2016 Renault Captur Reviews

You'll find all our 2016 Renault Captur reviews right here. 2016 Renault Captur prices range from $6,820 for the Captur Expression to $13,530 for the Captur Expression.

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 Renault dating back as far as 2015.

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

Renault Captur Reviews

Renault Captur Dynamique 2015 review
By Peter Anderson · 14 Jul 2015
Peter Anderson road tests and reviews the Renault Captur Dynamique with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.
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Renault Captur 2015 review: road test
By Paul Gover · 17 Apr 2015
Paul Gover road tests and reviews the 2015 Renault Captur Expression with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.
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Renault Captur manual 2015 review
By Ewan Kennedy · 19 Feb 2015
Ewan Kennedy road tests and reviews the Renault Captur at its Australian launch.
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Renault Captur 2015 review
By Craig Duff · 06 Feb 2015
It's all about the look with the Renault Captur, from the optional two-tone exterior styling to the dimpled surfaces, coloured zippers and bright plastic highlights in the cabin. But there's a method behind the interior-designer madness. The surfaces will be easy to wipe down, which will endear them to parents with
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Renault Captur 2015 Review
By Peter Barnwell · 09 Oct 2014
Peter Barnwell road tests and reviews the Renault Captur SUV ahead of its arrival in Australian showrooms.
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Peugeot 2008 vs Renault Captur 2013
By Luke Madden · 19 Dec 2013
Small SUVs are the next big thing and car makers are literally falling over themselves to get theirs to market.
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Renault Captur 2015 review
By Rebecca Jackson · 06 Sep 2013
Renault CapturPrice: from $19,990 (estimate)Warranty: 5 years/unlimited kmService interval: 12 months/15,000kmSafety: 4 airbags, ABS, ESP, TCCrash rating: Not testedEngines: 0.9-litre turbo petrol, 66kW/135Nm; 1.2-litre turbo petrol, 88kW/190NmTransmission: 5-speed manual, 6-speed dual-clutch auto; FWDThirst: 4.9L/100km, 113g/km CO2; 5.4/125Dimensions: 4.12m (L), 1.7m (W), 1.56m (H)Weight: from 1101kgSpare: space saver 
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Renault Captur 2014 Review
By Paul Gover · 15 May 2013
A new wave of baby SUVs is breaking on Australian shores and Renault is hoping to surf to success with its all-new Captur. The youthful newcomer should land early next year with a starting price just below $20,000 and the emphasis firmly on 20-somethings buying their first new car.That means design is king - including bodywork with contrasting roof colours - with everything from in-car Apps for the infotainment system to zip-off washable seat covers.The Captur's SUV body is built up over the mechanical package used for Renault's new baby, the fourth-generation Clio, which means front-wheel drive, small-capacity turbo petrol engines and impressive suppression of mechanical and road noise. Fuel economy should also be good.Renault now sees the baby SUV class as a potential gold mine, just like its Euro rivals and even Ford and Holden in Australia, which means buyers will have plenty of choice and lots of bargaining power."We think it will be a worldwide tendency for a long time. It is a strong trend, crossovers, globally," says Christophe Pejout, the Captur project leader.It's tough to really rate the Captur without running it back-to-back with its new rivals - including the Ford EcoSport and Opel Mokka - but it does well enough for a small SUV. It's never going to excite a sports car fan, but it's a good looker that hits the right notes for Gen-Y buyers coming to cars for the first time.And it might also do well with older people looking for that essential higher seating position for their suburban runabout.VALUEHow do you rate the Captur without a solid bottom line? It's impossible. But, based on a pricetag that is likely to limbo just under $20,000 for the base model - with a tiny 900cc turbo engine - and hover around $23,000 for the popular model, the French contender should be right on the money.The Captur also promises miserly running costs, with 4.9 litres/100km thirst for the baby engine and 5.4 for the larger 1.2-litre turbo that was available for test driving in France. On the downside, the petrol engines take premium unleaded and Renault Australia has no intention of taking diesel engines, at least for the foreseeable future.But ownership will be helped by the five-year warranty with $299 capped-price servicing for the first three years. "We wanted a car that looked like a crossover, and acted like a crossover, but didn't consume like a crossover," says Pejout.There are likely to be three trim levels in Australia, with even the basic car getting Bluetooth connectivity and an Eco driving mode but no rear-view camera."There is a lot of competition coming and it will be priced and specified appropriately," is all Renault Australia's Emilie Ambrosy says on pricing plans.TECHNOLOGYThe mechanical package of the Captur is solid and basic. Just think of the Clio, add a new body on top, and there you go - right down to the cost saving rear drum brakes.In fact, the Captur is only 150 kilos heavier than the Clio 4 and the same weight as the previous-generation baby car.Where it scores is with the sort of stuff that young buyers want and need these days, especially the impressive R-Link with giant display screen and access to more than 50 Apps. The system even has a text-to-voice system that can read out tweets and emails, which is going to be essential during the inevitable safety crackdown in coming years.The tablet-style display screen in the Captur test car - although not confirmed for the starter model - is clear and impressive, with satnav that works well thanks to the TomTom operating system that even keeps a track of the speed limit.On the mechanical front, the big tech news is the 900cc engine that makes 66 kiloWatts at 5250 revs and 135 Newton-metres of torque at 2500 revs. But, like most starter cars, it's only mated to a five-speed manual gearbox - and it was not available to drive in France.The larger 1.2-litre motor makes 88 kilowatts and 190 Newton-metres at just 2000 revs, with a six-speed dual-clutch auto called the 'Efficient Dual Clutch' by Renault.DESIGNThe Captur turns heads and will make great bait in showrooms, especially in the light blue-with white roof colour combination. But the best looking combination is reserved for the diesel cars during the French test and we're relegated to the black-over-brown look for our drive.There are nine body colours and three roof colours for owners to mix and match, with 16 and 17-inch alloys.Renault's crazy-talented design guru Laurens van den Acker - he always has a new wild looking pair of sneakers on display - has done a great job in overseeing a car that looks both youthful and inviting. It's not your typical blunt-edged SUV truckster.And the latest version of Renault's corporate 'face' gives the car a striking nose that manages not to offend. "We think it's more of a family car than Clio 4," says Pejout.The really classy work is inside the Captur, from the dash layout - which can be customised with colour splashes on things like the switches and air vents - to a sliding rear seat and the zip-off seat covers. They should make clean-up work easier, as well as potentially boosting resale values with a last-minute change to all-new fabric.The seats are cushy but not particularly supportive and the steering wheel sits too flat - bus-style - for my liking. And the impressive slide-out drawer on the passenger side - which is much bigger and more practical than a traditional glovebox - will be chopped to fit in a right-hand drive dash.SAFETYThe Captur is almost certain to score five stars from NCAP, since the Clio is a five-star winner that's rated as Europe's safest baby cars.Neither has any rear airbags but that has not affected the Clio's Euro NCAP rating, although it could cause a problem in Australia next year if ANCAP sticks to its plan to downgrade any newcomer without rear bags.Pejout admits safety development was focussed on costs and the NCAP targets but points to ESP stability control and ABS brakes in the Captur's favour. "In Europe, people don't count the number of airbags, they look at the EuroNCAP rating. For us, it's important to have a good EuroNCAP rating," he says.DRIVINGIt's impossible to really rate the Captur without driving its rivals. It's trendy enough, and has some cute design touches and lots of technology, but it is nothing special to drive.It's soft and cushy, not great for cornering grip, but has solid brakes and is quiet at all speeds. For people who just want trendy transport, or something for short-and-sharp city or suburban runs, it ticks the right boxes.The 1.2 turbo motor needs to be encouraged, which definitely means dumping the Eco mode unless you're in stop-start traffic or cruising at highway pace. At its best, it still only gets to 100km/h in 10.9 seconds and the baby 900 will take 12.9.The twin-clutch auto is smooth and efficient and, based on comparisons with anything Volkswagen short of the latest Golf 7, beats its German opposition for both smoothness and response. There is no jerking during parking manoeuvres and it holds well on hills.The Captur is not as good to drive as the Subaru XV, even though it's smaller and likely to be cheaper, and who knows what will happen when it goes up against the more powerful Opel Mokka and Holden Trax twins in the GM line, as well as the Ford EcoSport and the rest.The cabin package is impressive and the infotainment package is impressive, even the surprisingly-meaty sound system. The adjustable rear seat looks good but only really makes the leg space passable for adults, so is focussed on flexibility for load work, and I'm disappointed that the great dash drawer won't be coming downunder.So, what to do on the star-score front? Right now, I don't have enough information to make a seriously solid judgement on the Captur, but it's looking like a potential podium finisher in the new SUV class and that means it gets 3.5 from 5 with the potential for a re-score - up or down - once its lands in Australia.VERDICTThe Captur looks great and is good fun, but it's not for people who like to drive.
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Renault Captur 1.2 2014 review
By Chris Riley · 09 May 2013
In the old days they used to jack up cars to steal the wheels. These days car makers do it to turn them into 4WDs and sell more cars, although the modern day off-roader has very little to do with going off road. For a start, most of them don't have four-wheel drive and even if they did, the majority of drivers would be unlikely to get them dirty.Nope. It's got more to do with the coveted high driving position that makes it easier to navigate traffic and the increased cabin height that makes them easier to get in and out of.And, just like cars, SUVs are shrinking. Demand for the large, hard core 4WDs is dropping as people gravitate towards smaller, softer "crossover" style vehicles that bridge the gap between the traditional car and the 4WD.The latest wave is imminent. Smaller or sub-compact crossovers are about to hit town like VW's Taigun, the Holden Trax and its Opel stablemate Mokka, as well as a couple of French offerings - the 2008 from Peugeot and Captur from arch rival Renault.Renault, whose star is in the ascendant is pretty excited about Captur's prospects that arrives early next year and we got a taste of things to come this week in France. Captur (no E) we're told is a combination of MPV, SUV and family hatch. One thing's for sure - it's no shrinking violet.The bloke that designed the smiley Mazdas has jumped ship and his stamp is starting to emerge, with bright candy colours and a bold, new face dominated by a beefed up Renault badge.VALUEIt's early days yet and Renault is still finalising prices and equipment levels. Trying to nail down what we will and will not be in our cars is no easy task. We can confirm there will be three trim levels but that the car's defining feature - the two-tone paint job - is in fact not standard, at least overseas.Nor are we sure at this stage whether we'll get the full suite of multimedia components, with a large tablet-style computer screen, voice control for many functions and full internet connectivity on the car we drove - with access to more than 50 apps from the dedicated R-Link store.The system is so smart it is even able to read out tweets and emails if you ask it to. Unfortunately, the infrastructure to support most of these features is not yet in place in Australia.Prices are expected to kick off from less than $20,000 and it will be covered by a five-year warranty with fixed price servicing for the first three years, or three 15,000km services - whichever comes first (at $299 per service). TECHNOLOGYThe five-seat Captur is available in front-wheel drive only. We're getting two engines and neither of them is a diesel. There's a turbocharged, 900cc three cylinder unit that produces 66kW of power and 135Nm of torque and a turbocharged, 1.2-litre four cylinder engine with the latest direct injection technology that produces 88kW and 190Nm.Both incorporate a maintenance free timing chain avoiding the need to replace costly timing belts. The first will be available with a five speed manual, the latter with a 6-speed dual clutch auto that Renault refers to as EDC (Efficient Dual Clutch).Both power plants outgun Peugeot's direct competitor the 2008 but will be no match for the 1.4-litre turbo from Cruze that will power Trax and Mokka. The dash from 0-100km/h takes 12.9 and 10.9 seconds respectively, with a top speed in the 1.2 of 192km/h.Captur has a 45-litre tank and runs on premium unleaded, with fuel consumption rated at 4.9 for the 900cc engine and 5.4 litres/100km for the 1.2, with an ECO button that is said to improve fuel consumption by as much as 10 per cent.DESIGNBased on the Clio hatch and built in Spain, it's flashy and curvaceous, especially with contrasting roof and other coloured embellishments. It's 4.1 metres long and weighs up to 1180kg, and is about 100kg heavier than the hatch.Our test car was finished in a bright metallic orange with a black roof that had a orange graphic splashed across the roof, and was fitted with 17 inch alloys and 205/55 series tyres.The clever rear seat slides 160mm fore and aft depending on your needs, with 75mm more legroom in the back than the hatch and a small luggage compartment that hides a second, lidded storage area underneath.Left hand drive models get a large pull-out bin in place of a glove box but unfortunately there's no room for the bin with the steering wheel on our side of the car.There's nine colours and three roof combinations from which to chose: black, white or orange - along with other colour-coded accents. Coloured highlights are also fitted inside, with zip-off seat covers on the top drawer model that can be washed or replaced.SAFETYThe jury is still out over this one. It gets a full five stars from the Euro crash test people, but like the Clio comes with only four airbags. There's no curtain airbag to protect rear seat passengers. It will be interesting to see what the Australian NCAP organisation has to say about this one.In all other ways it features the full arsenal of electronic aids including electronic traction and stability control as well as rollover intervention - but no reversing camera on the entry model.In its defence, Renault has been at the forefront of safety for many years and points out that these type of vehicles rarely carry rear seat passengers - so the extra airbags are not warranted. They have however spent some time making sure the car is more pedestrian friendly in the event of an accident.DRIVINGSurprise, surprise - we only got to drive the more powerful 1.2-litre model. It goes okay but left us hankering for more (like the 1.6-litre turbo from the Clio RS for instance). It would fit, but meeting emissions standards could be tricky, explained Captur's program manager Chrstophe Pejout.A more powerful 1.2-litre engine would be easier and more likely, Pejout explained. But the Frenchman was at pains to point out that no decision had been made yet, although he conceded the matter is under consideration.The 1.2 is more than adequate for city and highway cruising, in situations where it is not stressed - but lacks any real punch, especially down low. Changing gears manually via the shifter elicits a sharper response but drives up fuel consumption (change paddles are not fitted). Although the Renault Captur is rated at 5.4 litres/100km but we finished the the first day with 11.0 and the second day of driving with 8.1 litres/100km.Captur is certainly no sports car and is not intended to be, sitting higher than the hatch with plenty of bounce and body roll from the comfort-orientated suspension. Having said this it remains confident even when pushed to the limit, with high levels of grip and refused to step out of line on the mountain roads encountered.Surprisingly, though fitted with rear drums, the brakes feel up to the job. With testing limited to French, Swedish and Spanish roads it will be interesting to see how it adapts to our blacktop.VERDICTThe striking design is a drawcard, but it's almost too pretty in some respects and likely to appeal more to women. The split is almost 50/50 in Europe, but then they have a penchant for some mighty funny clothes too. A bit more punch would be nice and a Renault Sport edition would be particularly welcome. Over to you Renault.
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