2023 Volvo V60 Cross Country Review – Quiet Luxury

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

Fast Facts

2023 Volvo V60 Cross Country Fast Facts

Powertrain
2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder with mild-hybrid (247 horsepower @ 5,400 RPM, 258 lb-ft of torque @ 1,800 RPM)
Transmission/Drive-Wheel Layout
Eight-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Fuel Economy, MPG
23 city / 30 highway / 26 combined (EPA Rating)
Fuel Economy, L/100km
10.1 city / 7.7 highway / 9.0 combined (NRCan Rating)
Base Price
$54,100 (U.S.) / $65,900 (Canada)
As-Tested Price
$63,585 (U.S.) / $65,900 (Canada)
Prices include $1,095 destination charge in the United States and N/A for freight, PDI, and A/C tax in Canada and, because of cross-border equipment differences, can’t be directly compared.

The word “quiet” in the headline applies in two different ways to the 2023 Volvo V60 Cross Country wagon. It means quiet in the literal sense – the cabin of this car isolates noise nicely, as befits a luxury car – but also in the more abstract sense. This is a car that seems to fly under the radar, even as it’s one of the last wagons left on the market.


That’s too bad, because it’s a comfortable commuter, though a bit lacking in the sort of sport that draws enthusiasts’ dollars.

The 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder puts out 247 horsepower and 258 lb-ft of torque and has a mild-hybrid setup that includes regenerative braking. It’s a strong enough package that you’ll be fine in urban traffic, but this is a car meant to get you to grandma’s house instead of being hustled down the PCH, and that is quite apparent.

Similarly, the handling is just fine, maybe with just enough of a touch of sport to keep your playful side happy, and the ride is generally comfy though a bit stiff on occasion. Credit a double-wishbone suspension up front and an integral link setup in the rear.

This is a car meant for ferrying you and your passengers from point A to B in comfort, and it does that well. Wagons have often been stereotyped as boring – especially before the shift to minivans and later, SUVs, which made them seem cool again – but boring isn’t always bad. Sometimes it’s nice and peaceful.

The cabin helps. The materials are generally nice and price-point-appropriate. The vertical infotainment screen looks good, though the learning curve for its use is a bit steep, especially if you aren’t steeped in the Google ecosystem. The clean design can’t help but make me think of stereotypes about Swedish design and minimalism. Maybe the small Swedish flag tags on the seats subtly implanted that thought in my brain.

Volvo keeps the simple design going on the outside – it’s boxy and simple in style. Handsome in a plain way. The only splashes of spice are a rear spoiler and some silver trim, such as around the grille or on the bottom of the rear bumper.

Speaking of price points, this is not a cheap car. To that end, the standard features include a 12.3-inch digital gauge cluster, the 9-inch infotainment screen that essentially runs on Google apps, remote start, Bluetooth, satellite radio, uplevel audio, four USB-C ports, LED headlights, LED fog lamps, blind-spot alert with steering assist, rear cross-traffic alert with automatic braking, collision-avoidance assist, adaptive cruise control, lane-departure warning and lane-keep assist, and rear park assist.

Other standard features include a panoramic sunroof, leather seats, heated front seats, cooled front seats, keyless entry, four-zone climate control, and a 360-degree camera.

Opt for the Ultimate, the way my test car was optioned, and you get Harman Kardon audio, 19-inch wheels, and a head-up display. A Climate Package ($750) added headlamp cleaners, heated rear seats, and a heated steering wheel. Other options included a luggage cover ($345), the metallic paint ($695), and a power tailgate ($200). A 20-inch-wheel kit replaced the 19s and cost $3,200. Another $3,200 replaces the Harman Kardon audio with a Bowers and Wilkins system.

All that plus destination ballooned the car’s $54,100 base price to $63,585. Fuel economy is listed at 23 mpg city/30 mpg highway/26 mpg combined.

The driving dynamics here are mostly bland and commuter-friendly with a touch of sport. That’s OK. This car’s selling point is that it’s going to get you from place to place with little fuss and even less muss. It’s also meant to coddle you, and it does.

Cars like this can be hard to talk about. They don’t offer sexy, head-turning styling or the kind of performance that sends scribes like me diving deep into the dictionary looking for the appropriate superlatives. They offer luxury but not the kind of distinctive features that a ride with a six-figure sticker would.

What they do offer is solid utility for the moneyed person who is often carrying passengers and/or cargo about town. Oh, and comfort.

You won’t turn many heads, but you’ll get more than a few to nod at your sensible taste in automobiles

[Images © 2023 Tim Healey/TTAC.com]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • Jkross22 Jkross22 on Jul 19, 2023

    These are great looking wagons and like a few of you, I'm in the long roof club. There is no way in Haiti this is worth 65k. Sorry Volvo, but you guys kinda screwed the pooch over the last few years with awful reliability problems and cool but laggy infotainment issues. Like most cars in 2023, this too is overpriced by about 20-30%. Combine that with the amount of time this will be in for warranty issues and it's not worth the trouble. Sucks saying that because I really do like these, but if I buy one in the next few years, it will need to have that 12 year 125k mile warranty to consider it.

  • Slyons Slyons on Jul 21, 2023

    Under 250 HP, only 26 MPG, for $60k?


    yeah they’re gonna need to try a little harder.


    it does look great though

  • Fred No idea why someone would interested in buying this at the price point. I'm pro-ev but a quick search can pull-up a lot more value at lower costs. I like the Fiat design but I couldn't stomach paying $37k for limited range and a super tight back seat.
  • 28-Cars-Later For the you-gotta-be-rich-to-afford-a-cheap-car crowd, Versa is the winner here IMO. Buy it new and pay the $300ish (?) note, but enjoy at least five years with relative reliability assuming historical average miles. Based on MY19, Manheim expects the "S" to be worth $5,975 in roughly five years with "retail" value being $12,650. Nissan and other second or third tier marques will give more on a new trade so assuming 20 OTD with incentives its a 12K/$2,400 depreciation over 5 years excluding interest and it probably could be kept another year or two before the Nissan in it starts to show. Mirage in this comparison is the new buy used on the cheap and run it till the wheels fall off. I'm loathe to compare it to either the Panther or 240 (since I don't believe it could physically last as long as either) but something in the vein of car you could repair yourself on the cheap which was originally intended for Third World conditions. Based on MY19, the ES hatch is worth $4K even with avg miles of 72,740 and "retail" value at $9,650. I personally see it as lot poison and could see savvy buyers making off with one of these near or below wholesale while Nissan is a staple of the subprime crowd and is much easier to finance. MC beings up an interesting contender in the used Chevy Bolt, whose wholesale is $12,050 for MY19 in LT trim with avg lower miles of 33,017. While this is very intriguing, financing is going to be the story here since Nissan or I imagine Mitsubishi could put buyers into half decent rates despite poor credit where a Bolt is "going to the street" and getting whatever high rate is being offered now. Assuming one can handle their own charging, Bolt does offer a lower maintenance cost and used I believe buyers have a higher chance of a white collar professional's commuter condition than what they will find in a used Nissan or Mitsu runabout. The risk to our theoretical buyer IMO is that the Bolt will straight up fail at some point in the future, either not take a charge or even turn on and for the higher wholesale entry point I say the Mitsu is a better choice since it likely won't completely fail and can very cheaply be replaced. Additional: For your kid/nephew/niece/any "middle class" child, I think Bolt is probably the better proposition here but I'd be out of the trade in 36 mos personally. For those truly on their own with no emergency support system, I'd shy away.
  • Jbltg It's interesting to note that in the Japan domestic market, where cars are built to order and dealers maintain barely any stock, that there are many, many color options. Really good ones, but no one seems to bite. Most of the cars on the road there are the same boring colors that we have. Go figure.My pet peeve is black interiors. Too depressing, and shows every speck of dust and dirt.
  • IBx1 Dealerships flood the market with grayscale cars to commodify them and drive down resale value. Green and yellow cars hold their value best because they cannot easily be replaced, but you can throw a rock and hit fifty shades of gray.
  • SCE to AUX Appliances (household and vehicular) have limited color choices, that's why.But today, if you want a crazy color, just buy a plain one and get it wrapped.
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