2021 Volvo XC60 T8 Polestar Engineered Review: A Hot Hatch for the PTA President?

Chris Tonn
by Chris Tonn
Fast Facts

2021 Volvo XC60 T8 Polestar Engineered

2.0-liter turbo-and-supercharged four with plug-in hybrid motors (414 combined hp, 494 combined lb/ft torque)
Eight-speed automatic transmission, all-wheel drive
27 combined (EPA Rating, MPG)
57 combined (EPA Rating, MPGe)
9.8 city, 8.7 highway, 9.3 combined. (NRCan Rating, L/100km)
4.0 combined (NRCan Rating, Le/100km)
Base Price: $70,495 US / $92,563 CAN
As Tested: $71,140 US / $93,463 CAN
Prices include $995 destination charge in the United States and $2341 for freight, PDI, and A/C tax in Canada and, because of cross-border equipment differences, can't be directly compared.

There’s a meme floating around, as memes do, with little localized variants. The one I see here in my little slice of Ohio reads something like: “Treat yourself like Interstate 70. Never stop working on yourself, no matter how much it inconveniences others.” Like most humor, there’s a bit of truth there – it always seems as of I-70 west of Columbus stretching at least to Indianapolis is in a constant state of either construction or in need of construction.

It was here on the pockmarked slab west of town I found myself driving on a brisk Sunday morn in the 2021 Volvo XC60 T8 Polestar Engineered, hoping to experience the floaty-but-controlled ride I knew from my old 740 wagon and other spawn of Gothenburg. Not here. That Polestar Engineered badge adds a serious dash of sporting intent to the midsized crossover – a car already quick from three, count ‘em three, power adders to the ubiquitous two-liter four.

Really, this crossover has the feel of a buttoned-down hot hatch. How does it work, as the Brits like to say, on the school run?


As an aside, if I were paid by the word, I should simply type the complete model name of this wagon a bunch of times to pad my invoices to editor Tim. For brevity and clarity, I’ll heretofore refer to this as the XC60 Polestar.

So, what is Polestar Engineered? Not to be confused with the Polestar marque —which is a nominally-separate brand — the Polestar Engineered badge is derived from a racing team that once raced Volvos, and as such is the highest-performing trim of a particular model. Here, the standard XC60 T8 Recharge – typically powered by a two-liter four-cylinder that is boosted by turbocharging, supercharging, and a plug-in hybrid system giving 400 combined horsepower – gets the Polestar Engineered treatment bumping power to 415 combined horsepower. Not an overwhelming difference, but I can attest that the XC60 Polestar does scoot.

I did not test the upper limits of the 12.3” digital display, however – and this time it wasn’t due to the presence of the Ohio State Highway Patrol. All 2021 model year Volvos are electronically limited to 112 mph, as part of Volvo’s longstanding efforts toward road safety. I’m sure this will get to the artificially-low limit with alacrity, of course.

The other big change to a more typical XC60 with the Polestar Engineered badge sits at all four corners. The XC60 Polestar is fitted with manually-adjustable dampers. Yes, a crossover/wagon thing with knobs just like the Civic your buddy slammed on cheap coilover shocks back in the heady days of Sport Compact Car magazine. The fronts are easily adjusted with a twist of an underhood knob – the rears require lifting the corner with a jack to reach the adjusters.

My first instinct is to ask “why”? Most track-day organizations won’t let anything this tall on track, so twisting knobs for apex hunting is a little weird. I’m also concerned about the stereotypical crossover driver being so oblivious to the function of the damper adjustment that they’d set radically-different settings at each corner – assuming, of course, they found the hood release themselves, which isn’t altogether likely for the stereotypical crossover driver.

I didn’t have time to break out the floor jack and fiddle with the rear knobs, so I didn’t mess with the settings from how it was delivered. The resulting ride was…fine, at least on reasonable pavement. It isn’t what I’d expect out of Volvo, to be honest. The ride quality was very firm, and expansion joints announced themselves with a firm thwack to the backside. Potholes were even worse. Again, I live in Ohio. From my limited travels, I can tell you that roads to the south of me are generally much better, while most to the north are in roughly the same rough shape as what I found on my Sunday jaunt west on I-70. I can’t even fathom what driving the XC60 Polestar in Michigan must be like – much of what I’ve seen there can only be called roads in the loosest of definitions.

Thankfully the cabin is as serene as the rest of the Volvo lineup. A dash of goldish yellow appears on the seatbelts to lend life to the charcoal and grey mixed material throughout the interior – the highlight color chosen to match the six-piston front brake calipers and the Öhlins dampers. It’s a cool look, and the interior is a nice place to spend some time. Rear seat room is very good for the too-tall tweens, and the cargo hold managed everything we would typically haul without hassle.

I don’t love Volvo’s touchscreen controls for nearly everything – yes, mercifully, there is a large knob for volume, flanked by shuttles forward and reverse for track/station, and a couple of buttons to activate max defrost and rear defrost. But everything else must go through the screen, from volume control to temperature settings to seat heating. It’s a clean look, but not as intuitive as it should be. In the past, I’ve found the controls to be slow to respond.

New this year, while the screens generally look much the same, the processing behind it is all new – and powered by Google. It’s basically an Android Auto interface – but with design, colors, and fonts all recognizably Volvo. Works well – obviously – with my recent Android phone, and they say it retains all Apple compatibility, though I don’t have an iPhone to confirm. The Bowers & Wilkins 15-speaker audio system (optional on other trims, but standard on the XC60 Polestar) sounds as incredible as you’d hope. The new audio controls do work better than in the past – but it’s still an awkward process to dial in the HVAC system.

I suppose that’s how I find the entire 2021 Volvo XC60 T8 Polestar Engineered – awkward. I think the styling is quite handsome – I appreciate that the typically de rigueur plastic lower-body cladding so often found on crossovers is nowhere to be found here. If the roads are well maintained, the ride quality is decent – and the car can be genuinely fun to drive on the right roads. But for a family hauler, a firm, manually-adjustable suspension that seems more appropriate for a touring-car racer than a tall wagon is an unusual choice. I appreciate when automakers go outside the boundaries a bit – I really do. But this would be a tough one to bring home.

[Images: © 2021 Chris Tonn]

Chris Tonn
Chris Tonn

Some enthusiasts say they were born with gasoline in their veins. Chris Tonn, on the other hand, had rust flakes in his eyes nearly since birth. Living in salty Ohio and being hopelessly addicted to vintage British and Japanese steel will do that to you. His work has appeared in eBay Motors, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars, Reader's Digest, AutoGuide, Family Handyman, and Jalopnik. He is a member of the Midwest Automotive Media Association, and he's currently looking for the safety glasses he just set down somewhere.

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  • BSttac BSttac on Dec 14, 2021

    These look stunning in person. I still will never understand why they went with manually adjustable dampeners when everyone else has electronically adjustable ones. Just a head scratcher on a luxury car. Especially given what they charge for one

  • Jfk-usaf Jfk-usaf on Dec 15, 2021

    I like it and would consider it. I do believe that Volvo needs to remember who they are and work safety back into their ergonomic plans. Voice command isn't where it needs to be to be a viable substitute and flipping through screens to get to a feature while driving is a safety hazard. Porsche seems to understand this... One other thing, stop requiring me to pay subscription fees to use features of the car that I've already paid for. Not a problem exclusive to Volvo.

  • Theflyersfan I used to love the 7-series. One of those aspirational luxury cars. And then I parked right next to one of the new ones just over the weekend. And that love went away. Honestly, if this is what the Chinese market thinks is luxury, let them have it. Because, and I'll be reserved here, this is one butt-ugly, mutha f'n, unholy trainwreck of a design. There has to be an excellent car under all of the grotesque and overdone bodywork. What were they thinking? Luxury is a feeling. It's the soft leather seats. It's the solid door thunk. It's groundbreaking engineering (that hopefully holds up.) It's a presence that oozes "I have arrived," not screaming "LOOK AT ME EVERYONE!!!" The latter is the yahoo who just won $1,000,000 off of a scratch-off and blows it on extra chrome and a dozen light bars on a new F150. It isn't six feet of screens, a dozen suspension settings that don't feel right, and no steering feel. It also isn't a design that is going to be so dated looking in five years that no one is going to want to touch it. Didn't BMW learn anything from the Bangle-butt backlash of 2002?
  • Theflyersfan Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Hyundai, and Kia still don't seem to have a problem moving sedans off of the lot. I also see more than a few new 3-series, C-classes and A4s as well showing the Germans can sell the expensive ones. Sales might be down compared to 10-15 years ago, but hundreds of thousands of sales in the US alone isn't anything to sneeze at. What we've had is the thinning of the herd. The crap sedans have exited stage left. And GM has let the Malibu sit and rot on the vine for so long that this was bound to happen. And it bears repeating - auto trends go in cycles. Many times the cars purchased by the next generation aren't the ones their parents and grandparents bought. Who's to say that in 10 years, CUVs are going to be seen at that generation's minivans and no one wants to touch them? The Japanese and Koreans will welcome those buyers back to their full lineups while GM, Ford, and whatever remains of what was Chrysler/Dodge will be back in front of Congress pleading poverty.
  • Corey Lewis It's not competitive against others in the class, as my review discussed. https://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/cars/chevrolet/rental-review-the-2023-chevrolet-malibu-last-domestic-midsize-standing-44502760
  • Turbo Is Black Magic My wife had one of these back in 06, did a ton of work to it… supercharger, full exhaust, full suspension.. it was a blast to drive even though it was still hilariously slow. Great for drive in nights, open the hatch fold the seats flat and just relax.Also this thing is a great example of how far we have come in crash safety even since just 2005… go look at these old crash tests now and I cringe at what a modern electric tank would do to this thing.
  • MaintenanceCosts Whenever the topic of the xB comes up…Me: "The style is fun. The combination of the box shape and the aggressive detailing is very JDM."Wife: "Those are ghetto."Me: "They're smaller than a Corolla outside and have the space of a RAV4 inside."Wife: "Those are ghetto."Me: "They're kind of fun to drive with a stick."Wife: "Those are ghetto."It's one of a few cars (including its fellow box, the Ford Flex) on which we will just never see eye to eye.
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