2007 Ford Mondeo Reviews

You'll find all our 2007 Ford Mondeo reviews right here. 2007 Ford Mondeo prices range from $3,190 for the Mondeo Lx to $7,700 for the Mondeo Xr5 Turbo.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Ford dating back as far as 1995.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Ford Mondeo, you'll find it all here.

Used Ford Mondeo review: 2007-2015
By Ewan Kennedy · 14 Feb 2017
Ewan Kennedy road tests and reviews the 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015 Ford Mondeo as a used buy.
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Used Ford Mondeo review: 2007-2013
By Ewan Kennedy · 13 Jan 2014
Ford Mondeos are medium to large cars from Europe that have had an on-again off-again career in Australia. In its latest iteration, introduced in 2007, the Mondeo is almost in the Falcon class.
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Ford Mondeo Zetec 2007 Review
By CarsGuide team · 08 Nov 2007
It's been seven years since Ford had a Mondeo in its line up; the last one was a flop, but this latest - and innovative - version comes with impeccable credentials.
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Ford Mondeo 2007 review
By Karla Pincott · 27 Oct 2007
Time changes everything in the car business.The latest example is the Ford Mondeo, withdrawn from sales here in 2000 when company president Tom Gorman said it was important to concentrate on volume sellers, not “rats and mice”.Now the rat is back as a far different creature from the dowdy mid-sizer that failed at its first try here in the days when Ford was the Falcon motor company.Gorman now says the move away from big cars and the boom in small and medium-car sales makes the Mondeo a must.“The growth in this mid-size segment, the growth in four-cylinders, has been significant and we had to respond to that,” he says.“If that hadn't happened, if oil prices hadn't moved and petrol prices hadn't moved correspondingly, I don't think we would have been in the position to say we can make good solid business sense of this.”Ford is making a conservative sales forecast of 500 Mondeo deliveries a month, with a sedan and hatch priced from $29,990.But that could easily be beaten.“Nearly everything in the Mondeo's segment, except (sales leader) Camry, is doing low volume,” he says.“But if you look at Toyota's numbers, they're making the numbers by flogging rental cars. If you look at what they do with Corolla and Camry, and even Aurion, it's a ton of rental cars."“We're trying to get into a better space and get more private buyers.”The European-built Mondeo has plenty of cabin space, a good spread of powertrains including a diesel, generous equipment, a strategic price that should avoid the pitfall that undermined Holden's Vectra, which shoppers saw as being too close in price to the Commodore; and fantastic looks.The four models start with the $29,990 sedan-only LX. It has a 118kW/208Nm 2.3-litre four-cylinder Duratech engine mated to a six-speed automatic with sport and simulated manual modes.And it has an impressive safety kit, including stability control, traction assist to stop the wheels spinning on take-off, and anti-skid brakes with emergency brake assist and brakeforce distribution.In case of a crash, it has seven airbags, twin front, side, full-length curtain and driver's knee and retracting pedals.Available across the range is a clever 'Human Machine Interface' or, in other words, extra information controls on the steering wheel. It also has a cap-less fuel filler, MP3 jack on the audio, and lumbar adjustment for the driver. But you wind the back windows by hand and the wheels are 16-inch steel.The $34,990 Zetec gets the same powertrain as a sedan and hatch, but picks up power to the rear windows and adds some body trim, 17-inch alloy wheels (with a steel spare) foglamps, dual-zone climate-controlled airconditioning, cruise nanny, driver-height adjustment, premium six-stack audio, touches of leather, cruise control and parking sensors.Another $3000 buys the TDCi with the same body choices and equipment list, but with the auto box joined to a 96kW/320Nm 2.0-litre turbodiesel.Topping the range is the $41,990 XR5 Turbo sedan with a six-speed manual and the same Volvo-sourced 2.5-litre Duratech five-cylinder used in the Focus XR5, though detuned by 4kW to 162kW and 320Nm.The XR5 gets everything from the Zetec/TDCi level, plus 18-inch alloys, alcantara and leather upholstery, heated front seats with more adjustment, ambient lighting, sportier body kit, lowered suspension, push-button start and a 15cm colour screen in the instrument cluster.Options include a $450 Bluetooth voice control that allows you to play with the phone, radio, airconditioning and audio system, though the female voice is firm in not allowing any shades of meaning in the commands.Ford says both petrol engines post fuel figures of 9.5 litres for 100km and the diesel comes in at 7.3. On the roadThe Mondeo is close to the Falcon in interior size and feel; and the cabin design makes a successful stab at quality and attractiveness levels that could appeal to premium buyers.However, there are some annoyances, like a dash-top vent that reflects noticeably on to the windscreen and a couple of plastic accents that stumble between sporty and tacky.But there is no mistaking the excellent build and solidity.And the Mondeo feels like it might be breaking out of the mid-size segment as far as road behaviour is concerned.The broad footprint adds balance that helps blot out some of the downsides of other front-wheel drives; the car feels nicely balanced and poised, and the steering sharp and well-weighted.The smaller petrol engine is a reasonably smart performer, but can be a little lacklustre if left to snooze with the transmission in full auto.Thankfully, the Sport auto mode produces such a noticeable change in response that the quick-shifting simulated manual gate is almost superfluous unless you want to play during a bit of cornering.Keen drivers will choose the XR5 with its flat spread of torque and tauter suspension and the nicely defined feel of the manual shift.However, the TDCi is the pick of the Mondeo powertrains and its slightly agricultural start-up sound is soon forgotten as you tap into the strong reserves of torque.Ford expects the Zetec to be the main seller, with 50 per cent of Australian deliveries, followed by the TDCi and LX, 20 per cent each, and the XR5, with the remaining 10. Inside viewFord MondeoPrices: from $29,990 (LX sedan) to $41,990 (XR5 hatch)Body: Four-door sedan and five-door hatchEngines: 2.0-litre four-cylinder diesel; 2.3-litre four-cylinder petrol; 2.5-litre five-cylinder turbocharged petrolPower: 96kW (2.0); 118kW (2.3); 162kW (2.5)Torque: 320Nm (2.0); 208Nm (2.3); 320Nm (2.5)Transmissions: Six-speed automatic or six-speed manual (2.5 only) 
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