Honda HR-V boot space, practicality and safety
- Good rear seat space
- Can be a pain to get into
- Boot is small
How much space is there?
Up front there are no complaints. Tall people will find enough head and legroom, while front-seat passengers won’t be knocking knees with the drivers.
There are plenty of storage cubbies, including good size door bins and two small spaces for phones and similar small items below the infotainment screen. The cupholders are acceptable, if not entirely suitable for large bottles.
Rear space is impressive, with only headroom for the tallest of adults being affected ever so slightly by the HR-V’s sloping, coupe-like roofline. However the shape of the roof and small-ish door openings make getting into the rear a bit of a faff. Even short people will have to duck to get in.
Boot space and storage
Honda’s very clever Magic Seats in the rear are still present and correct. These allow you to flip the seat bases up and out of the way, so you can stand tall things in the rear footwells.
Open the electronically-operated boot and you’ll be disappointed though. The load capacity of 316 litres is paltry, even compared to the form-over-function Vauxhall Mokka or Nissan Juke, despite the Honda being around 300mm longer than both of these rivals. This figure drops to 304 litres on top spec Advance Style models because of the upgraded sound system.
Bootspace expands to 1,290 litres when the rear seats are lowered and also includes the boot/luggage floor box which acts as an additional storage compartment.
Is it easy to park?
The car’s squat dimensions ensure it is relatively easy to park. The sloping roofline makes the rear window a bit narrow, but all models come with a reversing camera and front and rear parking sensors.
Safety
- Four out of five star safety rating
- Lots of kit as standard
- Some of it is quite annoying
Safety authority EuroNCAP gave the HR-V four out of five in 2022. It scored particularly well for adult occupation safety, but didn’t achieve a high enough result in the vulnerable road users category to achieve a full five out of five scoring.
All three trims broadly share the same safety features. This includes a Lane Keeping Assist System, Lane Departure Warning and Road Departure Mitigation. Only the Blindspot Info and Cross Traffic Monitor is absent from the Elegance.
Generally all of the safety tech works well, but the Road Departure Mitigation Warning system kicks in far too easily. It really tugs at the steering wheel aggressively at times when it simply doesn’t need to, and you need to manually switch it off every time your drive.
Watch: Honda HR-V Euro NCAP crash test
Euro NCAP rating
What is Euro NCAP? ⓘ | |
---|---|
Adult Occupant: | 82% |
Child Occupant: | 75% |
Vulnerable Road User: | 72% |
Safety Assist: | 78% |
Equipment and options
- 3x3 point rear seat belts
- ABS
- Alarm
- Alloy wheels
- Audio remote
- Body coloured bumpers
- Central locking
- Driver`s airbag
- Electric mirrors
- Folding rear seats
- Front electric windows
- Headlight washers
- Heated mirrors
- Heated seats
- Height adjustable drivers seat
- Isofix child seat anchor points
- Parking sensors
- PAS
- Passenger`s airbag
- Rear electric windows
- Remote locking
- Sat Nav
- Side airbags
- Steering wheel rake adjustment
- Steering wheel reach adjustment
- Traction control
- Partial leather seat trim
- n/a
- Partial leather seat trim
- Roof rails
- n/a
- Air conditioning
- Cloth seat trim
- n/a
Dimensions
Length | 4340mm |
---|---|
Width | 2028mm |
Height | 1582mm |