.30 and a smoother frontal area. Americans might spot shades of Kia’s impressive but not-for-Europe Telluride, but that’s no bad thing. It’s a great looking car, that.
Land Rover says it has taken out 125 patents for the new car and carried out a rigorous development programme that encompassed 140,000 hours of computational analysis. It’s also connected up the wazoo, has a sophisticated air filtration system, active noise cancellation tech in its headrests, and Standard and Long Wheelbase iterations are available, with the option of seven seats for the first time
WHAT IS IT LIKE ON THE INSIDE?

Range Rover is going hell for leather to deliver the ultimate modern luxury automotive experience, a process that no longer exclusively relies on skinning cows. TG’s D350 is trimmed in Ultrafabric and Kvadrat, sustainable alternatives to leather that prove to be both pleasingly tactile and phenomenally comfortable, if a little oppressive tonally.
That said, the all-singing long wheelbase SV fitted with the Signature Suite really is something. Highlights include a selection of plated metals, ceramics, mosaic marquetry, and contrasting colours for the front and rear seats. Nothing oppressively obsidian in here. The four-seat version liberates acres of rear-legroom for the occupants, there’s massage functionality, and a ‘club table’ rises on a 3D printed support out of a fixed, full-length centre console. It motors into view in a spectacularly well-engineered manner, hands-down winner in the admittedly niche ‘rear compartment deployable table’ battle. But it speaks volumes about the lengths Land Rover has gone to.
Look long and hard and you won’t find a shabby piece of switchgear or a duff button anywhere. It has the best interior door handles of any car on sale. The doors themselves shut with a resoundingly expensive thunk, and in a move nicked from the Rolls-Royce playbook they can be specced with power assistance; radar and ultrasonic sensors detect hazards, and the doors can even recognise inclines. You can close the driver’s door by pushing the brake pedal, via the central touchscreen, or by using a switch by the grab handles. This might be over-egging the closing-the-door pudding. Range Rovers, notoriously, are coveted by car thieving gangs; the new one uses Ultra Wide Band transceivers for improved security.
The driving position is the customary commanding Range Rover affair. The modern bit extends to an unprecedented level of technology. A new electrical architecture supports software-over-the-air updates, and covers 69 individual ECUs capable of handling 22,880 network messages. This is The Matrix on wheels. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are available, and Alexa voice AI is embedded and works in the familiar manner. And it actually does work, unlike most in-car voice activation software, which remains infuriatingly hit-or-miss.
Infotainment is taken care of via an enhanced version of the existing Pivi Pro system, now with a 13.1in touchscreen, the largest ever fitted in a Land Rover product. The graphics are crisp, the user interface generally pretty good, if not as intuitive as the system in the latest Mercedes S-Class or as imaginatively designed as the one in the BMW iX. There’s the option of haptic feedback, too, although that slows things down fractionally so you might want to turn it off.
Meanwhile, Land Rover is the latest car company to over-complicate the climate control, despite the presence of rotary buttons for temperature and fan speed. Direction is done by a graphic on the central screen which makes little sense. The air vents themselves are discreetly sited at the top of what used to be called the dashboard. That’s a quaint notion in the new Range Rover, whose mix of materials and tech adds up to what may well be the best car interior in the world right now.

WHAT IS IT LIKE TO DRIVE?
The new Range Rover takes aim at the latest Mercedes S-Class and the Rolls-Royce Cullinan as a curator of the ultimate luxury automotive experience. It’s underpinned by an all-new chassis, a mostly aluminium configuration dubbed MLA-Flex that works in conjunction with Land Rover’s Integrated Chassis Control which the company reckons moves the car from ‘a mechanical world to a mechatronic ecosystem’. Answers on a postcard, please. High tensile steel in critical areas of the body delivers a structure that’s up to 50 per cent stiffer than the old one.
The Range Rover rides on fully independent air suspension that incorporates a new five-axle set-up at the rear and twin-valve dampers, while a new 48-volt electronic roll control system checks excess body movements. It also uses eHorizon tech in the GPS to scan the road ahead for imperfections in order to prime the suspension.
So it feels a little odd to slide behind the wheel of the D350 first. A diesel just doesn’t feel terribly 2022, although people are apparently still buying them. Land Rover’s Ingenium twin turbo 3.0-litre features 48-volt mild hybrid tech and a starter generator for improved efficiency; it averages a claimed 37.2mpg and its CO2 emissions dip below 200g/km. It’s brisk enough and though not the last word in refinement it’s never sounded better – or quieter – than it does here. On part-throttle you’d barely know it was there. Handling? Yes there is some, but a quick hustle along the twisty coastal roads of our northern Californian test route is enough to establish that the Range Rover would prefer it if you enjoyed the view – inside and out.
The P400 and in particular the P530 are obviously more fun to punt along. The bigger BMW unit has a new air intake (for wading), a redesigned sump (for 45 degrees of articulation during off-roading), and it’s been beefed up to survive Land Rover’s durability tests (they slam their cars into concrete kerbs at 25mph). It’s also rapid – 0-62mph in 4.6 seconds – but the novelty wears off just as quickly. The Range Rover’s electric power steering is linear but over-light, the ZF automatic as silky as ever. There’s grip, poise and body movements are well contained, but this isn’t a car that really wants to be cornered on its – substantial – door-handles. Better to back off and enjoy the ride, which is sublime even on 23in wheels. We had a quick play in Dynamic mode, but quickly returned to the Comfort chassis setting.
Really, the focus is on overall refinement; the Rangie repels the privations of the real world more effectively than anything this side of a Rolls-Royce Ghost. Advanced speaker tech builds on the inherent integrity of the chassis; a revised active noise cancellation system monitors wheel vibrations, and mechanical and tyre noise and uses the 1,600w Meridian audio system to send out a noise-cancelling signal. There are 35 speakers to play with, including four hidden within the head-rests.
Other highlights include all-wheel steering, which allows the rear axle to pivot at up to seven degrees. It sharpens high speed stability but more importantly improves the Range Rover’s low-speed manoeuvrability. In fact, it now has the best turning circle of any Land Rover. LA hotel car jockeys will be thrilled to hear that. If their journey to the underground parking facility involves muddy inclines, something’s gone badly wrong. Nonetheless, we can reveal that the new Range Rover remains unsurpassable off-road. Terrain Response 2 automatically taps into the various chassis systems, or you can set things up manually.
