Why we ran it: To see if this hybrid can strike the sweet spot between a car and a van
Month 1 - Month 2 - Month 3 - Month 4 - Month 5 - Month 6 - Month 7 - Month 8 - Month 9 - Month 10 - Final report - Specs
Did the last of the van-estates make a compelling case for their return? - Final report
When the Corolla first joined us nearly 25,000 miles ago, I don't think anyone in the Autocar office expected much of it.
No disrespect to the legions of private hire drivers up and down the country, but the idea of driving one for the foreseeable future seemed Like the automotive equivalent of watching paint dry. However, this particular Corolla has a secret: it's actually a van in disguise.
This secret was a constant source of amusement for most. But any time someone asked about the Corolla Commercial - typically with a slightly incredulous "you came here in that?" while gesturing to my mock taxi - I'd simply fling open the rear door and show them the aircraft hangar behind the seats, which was usually met with an"ahhhhh" as they inspected it.
And I don't think they were just being polite: it is a genuinely unusual sight these days. The number of car-derived vans in production has plummeted, with now only a few remaining- and even then, most of them (the Suzuki Jimny, the Land Rover Defender and Discovery and the Ineos Grenadier) are lofty SUVs, leaving the Corolla Commercial as the sole survivor of the once popular van-estate class.
It's a shame that the market has gone that way, as although I was initially sceptical of the concept - the Corolla Commercial being not only more expensive but also having a significantly smaller load space and carrying capacity than an equivalent traditional Toyota Proace van - in practice, it makes a lot of sense.
This Toyota is clearly designed for the far-travelling tradesperson. Vans can be incredibly tiresome on long journeys, particularly if you have to navigate twisty country roads - not great when you're typically fighting a level of body roll that makes a monster truck look stable.
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Nice pretty pictures of the "van", but not a single one showing the load bay?
We all know what a Corolla Estate looks like from the outside, maybe the photographer wasn't briefed, or the interior shots weren't interesting or arty enough...
We seem to have come a full circle with people buying vans half a century ago for tax benefit, then installing rear windows and seats to convert to a small estate.
Presumably that's no longer possible in 2023 since any such modification would invalidate insurance and would be picked up during the MOT test?
But well done Toyota (and others) for spotting a market opportunity and exploiting it!