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2015 Volkswagen Jetta TDI Highline Review: One Form Of Financial Freedom

2015 Volkswagen Jetta TDI Highline brown in the snow

To say the 2015 Volkswagen Jetta TDI isn’t about fuel savings is to miss the point. But to say it’s about all-around money saving is to tell a lie.

If your only mission was to spend less money on personal transportation in the new vehicle realm, jaw-dropping highway mileage generated by a 2.0L turbocharged diesel is not necessarily the ticket to personal financial freedom. 

THE GOOD
• Mmmm…. diesel
• 236 lb-ft of torques
• Improved ride quality
• Big back seat
• Massive trunk
THE BAD

• The diesel engine premium
• The diesel fuel premium
• You don’t just want a Golf?
• Not the best DSG pairing
• Forgettable styling

There are much less costly ways of getting around town than in a highbrow Jetta like our test example, with its leather seating, navigation, upgraded audio, and Volkswagen’s dual-clutch direct-shift gearbox.

THE CONCEPT
So why can’t the two objectives comingle? I’d argue that they can, that a new car buyer can enjoy the benefits of an upgraded, torquey, semi-luxurious, and spacious German compact car – and spend the money that’s required to do so – while also enjoying weeks of fuel tank range.

2015 Volkswagen Jetta TDI Highline brown
2015 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA TDI HIGHLINE
Base Price: $ $25,385 *
As-Tested Price: $33,680 *
Drive Type: front-wheel-drive
Transmission: 6-speed direct-shift gearbox
Engine: 2.0L DOHC 16-valve I-4 turbodiesel
Horsepower: 150 @ 3500 rpm
Torque: 236 lb-ft @ 1750 rpm
Curb Weight: 3296 pounds
Length: 183.2 inches
Width: 70.0 inches
Height: 57.2 inches
Wheelbase: 104.4 inches
Tires: Continental ExtremeWinterContact
Tire Size: 225/45R17
Passenger Volume: 2665 litres
Cargo Volume: 439 litres
EPA City: 31 mpg
EPA Hwy: 45 mpg
NRCAN OEE City: 5.3 L/100km
NRCAN OEE Hwy: 7.5 L/100km
Observed: 44.4 mpg
Observed: 5.3 L/100km
* Canadian dollars, includes $1495 in fees.
Base price indicates least expensive Jetta TDI.
MPG fuel economy ratings from the
Environmental Protection Agency.
L/100km ratings from the Canadian
Office of Energy Efficiency’s new
5-cycle testing for MY2015 vehicles.

However, it’s not as easy for me to say that as it was in the past. After years of local parity or even diesel-favouring prices, diesel now costs significantly more than regular gas in Nova Scotia. The new turbocharged 1.8L four-cylinder gas-fired engine I experienced in the Mk7 Golf also eats into the TDI’s efficiency advantage in ways the old 2.5L five-cylinder never dreamt of doing. And the CAD $2300 premium for the TDI over that flexible 1.8T is frightening, at least before resale value is taken into account.

The TDI isn’t quite on the same level as a Tesla Model S, whose owner who can afford the initial outlay and enjoys the combination of electrified transportation and ridiculous performance. Nor can a direct comparison be drawn with a Chevrolet Volt owner who accepts the higher price of the car because he finds satisfaction in lengthy periods of electric-only driving without the penalty of limited range. Nevertheless, in a similar manner, the up-front cost and premium at the pump won’t hinder a TDI owner from sourcing pleasure in her car’s real-world pace and its aversion to fuel consumption.

See, just because a new car consumer purchases or leases a car with clear fuel saving intent doesn’t mean the consumer must showcase frugal tendencies across the board. They can still drive the car they want. And strangely enough, despite forgettable styling, a lack of auto headlights, not quite Golf-like steering, some wind whistle around the A-pillar, an antiquated infotainment unit, and one of the less effective DSG pairings, the Jetta TDI is, in fact, desirable.

THE CAR
Granted, I’d argue that it’s less desirable as the equipment level rises. The Highline-trim car loaned to us by Volkswagen Canada creeps deep into Passat territory. Yes, the Jetta is very roomy considering its exterior dimensions – at 182.2 inches long, it’s only two inches longer than a Mazda 3 sedan. But the Passat’s interior is utterly massive.

In Canada, diesel-powered Jettas start at $25,385. The 6-speed dual-clutch automatic adds $1400. Our test car, a Highline with the DSG and the $2495 Technology package (navigation, Fender audio, adaptive front lighting with LEDs) tops out at $33,680, including the $2300 diesel option. A mid-level Passat TDI Comfortline with the DSG costs $32,190.

• Historical Monthly & Yearly Volkswagen Jetta Sales Figures
• 2014 Volkswagen Jetta GLI Edition 30 Driven Review
• 2015 Volkswagen Golf 1.8 TSI Comfortline Driven Review
• 2013 Volkswagen Jetta Turbo Hybrid Driven Review

But remember, the 2015 Jetta is not like the 2014 Jetta. Independent rear suspension aids ride quality, which really is quite serene. The upgraded interior, aside from the laggy touch screen system with its poor graphics, never once let me down in terms of material quality or ergonomics. Jetta steering still lacks the Golf’s sharpness, and the DSG’s lack of instantaneous response works with the comfort-minded chassis to steer you away from aggressive driving on twisty back roads. The Jetta’s overall on-road behaviour, however, provides a mature ambience, leaving me the with the feeling that the Jetta is perhaps better at taking the fight to midsize sedans as a slightly downsized alternative rather than challenging compacts with its upper-crust price tag.

2015 Volkswagen Jetta Highline interior
All Photo Credits: Timothy Cain Â©www.GoodCarBadCar.net
Click Any Of Images For A Larger View

Also updated for 2015 was the powerplant. The diesel is still a 2.0L with 236 lb-ft of torque, but it’s not the same 2.0L diesel of old. It’s quieter, smoother, and just a little bit happier to rev, and it’s also more efficient. The OEE highway rating dropped from 5.7 L/100km to 5.3L L/100km. 

THE CONSUMPTION
In a week of driving around the city and its suburbs, the 5.3L/100km this Jetta registered was simply astonishing. With temperatures below freezing and a heavy right foot, the test example easily outperformed its city (7.5 L/100km) and combined (6.5 L/100km) ratings and very nearly matched the official highway figure.

Question the wisdom of spending $30K+ on a fuel miser if you must, but 5.3L/100km in city driving is the kind of mileage that engenders diesel loyalty. I just wish the 2015 Jetta TDI still looked like the fourth-gen model, handled like the Jetta GLI, and could be filled up with fuel that didn’t cost an extra $0.12/litre.