Autoexpress

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Auto Express: mainstream UK car journalism with broad and practical EV coverage

Auto Express is one of the UK’s best-known car publications, with a long-running magazine, a major website, and an active YouTube channel. It is not an EV-only channel; it covers the full car market, including electric cars, hybrids, plug-in hybrids, petrol and diesel models, performance cars, family cars, SUVs, used cars, product tests, buying advice, and industry news. For EV viewers, this makes Auto Express useful because electric cars are reviewed in the same mainstream buyer context as other vehicles.

The channel is best suited to regular car buyers who want clear, professional reviews from an established automotive publication. Auto Express is especially useful for UK-based viewers comparing electric cars with hybrids or combustion-engine alternatives, because its coverage is grounded in UK pricing, trims, roads, regulations, market availability, and buyer expectations. It is less of an enthusiast-only EV channel and more of a broad consumer guide to the car market.

A major strength of Auto Express is its scale and editorial structure. The wider website includes new-car reviews, used-car reviews, group tests, news, buying guides, product tests, and dedicated electric-car coverage. Its electric-car section includes EV reviews, rankings, news, and advice, while its “best electric cars” guidance is based on road testing across motorway, B-road, and urban driving. This gives the YouTube channel a strong publication background rather than making it only a standalone video project.

Auto Express is particularly useful for comparison-style EV advice. Because the publication reviews so many cars across different price classes and body styles, it can place an EV in context: whether it is good value, whether the range is competitive, how it compares with rivals, and whether it works for families, commuters, company-car users, or first-time EV buyers. This mainstream perspective is valuable for people who are not EV specialists but want a sensible buying recommendation.

The channel’s geek level is accessible to moderate. Auto Express covers the EV information that most buyers need, such as range, charging speed, battery size, efficiency, running costs, interior space, equipment, practicality, comfort, and value. However, it is not primarily a deep technical EV testing channel. Viewers looking for charging-curve graphs, battery chemistry, thermal-management analysis, diagnostics, winter range testing, or repeatable 1,000 km challenges will usually need more specialist EV sources.

Auto Express’s EV stance can be described as pragmatic and mainstream. The publication treats EVs as an important and normal part of the modern car market, and it gives them extensive coverage. At the same time, it does not review cars from an EV-advocacy position. Electric models are judged as cars: price, range, charging, comfort, practicality, software, ride quality, efficiency, and ownership costs all matter. Weak EVs can be criticized, while strong ones are recommended on the same basis as any other car.

The YouTube content includes new-car reviews, first drives, comparison tests, electric-car reviews, used-car advice, drag races, long-term fleet updates, and car-buying features. EVs appear as part of this wider mix rather than as the only subject. That makes the channel helpful for EV-curious viewers who still watch general car content, but less focused than channels dedicated entirely to electric range, charging, and infrastructure.

Production quality is professional and consistent. Auto Express videos generally have the structure and polish expected from an established automotive media brand: clear filming, edited road-test footage, presenter-led explanations, and concise verdicts. The style is more conventional magazine journalism than personality-driven EV vlogging or highly technical field testing. This makes the channel easy to follow for mainstream viewers.

The main limitation for EV-focused viewers is depth. Auto Express does not usually go as far into EV-specific testing as channels built around charging curves, long-distance road trips, winter efficiency, or repeated standardized range tests. It is also UK-focused, which is very helpful for UK buyers but means some pricing, trim, charging-network, and availability comments may not apply directly in other markets.

Overall, Auto Express is a strong source for mainstream electric-car coverage within the broader UK car market. It is especially useful for buyers who want professional reviews, clear comparisons, practical advice, and UK-relevant context. It is not the most technical or EV-specialist channel, but it is valuable for understanding how electric cars compare as normal consumer vehicles against the rest of the market.

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