The Toyota Yaris is heading back to its roots with the new, fourth-generation version that’s in our road test cross hairs this week.
Having been with us for a little over two decades, the French-built small hatchback has done well enough to become Toyota’s biggest-selling individual model in Europe; just as you’d expect a supermini from a volume car brand to do.
And yet Toyota would clearly like it to do better. So now that the company has an all-new TNGA-B model platform to deploy on the Yaris (it’s related to the one that has produced impressive results under the latest Toyota C-HR, Toyota Prius and Toyota Corolla, but not quite the same), it has taken the opportunity to redesign and reimagine its supermini on a clean sheet of paper.
The result, as you might have noticed, looks rather more like the original Yaris of 1999 than either of the subsequent generations. Like its showroom siblings, it’s a modern Toyota that offers only a petrol-electric hybrid powertrain.
Although it is likely to sell on the strength of its fuel efficiency and active safety credentials, it peddles significantly better performance than its petrol-electric predecessor as well as much-improved handling and driver appeal. Interestingly – and not by coincidence, you suspect – this is a car described in exactly the same suspiciously catchy terms as the original Yaris was, one distinguished by “big small” characteristics both static and dynamic. Consider that an attempt to sweep away some of the memory of the Yaris’s awkward-looking teenage years if you will.