Volvo XC90 vs Land Rover Discovery

What's the difference?

VS
Volvo XC90
Volvo XC90

2026 price

Land Rover Discovery
Land Rover Discovery

2022 price

Summary

2026 Volvo XC90
2022 Land Rover Discovery
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Turbo 4, 2.0L

Diesel Twin Turbo 6, 3.0L
Fuel Type
-

Diesel
Fuel Efficiency
1.8L/100km (combined)

7.5L/100km (combined)
Seating
7

7
Dislikes
  • Old school EV driving range
  • Clunky third row set-up
  • Unsettled low-speed ride

  • Price-tag
  • Wheels and tyres not suited to off-roading
  • Spongy brakes
2026 Volvo XC90 Summary

The first-generation Volvo XC90 remained on sale for 12 years in Australia before being replaced by the handsome second-gen version that recently clocked up a decade of sales.

There’s a reason for the longevity. People love the Volvo XC90. It is a reliable seven-seat family-friendly SUV with a premium bent. You’ll spot loads of these at fancy private school drop off.

Volvo has extended the life of the second-gen XC90 with a significant late-life update. It adopts some features from its stablemate, the similarly sized and positioned EX90 electric SUV.

It doesn’t get a fully-electric powertrain but you have the choice of a mild-hybrid grade that acts as the range opener and the well-equipped T8 Plug-In Hybrid I’m testing.

Interestingly, a number of this car’s rivals have had their lives extended, too. As many carmakers pour billions into EVs, they’ve taken to delivering major updates to older internal combustion platforms rather than developing all-new underpinnings. The Audi Q7 and BMW X5 are other examples of this.

For the update, Volvo has ushered in a front-end design refresh, a fresh take on the interior, new multimedia and safety tech, a light tweak to suspension and new colours and wheels.

But is this enough to keep premium SUV buyers interested? Let’s find out…

View full pricing & specs
2022 Land Rover Discovery Summary

The Land Rover Discovery is a bit of a classic with 4WDers – and while it’s never attracted a massive and passionate fanbase like its hard-core stablemate, the Defender, it’s done okay for itself.

There used to be a clear distinction between the Discovery and the Defender. The Discovery was always your Landie of choice if you were after a luxurious smooth-riding 4WD, while the Defender was a gruff, rough-riding, hard-core adventure machine.

Well, with the new Defender being so refined, so well-appointed, so comfortable and so nice to drive – it’s almost like a Discovery in disguise – is the 22MY Discovery even relevant any more? 

More importantly, does it make sense as your next seven-seat 4WD wagon?

Read on.

View full pricing & specs

Deep dive comparison

2026 Volvo XC90 2022 Land Rover Discovery

Change vehicle