Skip advert
Advertisement

Vauxhall Grandland GSe 2023 review

The most powerful version of Vauxhall’s mid-size SUV offers a decent amount of performance, but it’s more likely to appeal to company car drivers rather than all-out enthusiasts

Overall Auto Express rating

3.5

How we review cars
Avg. savings
£4,808 off RRP*
Find your Vauxhall Grandland
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

Verdict

The latest performance flagship of the Vauxhall Grandland makes more sense as a tax-busting fast SUV rather than a truly sporting one. The Grandland GSe could surprise many hot hatchbacks on the right road, but despite the reworked dynamics, it can't shake its flat-footed feel on more challenging tarmac. It's not the most practical offering either, but the comprehensive kit list, plug-in powertrain and straight-line pace could sway company car buyers. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

Such is the state of the car market, the most powerful Vauxhall on sale today is a tall, hybrid-powered SUV with more torque than a Porsche 911 Carrera. The Vauxhall Grandland isn’t the obvious choice for a performance flagship, but with 296bhp and four-wheel drive, the GSe has the raw power to justify that title. 

In 2023, Vauxhall is re-entering the performance car space to coincide with its push towards electrification, and its new GSe – or Grand Sport Electric – models will take the spotlight from here on in. The badge recalls cars such as the Manta GSi coupe and Carlton GSi sports saloon from years gone by, but the Grandland GSe takes on a very different form to these traditional offerings in both layout and conception. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

Grandland

2024 Vauxhall

Grandland

21,260 milesAutomaticPetrol1.2L

Cash £19,700
View Grandland
Grandland

2023 Vauxhall

Grandland

15,859 milesManualPetrol1.2L

Cash £17,499
View Grandland
Grandland

2023 Vauxhall

Grandland

13,496 milesManualPetrol1.2L

Cash £17,100
View Grandland
Grandland

2023 Vauxhall

Grandland

11,545 milesManualPetrol1.2L

Cash £18,295
View Grandland

The Grandland launched six years ago as Vauxhall's largest SUV, and a heavy facelift in 2021 brought the Nissan Qashqai rival back into contention, with revamped tech and a new look centred around the firm's ‘vizor’ design language. The GSe effectively replaces the 296bhp plug-in hybrid variant, using the same powertrain but with a series of styling and chassis upgrades to match the grunt. 

From the outside at least, the changes are subtle. There's a tweaked front bumper, a new set of alloys, GSe badging and a unique rear apron to distinguish the flagship, but the design is very familiar. Thanks to Vauxhall's signature black grille panel which spans the width of the nose, the Grandland hides its age well but reveals little of its performance credentials. 

The cabin gets a similarly understated makeover, with bespoke Alcantara sports seats and a chunkier steering wheel lifting the ambience. The dashboard is dominated by Vauxhall's dual-screen Pure Panel infotainment set-up, which combines a 10-inch touchscreen with a 12-inch digital instrument panel in the GSe. Both displays are crisp and responsive enough, and the interface is mostly easy to decipher. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

For a starting price of £43,700, the GSe receives a host of standard equipment that includes sat-nav, a wireless smartphone charger, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, along with a 360-degree parking camera and the brand's IntelliLux Pixel headlights. As you'd expect for the price, it's the most generously kitted out Grandland available. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

One or two oddities, such as Vauxhall’s older steering wheel design and temperature displays which repeat on the climate control panel and infotainment screen, stand out amongst the modern tech, but the cabin feels pretty robust on the whole. The gloss black surfaces might attract scratches and fingerprints over time, though, and some of the plastic trim doesn’t feel especially premium. 

Tall adults in the rear won’t be wanting for headroom thanks to the Grandland’s upright stance, but long-legged passengers might be tight for knee room compared with some of the Vauxhall’s more spacious rivals. Packaging the GSe's hybrid battery and rear motor also eats into boot space, which stands at 390 litres, down from 514 litres in combustion-engined models. 

Nevertheless, other Grandlands can't hope to match the GSe's straight-line pace. Sport mode draws the most power from the petrol engine and twin e-motor set-up, resulting in a genuinely rapid turn of speed for a crossover. We'd say it feels Golf GTI-quick, but that'd be unfair as the Grandland reaches 62mph a few tenths faster than Volkswagen's hot hatch, in an impressive 6.1 seconds. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

Unfortunately, the nature of this delivery doesn't encourage you to tap into it very often. Left to its own devices, the eight-speed gearbox clumsily shuffles between ratios, although the considerable pure-electric power does cover for the transmission's delayed reactions. When it does respond by dropping a cog or two, the engine lunges for the redline and doesn't sound particularly pleasant, even though the level of performance is strong. 

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

To make the most of it, the GSe's chassis has been reworked with firmer springs and a new set of dampers, which are designed to strike a better balance between comfort and body control. The electric power steering has been recalibrated for extra precision, too, although low-friction Michelin e.Primacy tyres have been fitted with efficiency in mind. 

Ultimately, the Grandland's tall body and 1,867kg kerb weight dilute any sense of agility on winding roads, and the mass needs to be managed with slower inputs to keep the GSe within its limits. The car generates decent grip once the weight has settled on the outside tyres, but you get very little sense of the load building through the steering wheel. Unless you drive with serious commitment – which feels out of step with the car's character – it's difficult to alter the SUV's trajectory with the throttle, and the handling is largely one-dimensional. 

For most buyers, though, this simply won't matter, and the Grandland counters with staunch four-wheel drive traction in the dry. Switch back to the Hybrid drive mode and the GSe is still able to cover ground swiftly, but it builds a much better case for itself. The coarse engine note settles into the background, the transmission operates more smoothly and the broad spread of electric torque allows you to easily build speed. 

The lack of steering communication is no longer a hindrance while mooching around, but the stiffer chassis is occasionally caught out by rough tarmac, feeling brittle and fidgeting over less than smooth surfaces. Still, the extra control is appreciable over bigger bumps at speed, reducing the distant, floaty feel that plagues some SUVs. 

Thanks to its 14.2kWh battery, the Grandland can achieve 40 miles of pure-electric driving, placing it in the eight per cent Benefit-in-Kind tax bracket for company car buyers. Replenishing the battery takes four hours, but the optional 7.4kW on-board charger slices this time in half. Up to 235.4mpg is possible according to Vauxhall, but in real terms, this figure is only achievable on short journeys with a full battery.

Model:Vauxhall Grandland GSe
Price:£43,700
Engine:1.6-litre turbocharged four-cylinder petrol + 2x e-motors
Power/torque:296bhp/520Nm
Transmission:Eight-speed automatic, four-wheel drive
0-62mph:6.1 seconds
Top speed:146mph
Fuel economy:235.4mpg
CO2:27g/km
On sale:Now

Now read our review of the Grandland GSe's hatchback sibling, the Vauxhall Astra GSe...

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Vauxhall Grandland

Vauxhall Grandland

RRP £35,655Avg. savings £4,808 off RRP*Used from £14,030
Vauxhall Frontera

Vauxhall Frontera

RRP £23,995Avg. savings £2,122 off RRP*
Peugeot 3008

Peugeot 3008

RRP £36,790Avg. savings £5,875 off RRP*Used from £10,695
Renault Austral

Renault Austral

RRP £34,195Avg. savings £3,835 off RRP*
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Have you considered?

Vauxhall Grandland Electric GS long-term test: chilled snacks leave warm impressions
Vauxhall Grandland Electric GS - header

Vauxhall Grandland Electric GS long-term test: chilled snacks leave warm impressions

Long-term tests
6 Jun 2025
KGM Actyon K50 long-term test: Korean SUV proves memorable if nothing else
KGM Actyon K50 long-term - header with laptop

KGM Actyon K50 long-term test: Korean SUV proves memorable if nothing else

Long-term tests
5 Jun 2025
Nissan Ariya review
Nissan Ariya - main image

Nissan Ariya review

In-depth reviews
3 Jun 2025

Most Popular

Citroen is plotting a new 2CV – but the risks are huge
Citroen 2CV retro render

Citroen is plotting a new 2CV – but the risks are huge

We talk to Citroen bosses on plans to reboot its icon – and do they go retro or futuristic?
News
8 Jun 2025
New Kia Sportage breaks cover and it’s sleeker than ever
Kia Sportage - front

New Kia Sportage breaks cover and it’s sleeker than ever

Full specification and details have been announced for the UK version of Kia’s big-selling mid-size SUV
News
4 Jun 2025
Best mid-size SUVs to buy 2025 - our expert pick of the top options
June 2025 Best mid-size SUVs

Best mid-size SUVs to buy 2025 - our expert pick of the top options

Mid-size SUVs are hugely popular in the UK, and these are the very best of the current crop
Best cars & vans
4 Jun 2025