2012 Toyota Prius V:Traditionally Built To Taste

The 2012 Toyota Prius V wagon is the first of several additions to the Prius line, which since 2004 has been only a five-door hatchback.

It takes the basic Prius formula of a practical vehicle with a liftgate and expands it in every direction, while retaining the Prius hybrid drivetrain. And it’s rated at 42 mpg combined gas mileage by the EPA, meaning it’s by far the most economical family vehicle on the market.

The Prius V wagon may also have four doors and a liftgate, but while there’s no mistaking it for anything other than a Prius hybrid, every body panel is different from the hatchback. The rear end has been squared up, but from certain angles it still looks like a tall hatchback rather than a boxy-ended wagon. Inside, Toyota dispensed with the striking by impractical “flying buttress” console and replaced it with a more traditional centre bin/elbow rest and a centre stack that gives easy access to trays, cupholders, and everything else on the tunnel. The dashboard resembles a standard Prius too, with the high-level central display offering a scattershot array of diagrams, readings, icons, and symbols in full color.

The 2012 Toyota Prius V isn’t notably different to drive than its smaller sibling. The driver sits somewhat higher, but hardly at the commanding heights of a sport-utility or truck. While it’s larger in every dimension especially wheelbase and overall length,it provides the same Prius experience behind the wheel. Its 98-horsepower, 1.8-liter engine and pair of electric motor-generators will feel very familiar to existing hybrid drivers, and somewhat removed and vague but perfectly fine to Prius newbies. The Prius V is about 300 pounds heftier than the hatchback, so it’s a tad slower and consumes more fuel to push its larger self through space.

But it’s the interior volume that makes the difference. According to the EPA, the Prius V has 34.3 cubic feet of cargo volume with the rear seat.With seats folded, the the cargo volume rises to 67.3 cubic feet. Equally as important, the width between the wheel wells is 39 inches, making the flat load floor wide as well as long.

The Prius V should do well on its safety ratings, with seven airbags and all the required electronic control systems. It has not yet been crash-tested by either the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) or the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS).