SsangYong
Click below to find information on all SsangYong ranges, read Parkers reviews and road tests, access owner reviews for in-depth knowledge of what the car is like to own. Parkers is your one-stop-shop for everything SsangYong related.
SsangYong Ranges
-
SsangYong Korando
Used price:£877 - £24,738 -
SsangYong Kyron
Used price:£480 - £2,800 -
SsangYong Rexton
New price:£28,145 - £44,030Used price:£524 - £34,496 -
SsangYong Rexton W
Used price:£2,860 - £8,902 -
SsangYong Rodius
Used price:£452 - £2,804 -
SsangYong Tivoli
New price:£13,955 - £22,955Used price:£2,278 - £17,582 -
SsangYong Tivoli XLV
Used price:£3,311 - £16,975 -
SsangYong Turismo
Used price:£2,249 - £15,608
Most popular SsangYong reviews
-
SsangYong Rexton SUV (2018 onwards) Review
Lots of space, but not a great deal of grace
New price: £28,145 - £44,030PROS
- Very good value for money
- Massive boot or seven-seat capacity
- Good off-road
CONS
- Appalling ride quality
- Poor handling
- Wooden steering
-
SsangYong Tivoli (2015 onwards) Review
"The Tivoli is an affordable, well-equipped crossover – but there are better options out there"
New price: £13,955 - £22,955PROS
- Affordable – prices start from around £18,000
- Loads of space and plenty of standard equipment
- Impressive seven-year/150,000-mile warranty
CONS
- Awful automatic gearbox
- Limited engine range – and no hybrids
- Lots of (arguably better) rivals
-
SsangYong Kyron (2006 - 2010) Review
Used price: £480 - £2,800PROS
Good value 4x4, very capable off road, strong diesels, large boot, five year warranty from 2009
CONS
Anonymous image, fussy styling, shiny interior plastics, bouncy ride, lifeless steering
-
SsangYong Rexton SUV (2016 - 2017) Review
All-terrain seven-seat MPV workhorse
Used price: £0 - £0PROS
- Strong off-roader
- Improved 2.2-litre diesel engine
- Cheap
- Standard seven seats
CONS
- Running costs still high
- Cheap-looking interior
- Not the best drive
-
SsangYong Tivoli XLV (2016 - 2020) Review
Tivoli gains a bigger boot for added practicality
Used price: £3,311 - £16,975PROS
- Larger boot than standard Tivoli
- Smarter new front bumper
- Huge standard specification
- Manual or auto, two- and four-wheel drive
CONS
- No petrol engine
- Same passenger space as Tivoli
- Not a thrilling drive
- Diesel engine quite noisy
Latest news
-
SUVs for £200 per month
If you’re after a family car then you’re potentially going to be looking at the best SUV deals as your first port of call. Their practicality and rugged appeal are...
-
6 champion tow cars for happier holidays
People shopping for new cars often have different priorities. Some need a sensible traditional saloon, others a capacious estate or even a family-friendly seven-seater people carrier. It’s the same if you’re...
-
Qash-ing in: the rise of the family SUV
Since the Nissan Qashqai was introduced in 2007, the car world has gone SUV crazy. You can’t drive down the high street now without seeing one, and the Qashqai has remained...
-
Ssangyong Tivoli XLV 16- preview
SsangYong’s new SUV-with-a-bigger-boot will be named Tivoli XLV in the UK, as opposed to just XLV in its home market of South Korea. Such is the value of the Tivoli name...
-
The five smartest buys of 2016: low-cost cars from the Geneva Motor Show
There are so many exotic cars at the Geneva Motor Show it can be a little hard to pick out ones which will deliver wallet-friendly performance. We hit the floor...
-
Top 10 cars for less than £14k in 2016
It’s important to set a budget when looking for a new car because it can be all too tempting to overspend when you’re under the bright lights of the dealership. But...