Autocar

133 reviews
Visit on YouTube

Autocar: historic UK car journalism with serious EV coverage

Autocar is one of the most established automotive publications in the world, with a magazine history dating back to 1895, a major website, and an active YouTube channel. It is not an EV-only outlet; it covers the full car market, including electric cars, hybrids, plug-in hybrids, petrol and diesel vehicles, performance cars, luxury cars, motorsport, industry news, future models, and used-car advice. For EV viewers, this makes Autocar useful because electric cars are evaluated as part of the wider automotive landscape rather than only within an EV enthusiast bubble.

The channel is best suited to viewers who want professional automotive journalism, detailed driving impressions, and strong industry context. Autocar has a long tradition of road testing, and the publication describes its 1928 Austin 7 Gordon England review as the first road test of a car published anywhere in the world. That history matters because Autocar’s EV coverage is shaped by conventional car-testing values as well as modern electrification topics: ride, handling, steering, refinement, performance, practicality, usability, and value all matter alongside range and charging.

Autocar’s EV coverage is broad and serious. Its website has dedicated electric-car news and “best electric cars” sections, with EVs reviewed, ranked, and compared against rivals in the UK market. Recent EV-related review coverage includes models such as the Renault 5, BYD Seal, Kia EV9, Volvo EX30, Volvo ES90, Denza Z9 GT EV, and other current electric cars. This makes Autocar useful for buyers who want to understand how new EVs fit into the mainstream car market.

A major strength of Autocar is its industry knowledge. The publication does not only review finished cars; it also covers product strategy, future models, vehicle development, manufacturers, legislation, business, technology, and the changing structure of the car industry. For EV viewers, that wider perspective is valuable because the electric transition is not only about individual cars. It also involves battery supply, charging infrastructure, software, regulation, pricing, manufacturing, and brand strategy.

The channel’s geek level is moderate. Autocar can be detailed, especially when discussing driving dynamics, platform engineering, performance, efficiency, and market positioning, but it is not primarily a specialist EV testing channel. It usually does not focus on long charging-curve graphs, battery chemistry, thermal-management diagnostics, or repeatable 1,000 km EV challenges. Its technical strength is more traditional and journalistic: how the car drives, how it is engineered, where it sits in the market, and whether it is good compared with rivals.

Autocar’s EV stance can be described as pragmatic and professionally neutral. It treats electric cars as an important and permanent part of the modern car market, but it does not approach them as automatic winners. EVs are judged as cars: range, charging, efficiency, price, software, ride comfort, handling, interior quality, practicality, refinement, and desirability all count. Strong EVs are praised, but weak points are treated seriously, especially when an electric car fails to deliver the driving quality, usability, or value expected in its segment.

As a YouTube channel, Autocar is strongest for viewers who want authoritative reviews and industry-aware commentary rather than influencer-style ownership content. Videos often include new-car reviews, first drives, performance features, comparison tests, interviews, and car-industry explainers. EVs appear as part of this wider mix, which makes the channel useful for viewers who follow cars generally but want informed electric-car coverage.

Production quality is professional and publication-led. The videos are generally clear, well edited, and built around experienced motoring journalists rather than a single YouTube personality. The style is more traditional automotive media than entertainment-first YouTube. That can make the videos feel less casual than independent EV channels, but it also gives them a serious, editorial tone.

The wider Autocar platform is central to its value. The website describes Autocar as delivering authoritative car reviews and agenda-setting industry news, while the magazine and digital archive give the brand unusual historical depth. Its coverage spans “everything automotive since 1895,” including petrol and electric cars, which reinforces its position as a broad car publication rather than an EV-only source.

The main limitation for EV-focused viewers is that Autocar is not a dedicated EV testing outlet. Viewers looking for highly standardized range tests, winter EV testing, charging-network reliability analysis, home-charging troubleshooting, or deep EV ownership data will usually need more specialized channels. Autocar is also UK-centered, which is useful for UK buyers but means pricing, trims, tax context, and availability may differ in other markets.

Overall, Autocar is a strong source for viewers who want electric cars reviewed with the discipline and context of traditional automotive journalism. It is especially useful for buyers and enthusiasts who care about driving dynamics, engineering, market positioning, and how EVs compare with combustion, hybrid, and plug-in hybrid alternatives. It is not the most EV-technical channel, but it is one of the most established and credible general automotive outlets covering the electric transition.

Latest reviews

We drive a £300,000 1968 Ford Escort touring car, built in 2025

We drive a £300,000 1968 Ford Escort touring car, built in 2025

apr. 29, 2025

Fab new Morgan Supersport reviewed | Autocar

Fab new Morgan Supersport reviewed | Autocar

apr. 14, 2025

VODCAST | Great value '90s classics | TT meets RAV4

VODCAST | Great value '90s classics | TT meets RAV4

apr. 09, 2025

More power! Manual 'box! 2025 BMW M2 review | Autocar

More power! Manual 'box! 2025 BMW M2 review | Autocar

apr. 02, 2025

Bigger, pricier, but still a Dacia: the new Bigster reviewed

Bigger, pricier, but still a Dacia: the new Bigster reviewed

mar. 27, 2025

Spectre Black Badge review: most powerful ever Rolls-Royce driven

Spectre Black Badge review: most powerful ever Rolls-Royce driven

mar. 24, 2025

Nissan GT-R: old, new... and what's next?

Nissan GT-R: old, new... and what's next?

mar. 14, 2025

What is 2025's best affordable fun EV? | Alpine A290 vs Mini Cooper SE vs Cupra Born VZ

What is 2025's best affordable fun EV? | Alpine A290 vs Mini Cooper SE vs Cupra Born VZ

mar. 07, 2025

Driven: Ferrari 12Cilindri Spider

Driven: Ferrari 12Cilindri Spider

feb. 24, 2025

REVIEW: Electric Mercedes G goes where other 4x4s can't

REVIEW: Electric Mercedes G goes where other 4x4s can't

feb. 19, 2025

REVIEW: Maserati MC20 GT2 Stradale track weapon

REVIEW: Maserati MC20 GT2 Stradale track weapon

feb. 14, 2025

Vodcast: Toyota GR Yaris vs Volkswagen Golf R

Vodcast: Toyota GR Yaris vs Volkswagen Golf R

feb. 05, 2025

Brilliant new "992.2" Porsche 911 GT3 tested on track and road

Brilliant new "992.2" Porsche 911 GT3 tested on track and road

jan. 31, 2025

Ultimate Land Rover Defender tested | 627bhp Defender Octa 4x4 takes on gravel, sand, rocks and ruts

Ultimate Land Rover Defender tested | 627bhp Defender Octa 4x4 takes on gravel, sand, rocks and ruts

jan. 22, 2025

Off-road mega test - what's the best 4x4? | Land Cruiser takes on Defender and Grenadier

Off-road mega test - what's the best 4x4? | Land Cruiser takes on Defender and Grenadier

jan. 16, 2025

The world’s greatest all-rounder? | Alpina B3 GT review

The world’s greatest all-rounder? | Alpina B3 GT review

jan. 09, 2025

Brit pack! £200,000 sports car special | The Autocar Vodcast

Brit pack! £200,000 sports car special | The Autocar Vodcast

jan. 03, 2025

Tesla Cybertruck full review | 845bhp Cyberbeast driven

Tesla Cybertruck full review | 845bhp Cyberbeast driven

dec. 26, 2024

We test - and JUMP! - a Monster Truck

We test - and JUMP! - a Monster Truck

dec. 18, 2024

What is a Lotus? | The Autocar Vodcast

What is a Lotus? | The Autocar Vodcast

dec. 10, 2024

Aston, Ariel, Hyundai…? We crown Britain’s Best Driver’s Car 2024

Aston, Ariel, Hyundai…? We crown Britain’s Best Driver’s Car 2024

dec. 04, 2024

New Bentley Flying Spur Speed review | Limo with race car pace ditches W12 for V8 PHEV

New Bentley Flying Spur Speed review | Limo with race car pace ditches W12 for V8 PHEV

nov. 29, 2024

Best sporty EV wagons: Porsche Taycan meets Hyundai Ioniq 5 N | Autocar Vodcast

Best sporty EV wagons: Porsche Taycan meets Hyundai Ioniq 5 N | Autocar Vodcast

nov. 22, 2024

New Alpine A290 review | The old-school hot hatch is back

New Alpine A290 review | The old-school hot hatch is back

nov. 18, 2024