VAN WITH THE PLAN

I’ve driven the new Volkswagen Caddy – it’s proof that the old way is the best way for moving people

REMEMBER that thing called the MPV? It's quite big. Has lots of space. Usually pretty ugly, but was superb at its job.

Mini cab drivers love them, but the reason nobody else does these days is the SUV.

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Old-school van-based MPVs like the VW Caddy Life are superb at moving peopleCredit: VW UK

Suddenly you could have space and look down your nose at people, and that was enough for most people to lose interest.

But having spent a week on holiday with my wife, three young kids and a Volkswagen Caddy, it's clear the old way was the best way.

Let's not beat about the bush; design is subjective, but the Caddy is no looker.

From the front it's fine, but from the back, I think it's, err, terrible.

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But then, show me any van-based MPV that can get you excited. There aren't any. I checked.

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That doesn't matter, what matters is that it just works as family transport, and it excels at this.

The VW Caddy comes in three forms; a panel van called the Caddy Cargo, an MPV called the Caddy or a mini motorhome called the California.

The Caddy MPV comes in two lengths, and you can have five or seven seats in either of them.

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It's quick enough, returned nearly 40mpg fully laden and never swayed about in bends like an old bus.

That said, the rear suspension, which despite being improved on this latest model, still thudded too loudly over bumps for me.

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And while we're on gripes, the only other one was VW's latest infotainment system.

It's an 8-inch screen on the dash as standard or you can up that to a fancier 10-inch one for a whopping £2,000 like ours had. But don't bother.

The screen itself is superb and comes with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as standard, but the climate control, volume and things like the light controls are all controlled by touch-sensitive surfaces.

It's Just hard to use when driving and I wasn't used to it even after a week.

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Still, the Caddy Life has Golf-like quality inside, it fitted our three bulky child seats side-by-side across its rear bench, its sliding doors are brilliant in tight car parks and even as a family of five, we failed to outdo its boot.

No five-seat SUV at this price level will compete.

So how much for all this? The Caddy starts at around £27,000 and tops out at a little under £34,000 for the longer seven-seat diesel Caddy Life.

Ours was somewhere in the middle before its optional extras.

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Great, but there's just one problem - Ford's Tourneo Connect is exactly the same MPV but has a Ford badge and a cheaper price tag.

So, decide your budget, pick your van-based MPV and be happy. If you have a family you can't lose.

Apart from the looks.

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It feels car-like inside but VW's infotainment system can be frustrating to useCredit: VW UK
Only the Caddy's outside rear seats have Isofix points but three child seats fitted fineCredit: VW UK
Even the shorter model has a massive boot that'll easily handle a family week awayCredit: VW UK
The Caddy isn't too bad to look at from the front, but it's no looker from the backCredit: VW UK
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Sliding doors are a rare sight these days but are so useful in tight car parks with kidsCredit: VW UK
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