Skip advert
Advertisement

Peugeot 207 1.4 S

The new 207 retains the look of the model it succeeds, although it’s marked out by bold bumpers and a gaping grille

Why change a winning formula? That’s the question top brass at Peugeot were asking themselves when they started developing a replacement for the successful 206. The new 207 retains the look of the model it succeeds, although it’s marked out by bold bumpers and a gaping grille.

It’s the longest of our five contenders – indeed, as with the Corsa, the Peugeot has grown considerably. Yet despite having a wheelbase 29mm greater than the Vauxhall’s, the 207 doesn’t offer as much leg or headroom in the back. Its rear windows are tiny – as is the case on the Corsa – but the 207 has a tighter roofline, so it’s the French car that feels more claustrophobic in the rear.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Video: watch CarBuyer's video review of the Peugeot 207

[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"content_narrow","fid":"69208","attributes":{"alt":"","class":"media-image"}}]]

The boot also disappoints – its 270-litre capa­city is the smallest on test – yet things improve up front. Providing a wide range of steering wheel movement and superb seats, the 207 has the best driving position, while visibility is good, too.

What’s more, the dashboard layout is smart; the upper section is stylishly designed and feels solidly put together, although some of the plastics used lower down in the cabin are less impressive. Interior stowage is poor, with half the glovebox lost because Peugeot didn’t swap the fusebox over in the transition from left to right-hand drive. The cheap-looking heater controls are another prominent example of cost-cutting, and this takes the edge off the feelgood factor. As a result, the 207’s cockpit can’t match the quality of the Corsa’s or the individuality of the Clio’s.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

EV6

2024 Kia

EV6

23,293 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £23,800
View EV6
Yaris

2026 Toyota

Yaris

7,667 milesAutomaticPetrol1.5L

Cash £16,495
View Yaris
I-PACE

2023 Jaguar

I-PACE

26,108 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £20,871
View I-PACE
Discovery Sport

2025 Land Rover

Discovery Sport

22,459 milesAutomaticDiesel2.0L

Cash £34,275
View Discovery Sport

Still, if there’s one thing Peugeot has always got right, it’s making its small cars fun to drive. The 207 offers lots of grip and is nicely balanced when cornering. Body roll is well controlled, and although it rides harder than the Clio, it isn’t quite as firm as the Corsa SXi.

The steering has a nice feel and offers the sharpest turn-in of all five cars in this test. It’s just a shame the five-speed gearbox has such a vague and flimsy shift action – this is one legacy from the 206 that the 207 could do with­out, as it spoils the whole driving experience.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The 1.4-litre engine is also carried over from the old car, and it shows. It’s short on refinement and becomes strained high in the rev range. Delivering 90bhp, it’s 1bhp up on the Corsa, but trails the Clio by 8bhp. As a result, the 207 is 1.5 seconds behind the Renault in the 0-60mph sprint. Yet the Peugeot has the most torque, at 133Nm, which translates into impressive in-gear pace.

But this isn’t matched by its ability to stop. Although the middle pedal feels good underfoot, the brakes took 39.5 metres to bring the 207 to a halt from 60mph – that’s the longest here. And while the car proved comfortable over distances, it was noisier than the Clio and Corsa at 30 and 70mph. It’s simply not as well insulated or built.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

The 207 scores well on safety, though. It ach­ieved a five-star Euro NCAP crash test rating, picking up more points overall than the Renault.

Our £10,295 A/C S model is cheaper than the Corsa and Clio, but alloys and front foglamps are missing from the kit list. Go for the £10,895 Sport, though, and they are standard. As with the Corsa and Clio, stability control is an option, yet Peu­geot charges £100 more for it than Vauxhall, at £350.

Attractive to look at and entertaining to drive, the 207 has lots to offer. But the gearbox, engine and rear cabin space count against it here.

Details

Price: £10,295
Model tested: Peugeot 207 S 1.4
Chart position: 3
WHY: The new 207 is available in three or five-door bodystyles, and there’s a choice of six trim levels. Five engines are offered: two petrol powerplants and three diesels. In this test, we drive a 1.4-litre S fitted with air-conditioning – and at £10,295, the Peu­geot is one of the cheapest cars in our line-up.

Economy

The differences in this class are small, and we averaged 34.7mpg – 1.1mpg more than the Corsa. But a five-litre bigger tank gives the French hatch 49 miles of extra range.

Residuals

With a retained value of 45.5 per cent, the 207 is the second strongest performer. It should be worth £4,684 in three years’ time – £408 more than the Clio.

Servicing

While the Peugeot is the most costly car to service, checks are needed only every 20,000 miles. But the firm’s dealers came 31st out of 33 in our 2006 Driver Power satisfaction survey.

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Omoda 5

Omoda 5

RRP £24,040Avg. savings £1,535 off RRP*Used from £18,495
Volkswagen Golf

Volkswagen Golf

RRP £25,250Avg. savings £2,502 off RRP*Used from £8,995
Skoda Kodiaq

Skoda Kodiaq

RRP £39,045Avg. savings £4,255 off RRP*Used from £11,195
Audi A3

Audi A3

RRP £26,310Avg. savings £2,713 off RRP*Used from £9,970
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power
Toyota Yaris - front (watermarked)

New Toyota Yaris: next-gen supermini to embrace hybrid and EV power

The new Toyota Yaris will arrive by 2028, and our exclusive images preview how it could look
News
5 May 2026
New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover
Freelander 8 - front

New Freelander 8: huge SUV is coming to the UK, just don’t call it a Land Rover

We get the scoop about a UK sales confirmation of the new joint-venture between Chery and Jaguar Land Rover
News
28 Apr 2026
Nissan Ariya gets a new look and a lower price
New Nissan Ariya facelift - front tracking

Nissan Ariya gets a new look and a lower price

Leaf-inspired styling for Nissan’s flagship EV as it looks to stay competitive
News
6 May 2026