
Over the last decade, seven-seat cars have undergone a significant transformation.
While they were traditionally designed as MPVs, like the now departed Ford Galaxy and Volkswagen Sharan, today's best seven-seaters are predominantly fashionable SUVs.
But no matter how sharp they look, the general ethos of a seven-seater hasn’t changed: ferry the family, swallow shopping and occasionally moonlight as a van for Ikea flatpacks.
Our top 10 list features cars with varying characteristics: some offer a third row best suited for occasional use alongside massive boots, while others comfortably accommodate a group of adults without needing Tardis-like magic. Some combine all of these aspects to great effect.
Our top pick for the best seven-seater on sale today is the Dacia Jogger, which stands out thanks to its unbeatable value and immense practicality that few others can match.
Close behind is the Kia EV9, an electric option boasting an excellent interior, good third-row space and a substantial range.
While seven-seaters are gradually disappearing from the UK market, there’s still a solid list of options you can add to your shortlist. So read on, as we dive into the top 10 best seven-seaters on sale today.
1. Dacia Jogger

Best for: Value
It's perhaps no surprise that the biggest breath of fresh air in the seven-seater market for a while has come from Dacia.
The Dacia Jogger is a fully equipped people mover, but more importantly, it will cost you less than the price of a mainstream supermini - and is the cheapest car on this list.
Straddling the lines between estate, MPV and SUV, the Jogger contains enough space for seven adults, although the third row is best left to children on longer journeys.
With the rear seats lowered or removed completely, there's up to 2094 litres of carrying capacity available, plus several nearly packaged storage compartments tucked away around the cabin.
Driving the Jogger is a mixed bag, but it's not bad. There's a supple, languid gait to its ride, while its turbocharged 1.0-litre petrol triple is a smooth and willing accomplice.
Light and accurate steering combines with a subtly raised seating position to make the Jogger easy to place on the road, and while it can roll like a drunk when cornering hard, the grip is strong and the handling always remains faithful.
It's far from a scalpel-sharp street fighter, but there's enough character in the way the Jogger goes about its business that it really should be considered if you're in the market for seven seats.
2. Kia EV9

Best for: Electric motoring
Electric cars are beginning to muscle in on the seven-seat act, and the Kia EV9 is one of the first of the bunch.
You certainly won’t struggle to find it in a packed car park. It's roughly the same size as the Range Rover Sport and has a really bold design, so it possesses genuine presence.
The sheer size of it and its clever packaging means it can offer six- and seven-seat cabin layouts. The former swaps the second row’s three-seat sliding bench for a pair of swivelling ‘captain’s chairs', a bit like you would find in the Mercedes-Benz V-Class.
Those third-row seats are big enough for small adults and kids with booster seats, which is useful as four of the five rear seats get Isofix points. The rearmost seats stow and deploy electrically.
With all seats up, the boot is big enough for a reasonable amount of shopping cargo, while five-seat mode makes it very generous.
The EV9 comes with a 99.8kWh battery. In the 200hp single-motor, rear-wheel-drive model, official range is 349 miles. Kia quotes efficiency of 3.0mpkWh and our testing achieved 2.8mpkW - impressive for a car with such a large, block-like frontal area. The official range of the dual-motor, four-wheel-drive model is 313 miles.
In cooler conditions, the top-of-the-line EV9 achieved 259 miles on our 70mph touring efficiency test and gave us reason to expect it would cover a little over 300 miles in exclusively urban and gentler out-of-town motoring.
3. Hyundai Santa Fe

Best for: Interior ambience
The Hyundai Santa Fe has always been one of our favourites in the seven-seat car market, and its 2024 renewal cemented its position as a go-to option.
Along with a complete retro-inspired redesign, the Santa Fe is bigger and more spacious than ever, filled with technology and a comfortable way to travel with up to six passengers.
The Santa Fe comes with either a full hybrid or a plug-in hybrid powertrain, with maximum power standing at 249bhp. In PHEV guise, it offers up to 33 miles of electric-only range, which is slightly disappointing, but the rest of the car makes up for it.
Boot size varies depending on specification and powertrain, but the seven-seat PHEV features 985 litres with its rearmost seats folded down (compared with 992 litres for the regular hybrid) or 621 litres with them in place.
Partner its extensive practicality with its excellent material quality and the Santa Fe justifies its high position in our top 10.
4. Volkswagen Multivan

Best for: Versatility
The Volkswagen Multivan is a traditional MPV: a thoroughly sensible and spacious box on wheels that offers unrivalled space and versatility.
A brilliantly rational form of family transport, it mixes one of the most flexible interiors in the business with grown-up driving dynamics and a dash of premium appeal.
Thanks to sitting on the MQB platform that underpins everything from the Volkswagen Golf to the Skoda Kodiaq, the Multivan also handles like a car, with surprising precision and brilliant ride refinement.
It also gets access to petrol, diesel and PHEV options. The latter uses a 1.4-litre petrol engine and an electric motor for 215bhp and a claimed 31 miles of EV running.
The Multivan's trump card, though, is its modular interior, which can be organised just how you want it with more than enough space for seven passengers. Plus, it has a sliding door on each side.
5. Land Rover Defender 130

Best for: Desirability
This biggest Land Rover Defender ought to have been a candidate for the top of this chart, because while it's expensive, its cleverly configurable interior presents the option of as many as eight seats.
Buy a long-wheelbase, five-door Defender 110 and JLR will offer you a choice of five, six or seven passenger seats, while the elongated Defender 130 can seat eight in a 2-3-3 formation.
Sadly, for legislative reasons, you can't order the latter with the jump seat in between the driver and front seat passenger, which would have made it a nine-seater (and, in the UK at least, in need of registration as a minibus).
Even without this as an official option, though, this car has impressive versatility. The seven-seat Defender has third-row seats that are a little smaller than those of the related Land Rover Discovery's but still perfectly usable by children, teenagers and smaller adults.
In the 130, you can take all eight on board and still have a very usable 400-litre boot, although the trade-off is the car's vast 5358mm length that makes it something of a squash and a squeeze in most parking spaces.
This is also an expensive car, with even the very cheapest models starting from more than £70,000. But unlike the old Defender, it drives nearly as well as almost any luxury SUV of its size and type, has a broad range of modern electrified powertrains and has off-road capability to spare.
6. Land Rover Discovery

Best for: Third-row space
The third-generation Land Rover Discovery remains a fine full-sized seven-seat option, thanks to likeable charm and genuinely luxurious characteristics.
Launched in 2017 and updated in 2021, it comes with seven seats as standard. It's seriously spacious, with excellent head and leg room for all passengers, and vitally it tops the list for third-row space.
Boot space stands at a cavernous 1137 litres when you're using only five seats, but it drops down to 258 litres when using all seven.
Currently, the Discovery is only available with a mild-hybrid diesel engine, offering 348bhp and a 0-62mph sprint of 5.9sec. Apart from the Defender, then, the Discovery is probably your best bet on this list for performance.
It's pleasant inside too - not far from Range Rover quality. And it's even better off-road – not that the vast majority of owners will ever find out.
7. Skoda Kodiaq

Best for: PHEV electric range
Skoda branched out into the seven-seat SUV market in 2016, launching a car that split the difference between full-sized and mid-sized options quite cleverly.
The Kodiaq, now in its second generation, has a big cabin and a generous boot for a car of its price and size, and all versions of it bar the bottom-rung variant get seven seats as standard.
The one dimension in which the car is lacking a bit of space is cabin width. And because the middle second-row seat can't be slid into an offset position relative to both outer ones, it's tricky to get three child seats installed side by side.
The Kodiaq's engine range consists of a 1.5-litre turbocharged petrol with mild-hybrid assistance and a 2.0-litre diesel.
Both are admirable units, but it's a shame the PHEV powertrain is available only in the five-seater, especially with its impressive 70-mile electric-only range.
All Kodiaqs are pleasant and easy to drive, if a little bit firm-riding in some editions.
8. Volkswagen Tayron

Best for: Powertrain selection
The all-new Tayron SUV replaces the Tiguan Allspace as Volkswagen's seven-seat passenger car (there's also the Multivan, of course).
It's available with a huge range of powertrains, including petrol, diesel, mild hybrid and plug-in hybrid.
It's a good all-around option with accessible driving dynamics, a pleasant interior and frugal powertrains, but that third row will be very tight for anybody beyond secondary school.
However, as with the related Skoda Kodiaq, the PHEV version (which has a 70-mile electric-only range) isn't available with seven seats.
9. Volvo XC90

Best for: Daily driving
The fact that the Volvo XC90 has been on sale for almost 10 years is a testament to its compelling blend of space, practicality, comfort and class - and a facelift keeps things fresh in 2025.
Some rivals are sharper to drive, but the XC90 offers a great balance of performance, efficiency and low running costs, particularly for business users - especially in its plug-in hybrid form.
The XC90’s greatest strength is its roomy, well-equipped interior, which is of high quality and smartly finished. It has enough space for seven adults to travel in comfort, with the third-row seats serving up good head and leg room.
The range opens with the B5 mild-hybrid petrol with 247bhp, but there's also the refined, bik-busting T8 plug-in hybrid model, with 443bhp and 44 miles of electric-only range.
Whichever powertrain you choose, this Volvo is composed and capable on the road. Its emphasis is on comfort and refinement, rather than an uplifting driving experience, but that's perfectly in keeping with its remit.
10. Mercedes-Benz GLB

Best for: Being fashionable
Mercedes has adopted an interesting design strategy with its new smallest SUV: to miniaturise much of the visual DNA of its largest (the GLS) and to squeeze in seven seats as standard into a vehicle small enough that you probably wouldn't expect to find them.
Both factors might just help to sell the car in an increasingly crowded market. The GLB is available as a 200 petrol, 200d diesel, 220d diesel or AMG 35 petrol that borrows its 302bhp turbocharged 2.0-litre four from the AMG A35 hot hatch.
Even the base petrol engine serves up ample performance for what's a fairly laid-back-feeling car on the road, with ride quality being impressive on adaptive dampers and body control a little soft and permissive but still good.
The four-wheel-drive 4Matic models are also impressive off-road, rivalling the Land Rover Discovery Sport for go-anywhere ability.
Finally, Mercedes has broadened the GLB's appeal with the electric EQB version, which retains the option of seven seats.
That's available in 225bhp EQB 300 and 288bhp EQB 350 guises, both with a dual-motor, four-wheel-drive set-up. It's comfortable and easy to drive, but with prices starting at just over £55,000, it's not cheap, while a range of up to 257 miles falls well behind cheaper, albeit five-seat, rivals.
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