The Nissan Qashqai Is Stupidly Popular, But I’m Not Sure It Should Be

Nissan’s ubiquitous crossover has sold in colossal numbers, but a mid-life update for the current version can’t stop it from falling behind its competitors
The Nissan Qashqai Is Stupidly Popular, But I’m Not Sure It Should Be

The sheer volume of Qashqais shifted by Nissan over the years is simply staggering. 3.3 million have been built since the first generation was released in 2007, and to put that in perspective, that’s nearly 100 Qashqais for every GT-R flogged in the same period. Yikes.

It had a huge part to play in the worldwide explosion of crossover popularity, and Nissan reckons it now has 20 competitors each trying to imitate the car’s success. We’ve no doubt the Qashqai will continue to be a massive seller, but after a drive in the facelifted second-generation version we’d have to say it’s no longer something to recommend above all else.

Not because a hatchback will be cheaper, faster and more efficient - by now we know that your average crossover buyer is certain they need the ground clearance and driving position of a crosser and can’t be convinced otherwise. No: the problem is that the Qashqai is nowhere near the best car in the class any more.

The Nissan Qashqai Is Stupidly Popular, But I’m Not Sure It Should Be

Before we get to why, it’s important to point out there’s a lot to like. The facelift has given the front end Nissan’s fancy ‘V motion’ design motif thing plus some fancy new leather bits in the cabin, sprucing proceedings up nicely. Oh, and the naff, dated steering wheel has been ditched for something a little more modern and button-festooned. It’s just as roomy on the inside as it ever was, and boot space is decent.

The 1.6-litre, 129bhp diesel - yours from £26,805 - is reasonably refined and sounds weirdly un-diesel like, and Nissan has even had a play with the car’s handling. The dampers have had a subtle retune, as has the electric power steering.

The Nissan Qashqai Is Stupidly Popular, But I’m Not Sure It Should Be

We’re not going to pretend it’s a Porsche Macan all of a sudden, but the steering is genuinely quite nice and natural-feeling. The car still rolls quite easily of course, but not excessively so. Mr and Mrs Qashqai owner aren’t likely to be hankering after a country road blat particularly often, remember.

The trouble is, the changes aren’t enough to get the Qashqai back to the front of the pack. It’s starting to look old inside, particularly when you start to play with the infotainment system and its ancient-looking graphics and lack of proper smartphone syncing. It’s perfectly serviceable and the touch screen is reasonable, but that’s not good enough given the extreme levels of competition in this sector now.

The Nissan Qashqai Is Stupidly Popular, But I’m Not Sure It Should Be

There is a Bose sound system option available at least, which Nissan seems very excited about in its press material. But it’s disappointingly flat-sounding - the Dynaudio systems VW Group has started fitting in many of its cars are far better.

Right now, if I attempt to put myself in the shoes of a crossover buyer (a particularly hard thing to do, I admit), I can’t think of a good reason why I’d have one over the Seat Ateca. The Spanish combatant in this bitterly contested crossover war is better to drive, arguably better to look at, much nicer inside and has a considerably better infotainment system. Oh, and if you want an automatic, you can have a snappy dual-clutch arrangement. In the Nissan the only auto option is a CVT. Boo.

The Nissan Qashqai Is Stupidly Popular, But I’m Not Sure It Should Be

Slipping so far off the mark in a talent-laden part of the market really isn’t ideal. If we were to think of the crossover sector as The Avengers, the Qashqai would be Hawkeye. Sure, he’s pretty good at what he does, but you know you’d rather have Iron Man fighting your corner. Or maybe Thor.

The Qashqai’s aforementioned attributes combined with attractive pricing mean it’s sure to continue selling in big numbers, but we’d be surprised if it continues to spam the world like an Internet meme to the same degree it has done in years gone by.

Comments

Anonymous

Why anyone would anyone buy a crossover over an estate car is beyond me. Is it really worth sacrificing driving dynamics, stability, safety, space just for the seat to be a few centimetres higher? Why pay more for an inferior vehicle? Buy the hatchback, or if you really need the space, the wagon version of the hatchback

06/15/2017 - 23:58 |
2 | 0
ismail beygirci

so we cant understand why because we are car lovers

06/16/2017 - 07:13 |
0 | 0
ColumnM

What is so special & exclusive about this car?

06/16/2017 - 12:52 |
0 | 0
Paul Lindorfer

I would choose the Qashqai over the Ateca. I don’t want an Ibiza on Steroids.

06/16/2017 - 12:57 |
0 | 0
CAElite

My grandparents just picked one up this year, ‘14 model 1.2 petrol. Actually drives of for its size & is surprisingly well damped, doesn’t weigh as much as it looks.

Where we stay the roads flood a lot and my gran has dodgy hips, does the job better than any hatchback for them, they had a Focus diesel prior which they managed to wipe out 2 DPFs on before the words of myself and the mechanic sunk in that they needed a petrol for doddling about

06/19/2017 - 00:31 |
2 | 0
The Stig's Danish Cousin 1

All these companies only make crossovers to milk the qashqow. I’ll see myself out.

06/19/2017 - 11:03 |
0 | 0
Car interested person

Popular? I’ve never heard of the car..

06/20/2017 - 13:53 |
0 | 0

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