It makes the most sense as a company car, but this PHEV can’t emulate the blend of talents that makes its purely petrol sibling so brilliant
Suffice it to say that we rather like the latest Skoda Octavia. “This rightly-popular car has taken a step forward in interior quality and practicality as well as being one of the best-driving and comfortable Octavias ever,” opined Andrew English when he first drove a diesel estate version in a pandemic-heavy June 2020. I wrote: “The Octavia leads the class: in comfort, quality and practicality” after testing the petrol hatchback later that year.
However, the one Octavia we haven’t yet driven is the plug-in hybrid (PHEV), or ‘iV’ in Skoda parlance. This is important, both because of the tax benefits afforded to PHEVs as company cars and because the Octavia’s blend of value and space make it inherently attractive both to fleet managers and to company car user-choosers. The Octavia iV, then, should be the ideal company car. Is that the case?
It hasn’t been all that hard to turn the Octavia into a plug-in hybrid. Skoda simply nabbed the same 1.4-litre petrol engine and 13kWh battery pack combination we’ve already seen in several other Volkswagen Group plug-ins.
This powertrain now offers a variety of outputs, two of which are available in the Octavia; a 201bhp version in the SE L, and a hotter 242bhp set-up in the vRS model.