Car Review UK

  • Home
  • Road Tests
  • First Drive
  • Brands
    • Abarth
    • Alfa Romeo
    • Aston Martin
    • Audi
    • Bentley
    • BMW
    • Chevrolet
    • Chrysler
    • Citroen
    • Dacia
    • Daihatsu
    • Dodge
    • Ferrari
    • Fiat
    • Ford
    • Great Wall
    • Honda
    • Hyundai
    • Infiniti
    • Isuzu
    • Jaguar
    • Jeep
    • Kia
    • Land Rover
    • Lexus
    • Maserati
    • Mazda
    • McLaren
    • Mercedes-Benz
    • MG
    • Mini
    • Mitsubishi
    • Nissan
    • Peugeot
    • Porsche
    • Proton
    • Renault
    • Rolls-Royce
    • SAAB
    • SEAT
    • Skoda
    • Smart
    • Subaru
    • Suzuki
    • Toyota
    • Vauxhall
    • Volkswagen
    • Volvo
  • Music

Featured · First Drive · Reviews · Suzuki

Suzuki sweet on the Baleno blitz

  • by Mike Torpey
  • May 13, 2016

STEERING a centre course, rather like occupying the middle lane of the motorway, may not seem the most ambitious route to travel.
But for Japanese car maker Suzuki it’s a no brainer, especially when it comes to the company’s latest offering the Baleno.
Few manufacturers ‘do’ small cars better than Suzuki and in the Baleno, which hits the streets on June 1, the company has a model sure to eclipse the sales of its mid-90s predecessor of the same name.
Buyers of supermini-size vehicles tend to pick their car on either an emotional level – stuff like MINI, Renault and SEAT – or a rational one, with cars from Skoda, Hyundai, Ford or Toyota.
Suzuki is bidding for the best of both worlds with the Baleno, splitting the two categories down the middle.
SuzuBaleno2Its appeal couldn’t be simpler. You get a spacious hatchback that drives well, looks stylish, is economical, has terrific interior space – even room for three passengers in rear – plus a deep split-level boot.
Prices start at £12,999 and while that tab isn’t exactly giveaway the amount of standard kit included leaves most of the opposition looking decidedly red-faced.
Two models and a pair of trim grades keep decision making down to the minimum, a sensible manoeuvre by Suzuki in that 80 per cent of Baleno buyers are expected to be private rather than fleet customers.
While visual flair, courtesy of a new ‘Liquid Flow’ design theme, will play its part in the car’s attraction, having a strong, efficient powerplant under the bonnet is essential.
SuzuBaleno5And for Suzuki the secret weapon here is something called Boosterjet. It made its debut earlier this year in the Vitara S model and is a turbocharged direct injection petrol engine designed to achieve high levels of power and efficiency.
In the Baleno it is a 1.0-litre unit producing 111bhp, acceleration figures of 0-62 in 11.4 seconds, a top speed of 124mph and the potential for a Combined fuel return of 62.7mpg. CO2 emissions are also low at 105g/km.
On an 80-mile test route from Belfast along the Northern Ireland coast the Baleno proved a breath of fresh air in that it is such an uncomplicated car to drive – relaxing, enjoyable and comfortable with light but positive steering, an easyshift five-speed manual gearbox and solid dynamics.
SuzuBaleno4Okay, there are a few brittle plastics and fake aluminium cabin features, but overall the fit and finish of the car is good quality and every version comes with the likes of six airbags, sat-nav, alloy wheels, air-con, HID headlights, front electric windows, rear privacy glass, DAB radio and Bluetooth.
Move up from entry level SZ-T grade (an extra £1,000) to SZ5 and there’s a 4.2-inch central colour trip display, LED rear lights, auto climate control, Adaptive Cruise Control and Radar Brake Support.
The second engine option, a 1.2-litre SHVS (Smart Hybrid Vehicle by Suzuki) 90bhp unit, gets the emissions figure down to 94g/km and the potential for an average 70.6mpg.
SuzuBaleno6It’s only available as an SZ5 manual and costs £13,499, though auto transmission fans can specify the SZ5 Boosterjet which tops the Baleno range at £15,349.
Recent times have seen Suzuki’s development and design efforts pay off in spades with the last two years of UK sales proving the company’s best yet.
And with three more new models – updated S-Cross, iM-4 crossover and new Swift – due over the next 18 months, it’s a case of onward and upward. This year’s target of 40,000 cars looks well within their compass.

SuzuBaleno3

Tags: BalenoBoosterjetiM-4Liquid FlowS-CrossSHVSSuzukiSwiftSZ-TSZ5

— Mike Torpey

Mike Torpey is freelance Motoring Editor of the Liverpool Echo, past Racing Editor and also a travel/golf writer, music reviewer and rock music nut. Tweet @michaeltorpey1

  • Previous story Slap of style from DS and Givenchy
  • Next story Fans in a frenzy for Ford GT

    Explore More

  • Suzuki Swift – in pole position January 2, 2025
  • Suzuki Swift – opportunity knocks May 7, 2024
  • Suzuki Ignis – igniting the fire October 25, 2023
  • Suzuki Swace – swagger and grace June 4, 2023
  • Recent

    • Lexus UX 300h – crossover classMay 20, 2025
    • Subaru Forester – best kept secretMay 8, 2025
    • Kia EV3 – world classApril 28, 2025
    • MG3 Hybrid+ – style and economyApril 23, 2025
    • Volkswagen ID:7 – electric showstopperApril 14, 2025
    • Audi A3 Sportback – timeless qualityMarch 28, 2025
    • 4×4
    • Commercial
    • Coupe
    • Executive
    • Hatchback
    • Saloon
    • Sports
    • SUV
  • More

    All First Drive Reviews All Road Test Reviews All News Features Click MUSIC for all our previous picks
  • Search

  • Home
  • Featured
  • Suzuki sweet on the Baleno blitz
          • Home
          • Driven
          • News
          • Sitemap & Archive
          • Contact

          Copyright © 2014-15 CarReviewUK | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy