Jaguar X-Type Estate (04-10) - Review

Review by Simon Harris on
Last Updated: 11 February 2009
The five-door version of the X-Type was Jaguar's first ever estate car and thanks to excellent refinement and a good-size boot, it's usefully practical. It may not have the wide range of engines alternatives like the BMW 3-Series and Mercedes C-Class offer, but does have strong diesels including the excellent 2.2-litre unit. The ride quality is superb and it's well built too, but the rather traditional Jaguar looks mean it's not always a popular choice with younger drivers. In 2008 it was revised with bolder front and rear bumpers, but while it's not a bad car, the X-Type Estate, like the saloon, fails to reach the high benchmark set by the German premium makes.
3.5 out of 5

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3.5 out of 5

Performance

Diesel is by far the most popular engine choice in the X-Type Estate. Two are available - both sourced from Ford - the first a 130bhp 2.0-litre engine which offers decent pace and impressive refinement while returning 49mpg. A 2.2-litre with 155bhp was launched in 2005 and almost matches the 2.0-litre for fuel economy, but feels much livelier and sprints from 0-62mph in 9.3 seconds - around a second quicker. In March 2008 this version was offered with an automatic transmission for the first time and the six-speed gearbox is exceptionally smooth. The Sport mode improves responsiveness ensuring it feels keen accelerating out of slower corners, and there is also a manual mode using the gearstick. The petrol line-up includes a 2.5-litre and a 3.0-litre V6 - both with four-wheel drive as standard. Jaguar also offered a 2.1-litre V6 - badged a 2.0-litre - petrol model with front-wheel drive. With 157bhp its performance is quick enough , but it's a much thirstier engine than four-cylinder engines. All engines, with the exception of the 2.2 diesel, come with a five speed manual or five-speed automatic transmission (2.0D manual only). In Spring 2008 the line-up was tweaked with all the petrols, aside from the 3.0-litre V6, dropped from the range.

3.5 out of 5

Handling

The X-Type has been designed to offer the type of comfort expected in a Jaguar along with nimble and agile handling. It offers exceptional ride comfort with good body control and responsive steering. It isn't as sharp or as good to drive as a BMW 3-Series but nevertheless, the Jaguar is able to cover ground on motorways and A-roads briskly and with minimal fuss. The 2.5-litre and 3.0-litre models come with four-wheel drive, while all other models are front-wheel drive - however whichever model you choose, all handle predictably and remain composed through corners. Unfortunately there are few thrills to be had along the way.