Review: 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country

Volvo was all-in on "because wagon!" long before it was popular, unpopular, and then popular again.
Volvo was all-in on "because wagon!" long before it was popular, unpopular, and then popular again.

by | January 12, 2026

Advertisement

I couldn’t help but notice that wagons are very much in, but not the way they used to be. They’re in, in the bougie, trendy, expensive sense, not the honest sense, like this 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country. 

Just this year alone we’ve had a BMW M5 Touring, an Audi RS6 Avant GT, and a Porsche Taycan GTS CrossTurismo, and everyone fawned over them – because wagon! On press events I hear journosaurs asking beleaguered PR peeps “when are you gonna bring the wagon over?” Genesis just made a huge splash at the LA Auto Show with a stunning supercar prototype, and all I’m hearing is “but did you see the wagon?” 

This whole thing bothers me because I liked wagons back when they were very much out, and now all these hype-hounds are climbing onto my wagon and making a band-wagon out of it. I wonder if Volvo feels the same, given that they’ve never abandoned them, either?

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green

Don’t call it a comeback

History repeats itself, and Volvo has had to pare down their wagon lineup in the midst of shifting customer trends. The minivan began overruling the traditional station wagon as the de-facto family hauler in the 80s, and then the SUV started eating the minivan’s lunch, and in the years since, everything has been consumed by the neither-here-nor-there crossover (so much so that Volvo’s own XC60 has finally usurped the legendary 240 as its all-time best seller). 

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green

I’ve been here for years

The base V60 (and with it, my beloved V60 Polestar) have been discontinued, leaving only the V60 Cross Country, one of the original genre-benders, left to carry the wagon mantle. They’ve even got it down to just one trim level – Ultra – to simplify production and keep it going. Despite everyone on our side of the pond turning their backs wagons when the collective zeitgeist decided they were actively uncool, Volvo has always offered us a wagon, refusing to abandon this long standing paragon of practicality.

[Go figure, in the time between me drafting this and this being published, Volvo has axed the V60 Cross Country wagon for North America. Pour one out for one of the last real ones.]

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green with lens flare

I’m gonna rock this land

I spend quite a bit of time shooting my colleague’s vehicles. It is not nearly as fun or glamorous as people think it is, but I’m adamant that it’s not good enough to be good enough, and I try hard to produce the best work that conditions will allow. Which means shooting cars is not only not always fun, but often tiring work. Conversely, shooting a Volvo never gets old. 

I always get carried away with Volvos. I happily take too long. I always find new angles to work with, new ways of framing a design element, new ways of displaying their beauty. I love their wheel designs, I love their body lines, I love their colorways, I love their lighting arrays, I could (and have) spend days with a Volvo in my viewfinder, and the V60 Cross Country is the current pick of the litter. Its classic long, low, wide proportions, with a perfectly tasteful amount of toughness added by the Cross Country armour, make it uniquely handsome in a very subtle way. Don’t even get me started on the new Forest Lake paint; it’s sublime.

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green

Don’t ever compare

The same can be said of the cabin of Volvo’s cars. They’ve been largely unchanged for more than a decade because good design is timeless, and this was and is a very good design. Even on their newer cars that have tried to break the mold and shut up hype-hounds struggling to get hyped about “dated” design, they haven’t strayed far. It’s beautiful, clean, dressed in top-quality materials, and they’ve fixed the only thing that was kind of holding it back.

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country interior with lens flare 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country interior

Listen to the bass go boom

Like the updated XC90 and XC60, this V60 Cross Country is endowed with Volvo’s new Android-Automotive based infotainment system. Like those updated vehicles, this software is slick, responsive, delightfully intuitive, and in typically Volvo fashion, pretty. Unlike those updated XC vehicles, it does not have a larger screen floated over the original cavity, and instead makes do with the original-size 9-inch touch display. Anyone who thinks 9 inches isn’t enough probably needs help.

There’s not much in the way of options on one of these, which is fine, as they’re nicely equipped with leather, wood, powered heated seats and steering wheel, adaptive cruise control, automated emergency braking, and lane-keep assist. The only options on this tester are aforementioned 20-inch wheels (excellent) and the $3,750 Bowers & Wilkins sound system (very excellent). Given the usual cost of having that name in your car, this is a no-brainer – you’ll thank me later.

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country interior screen 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country interior Bowers & Wilkins tweeter

And my nine is easy to load

Volvo’s always been clever about the use of space in their vehicles, and it should be no surprise that a Volvo wagon excels on this front. Front seat space and comfort is excellent, and there’s a decent amount of knick-knack storage. Rear seating isn’t limousine generous but commodious enough for adults to be comfortable on a long haul, and the rear seats are actually supportive, unlike the flat benches in a lot of utility vehicles. There’s a ton of cargo space behind those rear seats, with a very low liftover height courtesy of it not being an artificially tall crossover. There’s a reason why Europe never let go of the wagon – they make so much sense!

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country interior cargo area

Listen to my gear shift

The V60 Cross Country has long since ditched the strange (but surprisingly reliable) Twincharged engine, instead opting for a fairly standard 2-Litre, turbocharged four-cylinder mill with an integrated mild hybrid system. It produces 247 horsepower and 258 foot-pounds of torque which is, in a word, fine. It’s not going to set your hair on fire, but it’s enough to accelerate, merge, and pass confidently, while returning good fuel economy (9L/100km) and displaying excellent manners around town. The mild hybrid makes the fuel saving stop-start function almost imperceptible. Volvo’s Aisin 8-speed automatic is similarly inoffensive, and responds diligently, if not terribly enthusiastically.

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country engine 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green

You better move

Volvos drive well. They have always driven well. It is inherent with their philosophy of safety that car should handle itself naturally, and deliberately. As such the driver controls are impeccably judged, body motions are well controlled, and its overall quite communicative and confidence inspiring. Just like I spend a lot of time looking at cars through my viewfinder, I spend a lot of time driving them – and I love me a Volvo, every time. They just feel right.

2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country in Forest Lake green

Mama said knock you out

If it sounds like I’m gushing about this 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country, it’s because I am. I love that it’s so good looking that it can bewitch even a cynical pro like me. I love that its cabin has transcended aging, and fixed the only thing that aged it. I love how useful it is. I love how comfortable it is. I love how well it drives. The only vehicle that would give me pause for our tester’s $67,475 asking price is BMW’s X3 30 – and as good as that is, I know I’d rather have the sensible Swede that I’d never get tired of looking at.

Get one now while you still can. Production of the 2026 Volvo V60 Cross Country ends in April.

 

Vehicle Specs
Segment
Mid-size luxury station wagon
Engine Size
2.0L turbocharged four-cylinder w/ mild hybrid assist
Horsepower (at RPM)
247 hp @ 5,400 rpm
Torque (lb-ft.)
258 lb-ft @ 1,800 rpm
Fuel Efficiency (L/100km, City/Highway/Combined)
10.0/7.5/8.9
Observed Fuel Efficiency (L/100km)
9L/100km
Cargo Capacity (in L)
658/1,431 L (seats up/down)
Base Price (CAD)
$62,250
As-Tested Price (CAD)
$67,745
The DoubleClutch.ca Podcast
Advertisement
Advertisement

About Nathan Leipsig

Editor-in-Chief Nathan is an eccentric car enthusiast who likes driver-focused cars and thoughtful design. He can't stand listening to people reminisce about the "good ole days" of cars because he started doing it before it was cool, and is also definitely not a hipster doofus.
Advertisement
Advertisement