Jaguar E-Pace vs Jaguar F-Pace: which is best?

How much difference is there between Jaguar’s SUVs? Time to see whether you should go large with the F-Pace or save some money with the smaller E-Pace...

Jaguar E-Pace vs Jaguar F-Pace

The contenders

DOWNSIZE: Jaguar E-Pace 2.0 D180 AWD S auto

List price £37,795
Target Price £35,014

Family SUV competes in mid-range diesel automatic form with four-wheel drive.


UPSIZE: Jaguar F-Pace 2.0 D180 AWD R-Sport

List price £44,105
Target Price £41,335

Bigger than the E-Pace but has the same engine and gearbox; is it worth the extra?


Here's a predicament for you to ponder. You’ve been shopping for a posh SUV with a budget of around £40,000, but you’re bored with Audi, BMW and Mercedes and fancy something from closer to home. Land Rovers are a bit obvious, so you’ve ended up in a Jaguar showroom.

On your left-hand side is the Jaguar E-Pace, a family SUV that shares its underpinnings with the Range Rover Evoque and comes with a range of four-cylinder petrol and diesel engines. To your right is the Jaguar F-Pace, a large SUV that’s related to the Range Rover Velar and is available with anything from a sensible diesel right up to a monstrous supercharged V8 with more than 500bhp.

Jaguar E-Pace front

In this case, it’s the popular 2.0-litre D180 diesel, connected to an automatic gearbox and four-wheel drive, that has piqued your interest in both cars. The question is, do you save yourself some cash and opt for the smaller E-Pace, or push your budget a bit more and pick the F-Pace?


Driving

Performance, ride, handling, refinement

Although the E-Pace is the smaller of our pair, it weighs much the same as the F-Pace because its body is made from steel rather than aluminium. The result is that both take a disappointing 9.2sec to sprint from 0-60mph – some way off what similarly powered rivals can achieve.

The F-Pace is actually slightly swifter when overtaking slower-moving traffic or getting up to motorway speed on a short slip road. Even so, their performance is adequate at best, not helped by automatic gearboxes in both (particularly the E-Pace) that hesitate before responding to presses of the accelerator.

Jaguar F-Pace front

Given that Jaguar made its name building sports saloons and sports cars, you’d hope that some of that same character would be present in its SUVs. And it is. Both cars have meaty, precise and feelsome steering and keep body lean well contained in corners. But while the E-Pace feels reasonably agile, the F-Pace is on another level for handling, scything through bends eagerly and displaying superior balance and grip.

Neither car has a particularly comfortable ride, though. The Jaguar F-Pace is no boneshaker, but you’re very aware of surface imperfections, especially around town. The Jaguar E-Pace, on the other hand, is just too stiff. It jiggles around over most surfaces, while your head is tossed from side to side along uneven roads.

The engine isn’t particularly quiet in either car; you’ll notice it thrumming away in the background at tickover and getting rather coarse under hard acceleration. You’ll hear some wind and road noise at motorway speeds in these cars, too; in both cases, several rivals are quieter.


Next: What are they like inside? >>

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