Living with a Peugeot 5008: Everything we love about this seven-seater, plus a few things we don’t

August 03, 2025 by

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We’ve spent a few months with the Peugeot 5008. There’s a lot to like about this SUV, but there are also a few things which get on our nerves. Here are five good things about this car, plus five annoying features.

This is our Peugeot 5008, a hybrid seven-seater SUV that we’ve been living with for a few months. During our time with this car, we’ve noticed a lot of cool features which make it a joy to use everyday, but there are also some annoying features we think aren’t so great.

For an in-depth look at this car’s interior, or to find out about how it drives, you can skip down to the previous two reports.

Five cool things about the Peugeot 5008

1. Fabulous ambient lighting

It’s easy to get interior ambient lighting very wrong, resulting in your cabin looking like a sketchy nightclub from the mid-2000s. Our 5008 gets it spot-on though. At night you’re bathed in a gentle glow which makes this already posh-feeling interior look even more premium.

2. The sound system is great

You can get the Peugeot 5008 with an upgraded premium audio system, but even the standard setup in our car sounds great. The bass is nice and strong, and the sound is really crisp and clear. It’s great for moshing out after a stressful day of filming drag races.

3. The little things

There’s loads of interior storage in this car, including a handy sunglasses holder in the headlining. This is nicely lined with felt as well so your lenses don’t get scratched. There’s also a hidden cubby in front of the cupholders which contains your USB ports, so you can keep your phone and cables hidden out of the way.

4. The driver assistance features are great

Our car has a great adaptive cruise control system. Not only does it work smoothly to keep you a safe distance from the car in front, it can also perform lane changes for you by just flicking the indicator stalk. It really takes the strain out of long journeys.

5. It’s really quiet

The windscreen and front windows are made from special acoustic glass which does a great job of keeping things nice and quiet. You only get a small amount of tyre noise in the cabin, making it a properly relaxing car to eat up the miles in.

Five annoying things about our Peugeot 5008

Not everything about this car is perfect though, here are five annoying things we’ve noticed over the past few thousand miles.

1. Keeping the windscreen clear

The windscreen washer jets are cleverly integrated into the wiper arms, which means you can clear the screen without blasting soapy water everywhere. What’s not so good though is the fact the washer fluid reservoir is tiny, and there’s no low level sensor. We’re constantly having to top it up.

2. The bonnet release

When you go to fill up the washer fluid, you’re supposed to be able to pull the bonnet release twice to fully release it without the need to dig around for a secondary catch. In our car however, it doesn’t quite work properly. You have to pull it once, walk around and pull the bonnet up slightly, then walk back and pull it again.

3. Keeping things cool

The air conditioning can’t be powered by the hybrid battery, so the engine is always having to cut in to keep the cabin cool. This was especially noticeable during the recent heatwave, and it’s annoying when you’re trying to waft around town in silence.

4. Temperamental keyless entry

The keyless entry system isn’t the most reliable. We find ourselves yanking on the door handles quite a few times before finally giving up and digging the keys out of our bags to push the button.

5. The start button

This is an annoyance we have with most Peugeots, Citroens and Vauxhalls. For some reason, you have to hold the start/stop button for a bit longer than you’d think before it works. Even after a few months, we still sometimes turn just the ignition on by accident.

Living with a Peugeot 5008 report 2: engine and driving

This is our Peugeot 5008 – a stylish and spacious seven-seater which we’ve been running around in since March. We’ve already been over the spec on this car and what it’s like inside, both of which you can read about below.

In this third report we’ll be going over what this car is like to drive, and we really like spending time behind the wheel.

Let’s start with the engine. Our car is fitted with a 1.2-litre petrol hybrid system, and it’s actually quite nippy. The electric motor gives it good shove off the line – ideal for nipping out at junctions – and the three-cylinder petrol engine provides enough torque for overtaking at higher speeds.

And this decent performance doesn’t harm fuel economy either. On long motorway runs we’ve been seeing around 50mpg from the 5008, which is bang-on what Peugeot says it will do. Around town it’ll return 40mpg as well, it’s really not bad for a massive SUV like this.

The only downside to this engine is that it’s quite noisy when you put your foot down. When you’re extracting all the power from that three-cylinder lump and it lets out quite an unpleasant groan – a bit like when you ask your teenager to clean their room.

You might think that a large car like the 5008 would be a pain to navigate through tight city streets, but not so. It has a surprisingly tight turning circle at 11.2 metres – a Kia Sorento’s is 11.6 metres – which makes U-turns a breeze, as does the light steering.

It can feel slightly firm over bumps, but the upside to this is that it’s good to drive on a country road. Obviously it’s no sports car, but you don’t get much bodyroll through the corners, which will be helpful for travel sick-prone kids, and the small steering wheel gives the 5008 a sporty vibe.

Considering Peugeot had a reputation in the mid-2000s for slushy steering and lacklustre handling, it’s really good to see how far it’s come over the past decade or so. The new 5008 is a lovely thing to drive, and a very pleasant SUV to live with.

Living with a Peugeot 5008 report 1: Interior and practicality

If you grew up watching Top Gear in the mid 2000s, you probably remember the endless stream of Peugeot jokes. You know the ones, about how the dashboards were made of spit and Kleenex? Or how about the entire sketch claiming Peugeot was making terrible cars on purpose?

It’s no secret that the French brand didn’t have the best reputation for build quality back then, but nowadays it’s making stuff which can easily compete with high-end German cars. We’ve been living with the Peugeot 5008 for about a month now, and we love the interior on this big seven-seater.

2025 Peugeot 5008 interior

Starting with the design, this cabin just looks far more interesting than the one you’ll find in a Kia Sorento or a Skoda Kodiaq, with a funky square steering wheel and the multi-layered dashboard look great, although we’re not so keen on the shiny black plastic. It slightly cheapens what is otherwise a very well-mad and posh-feeling interior.

It’s practical as well. You can fit six-foot adults in all three rows of the 5008, although you won’t have much of a boot left if you do. Fold the rearmost seats flat and you have loads of luggage space and palatial rear legroom.

2025 Peugeot 5008 rear seats

There’s loads of storage spaces as well, and they’re well thought out. You get a big cubby for charging your phone which is hidden away, and the centre armrest is air conditioned so you can keep your drinks cold. To keep things from rattling around, the door bins are lined with felt.

It’s a very touchscreen-heavy cabin, with almost all of the controls routed through the central touchscreen. While we would like some physical buttons, the customisable i-Toggles are a decent substitute. You can personalise your shortcuts so all of your most-used functions are just a tap away.

2025 Peugeot 5008 toggles

There is one annoying quirk in the 5008’s cabin though, and that’s the start button. You have to hold it down to start or stop the engine, and the length of time you have to hold it seems to change whenever you get in the car.

That’s a small gripe though in what is otherwise a fabulous cabin. Any motoring-based entertainment programme would struggle to make a mockery out of it.

Living with a Peugeot 5008: introduction

This is our new Peugeot 5008, a seven-seat SUV which we’ll be living with for the next six months.

So which model have we gone for? Well, the first thing to note is that this is the 5008 Hybrid and not the all-electric Peugeot E-5008. This particular car will be doing a lot of miles to and from Carwow video shoots – the sort of mileage that makes an EV impractical, at least without a home charger.

That means our 5008 gets a 1.2-litre petrol engine mated to a battery, an electric motor and a six-speed dual-clutch gearbox. It sounds quite weedy to move such a big, practical car around – we’ll see over the next few months whether it feels adequate or just underpowered. It’s unlikely to win any Carwow drag races, though.

In GT trim, as we have here, the hybrid 5008 comes in at a lofty £41,235 – or £42,585 as tested here, though by buying through Carwow you can save over £2,000 on average. Standard equipment is as generous as you might hope for that price – not only do you get the 21-inch display at the front, but our car’s fitted with adaptive Matrix LED headlights, Alcantara and artificial leather upholstery, a wireless phone charger and a whole suite of safety aids.

For optional equipment, we’ve gone for the £750 Cumulus Grey paintwork and the £600 ‘360-degree Vision & Drive Assist Pack’ – snappily named. It includes a 360-degree camera, highway driving assist, blind spot monitoring and some other safety kit, and seems good value for the price.

We’ll report back here once we’ve spent some time with the car and formed our thoughts on what it’s really like to live with, so bookmark this page and you can keep yourself updated. Check out our social media channels too, where we’ll be sharing more about the ups and downs of living with this Peugeot 5008.

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