2025.5 Volvo XC90 First Drive: Is This Old Favorite Ready For Today?
Yes, it’s a 2025.5: The updated XC90 can handle newer competition. Mostly.Pros
- Gorgeous design with great outward visibility
- T8’s 33 miles of electric range
- Excellent safety ratings
Cons
- B5’s noticeable shifts
- Third row hard to access
- Brake feel could be better
Hmm, this wasn’t supposed to happen. Volvo was going all-electric by 2030, making the gorgeous XC90 obsolete. After all, who needs the gas-powered XC90—our SUV of the Year way back in 2016—when the electric EX90 fills a similar role in the lineup?
Yet here we are talking about the 2025.5 Volvo XC90, a relentlessly updated three-row SUV fighting rivals that weren’t even on the drawing board when it first rolled out of dealerships.
We keep asking ourselves one question: Can a 10-year-old SUV possibly keep up with the younger players, or do the updates come up short? After driving the 2025.5 XC90 B5 gas and T8 plug-in hybrid models, we can confidently answer: Yes.
Timeless Design Across Three Engines
The 2025.5 Volvo XC90 returns with B5, B6, and T8 engine options. AWD and three-row seating are standard across the line down to the B5, a mild hybrid turbo I-4 making just 247 hp. Remember we’re not talking about Escalade-sized three-rows; the XC90 battles SUVs including the Lexus TX and Audi Q7. The B5 returns perfectly adequate acceleration, though passing on the highway requires a bit of an opening. In which case, maybe try the B6, a 295-hp mild hybrid turbo I-4 boosted by an electric supercharger.
The best efficiency and acceleration are found with the plug-in hybrid, which has dropped Recharge badging and is again known as the T8. Call it whatever you want, we like the idea of a 455-hp luxury three-row with 33 miles of electric driving with an estimated 5.1-second 0–60-mph time. The B5 takes 7.3 seconds to reach the same speed, and it’s a difference you can feel.
We admire Volvo’s dedication to updating the XC90, and this year the SUV is quieter thanks to added sound-deadening foam in the A- and B-pillars. A new 11.2-inch vertically oriented touchscreen pokes its digital chest out from the dash and is flanked by newly reshaped, slim, vertical air vents. The center console storage area has been redesigned to be more practical, and Volvo updated the suspension to enhance comfort in the B5 and B6 with the standard non-air suspension.
Also, let’s take a moment to appreciate Volvo’s exquisitely redesigned front grille detailing. So good, right?
As a package, though, does this stuff make the 2025.5 XC90 feel like an experienced veteran learning new tricks or more like a Gen Xer trying too hard to fit into a Gen Z trend?






