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2024 Range Rover Velar First Drive Review: A Fashion Accessory You Can Take Off Road

2024 Range Rover Velar First Drive Review: A Fashion Accessory You Can Take Off Road photo
2024 Range Rover Velar First Drive Review: A Fashion Accessory You Can Take Off Road photo

Chances are, you'll run into a 2024 Range Rover Velar at a Starbucks parking lot, Harrods valet, or a costly private school drop-off line. With its sleek exterior, minimalist interior, and overall persona that screams "rich city folk," the Velar has been the stylish Range since day one. Y'know, more Mayfair than Cotswolds.

Since its debut in 2017, the Velar has managed to fill a specific hole in Land Rover's lineup. If you didn't want the smaller, cheaper Evoque, had no interest in the more off-road-oriented Defender and Discovery models, and couldn't quite swing the six-figure Range Rover, chances are you'd buy the Velar.

The luxe SUV still fulfills that role today. But as part of the company spinning off its models into distinct brands—it's now just Range Rover Velar instead of Land Rover Range Rover Velar—and a new round of styling, tech, and feature upgrades for 2024, the Velar now feels like a much more confident luxury SUV, one with its own identity rather than just another option.

Base Price (Dynamic HSE P400 as-tested)PowertrainHorsepowerTorqueSeating CapacityCurb WeightTowing CapacityCargo VolumeGround Clearance0-60 mphTop SpeedOff-Road AnglesEPA fuel economyQuick TakeScore

2024 Range Rover Velar Specs

The Basics

The Range Rover Velar is a luxury SUV that seats five passengers, offers loads of minimalist luxury, and looks fancy enough to rival SUVs twice as expensive. In the newly rebranded lineup, the Velar sits just above the entry-level Evoque but below the Range Rover Sport and full-blown Range Rover. In a way, the Velar is the middle child. And while it aims to look sporty and elegant, it still possesses that Land Rover ruggedness in its DNA, meaning that it's more capable than you'd think off the tarmac.

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Don't call it shallow, but the Velar has always been about its looks. At the end of the day, that's what separates it from the rest of the lineup. A new front fascia for 2024 elevates the Velar even further, boasting a redesigned grille, headlights, and front bumper. Overall, the design remains sleek and sculpted but packs enough fresh lines to give it an air of modernity. Especially the redesigned headlights, which look less convoluted than before thanks to cleaner housings and DRL signatures. It's the same story out back. The rear retains its iconic long taillight fixture, but the housings and light signatures are new. It's several subtle changes that add up to a fresher, more vibrant, and certainly more desirable 2024 Velar.

The interior design stands out as the Velar's pièce de résistance. The ultra-minimalist cabin may not be everyone's cup of tea, but chances are that if you dig the outside then you will like the inside. If you hate clutter, this is the car for you. Range Rover has ditched all physical buttons and knobs on the dash and doubled down on touchscreen controls—yes, even for the volume. From a design perspective, the results are incredible. The cabin is serene and clean-looking, and there's nothing to distract you from the task at hand. In terms of usability, well, you have to get used to the touchscreen prompts. Or in the case of music volume, simply click up or down on the steering-wheel-mounted controls.

Driving Experience

When I drove the first-gen Velar years ago, I was left with the impression that Land Rover had created a handsome-looking SUV with not a lot of substance. The interior wasn't up to par, the driving experience was mediocre, and so was the fit and finish. This time, driving a top-of-the-line Dynamic HSE P400 proved that the British automaker has been spending quality time with its middle child. The end result is a luxury SUV that doesn't just look great but also feels it.

The mild-hybrid inline-six engine, which I had previously applauded in the Defender, is just as great in the Velar. Step hard on the gas and you'll feel the SUV lurch forward with urgency, delivering loads of torque and even a pleasant exhaust note. On windy country roads, the 395 ponies on tap were more than enough to deliver an entertaining drive. In Dynamic mode, the Velar's reactions are quite sporty. The suspension is stout, the steering is sharp, gear shifts are brisk, and pedal calibration is much more sensitive. If there's a long way home from the office, this is the mode you'll want to engage. However, if you've got a companion—especially kids in the backseat—you'll want to switch back to Comfort mode. Traveling through narrow farm roads proved to be slightly jarring in Dynamic mode, while Comfort softened the Velar's suspension and handling reflexes. Throttle inputs are slightly delayed, the steering is more relaxed, and frankly, it feels like the best all-around mode for such an elegant vehicle.

<em>JLR</em>
JLR