The Seat Ibiza is the Spanish firm's strongest-selling car – both overall and in the British market – and, as we're about to outline, the Seat sells well for good reason.
Like many of its rivals, it comes in two body variants: a stylish, if traditionally shaped, five door, a more rakish three-door Seat Ibiza hatch (called the SportCoupé). There was a Seat Ibiza estate version, but it was discontinued at the end of 2016 due to dwindling sales.
The engine line-up mirrors that of Volkswagen’s Volkswagen Polo, using the same engines to good effect. There is an entry level naturally aspirated Seat Ibiza 1.0-litre engine, followed by a turbocharged version of the unit, two versions of the Seat Ibiza 1.2 TSI, a cooking Seat Ibiza 1.4 TSI for the FR and a fizzy 1.8 TSI for the Seat Ibiza Cupra versions. The diesels pretty much limited to an 1.4 in two guises, with the lower-powered version given a green makeover for Ecomotive models.
SOL is the entry-level trim available only on the cut-price, low-powered 1.2 and 1.4 TDI, otherwise there is three other trims to choose from - SE Technology, FR Technology and FR Technology Red Edition, and two Cupra versions in that order of performance.