
Best 4x4s of 2025 in the UK
If you’re looking for the best SUVs on sale, you’ve arrived at the wrong page. There’s a definite distinction between those cars and the best 4x4 cars on sale today. A 4x4 car is one that offers four-wheel drive, something that’s essential if you want to go off-road, and preferred by plenty of people who want a bit of extra reassurance that their car is up to tackling slightly rougher terrain than normal.
It’s fair to say that drivers today are in love with SUVs - cars that look as if they can go anywhere. The truth is, modern SUVs often can’t. Most of them are front-wheel drive, and even those that offer four-wheel drive have precious little off-roading capability thanks to low ground clearance, fragile plastic bodywork and tyres meant for tarmac rather than turf.
But what if you need a car that really can take on anything? Well, our expert reviews team have you covered. We’ve tested the best 4x4 cars on sale today, many of them off-road, and can say with confidence which ones are worth your time.
The best 4x4s don’t lose out on anything much as a consequence of their off-road prowess. While very hardcore mud-pluggers do often suffer with poor comfort on regular roads, these are the cars designed to scale mountains. If your needs stop at the British countryside, then a slightly less hardcore alternative will still ably get you across a ploughed field, down a rutted greenlane or through the worst floods - but you won’t suffer burst eardrums and a numb bum when you use it to nip down to the shops.
Do you really need a 4x4 car? Well, there’s the question - many people think four-wheel drive is a magic cure-all for greater traction, especially when the roads get slippery such as in winter. The truth is that when it comes to sliding about on tarmac, your choice of tyres matters much more than your drivetrain.
You should therefore spend extra on a four-wheel drive car if you have genuine need of it off tarmac. If you want a car that’s a little more reassuring to drive on regular roads, then consider investing in some all-season tyres first. This of course doesn’t apply to sports cars and supercars, which have four-wheel drive to improve their performance - but you’re unlikely to go off-roading in a BMW M5 anyway.
Otherwise, with a 4x4 off-roader, you’re likely to see poorer fuel economy due to the added weight and complexity of the extra drivetrain components. Four-wheel drive versions of cars are more expensive to buy than their two-wheel drive alternatives, and many of the cars on this list are big, powerful off-roaders with high starting prices anyway.
That being said, there are a few more budget options available if you’re not looking to spend a fortune, and you’ll even find a couple of alternatives that aren’t just boring SUVs…
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The Land Rover Defender is a car that can do it all. It’s one of the most legendary names in off-roading, so of course it’s accomplished on the rough stuff, but it also makes a fantastic family car and a superbly comfortable long-distance cruiser.
The Defender name is synonymous with off-roading and while the current Defender might not be quite as simple and rugged as its predecessor it makes up for it with a suite of sophisticated electronics designed to keep you going in whatever direction the nose is pointed, over any terrain.
Land Rover’s Terrain Response system makes sure the Defender is set up correctly whether you’re driving on slippery sand, through deep ruts or trying to rock crawl. It takes the guesswork out of off-road driving and means that the Defender is extremely friendly to those who haven’t really ventured off the tarmac before.
Many Defenders never even make it to any terrain more taxing than Kensington, though, so it’s good to know that this is a seriously multi-talented car. Whether you go for the ballistic V8 engine, the tax-friendly plug-in hybrid or one of the eminently sensible diesel options, you can be sure that you’ll get a pleasant driving experience.
It’s especially good on a long journey where squashy suspension and excellent refinement make it feel really luxurious. Even round town, it’s not too bad - you get a high driving position, light and accurate controls and plenty of driver assistance kit to take the sting out of parking or tight roads.
It’s practical, too. The 110 model here is the sweet spot of the bunch, having up to seven seats but being manageable in dimensions. The eight-seater 130 is overkill, while the smaller 90 looks insanely cool but has cramped back seats and a minuscule boot.
Other 4x4s are cheaper, more spacious and a bit less ‘look at me!’ in style - but the Land Rover Defender is a hugely impressive package and if you need to go off road, there’s almost nothing better.
There’s a reason that everyone from explorers to the UN uses Toyota products - they’re legendarily long-lasting and reliable. The latest Land Cruiser looks set to continue that enviable legacy.
Not only is it super-rugged, capable of matching or even beating the best Land Rovers with its off-road accomplishments, but Toyota in the UK gives you an unbeatable ten years of warranty cover, compared to just three years for most alternatives.
Off-roading in the Land Cruiser is easy - it doesn’t have so many flashy aids as the Land Rover Defender, but what it does have is enough to keep you going over just about any terrain. Combined with seriously tough bodywork, loads of traction and the toughest of the tough four-wheel drive systems, there shouldn’t be anywhere you can’t go.
The Land Cruiser comes with just one engine - a 2.7-litre diesel - so don’t expect a rip-roaring V8 under the hood. It’s very much a dutiful rather than spectacular unit, but it has enough performance for effortless off-roading and doesn’t feel underpowered on the road either.
Speaking of on-road driving, the Land Cruiser isn’t quite as comfortable as a Land Rover Defender - but you certainly don’t suffer too much for having this 4x4. It’s quiet and refined enough on a long drive, and the standard automatic gearbox means it’s not too much of a pain to drive in town either.
And the Land Cruiser’s interior is just as hardwearing as the outside. Built like a true tank, it’s well up to the rigours of family life and outdoor pursuits alike, with plenty of wipe-clean surfaces just waiting to be muddied up again.
Perhaps the best thing about the Land Cruiser is its achingly cool retro-classic looks, though. The Land Rover Defender may have a few design details that hark back to previous models - the Land Cruiser is a full-on homage, from the cool circular headlights to the choice of vintage-inspired paint schemes. It’s definitely retro done right.
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The Mercedes G-Class is a 4x4 that’s very hard to buy with the head. For starters, it’s colossally expensive - even the most basic model starts at nearly £140,000, and if you want the very top AMG model you’ll be looking at a bill in excess of £200,000. Spending the price of a three-bed semi on a car is never a logical choice.
Available versions range from a semi-sensible diesel option to the absolutely bonkers G63 AMG with more than 600hp.
The G-Class does go some way to warranting that with the sheer force of presence it conveys. Very few cars make an entrance as well as a G-Class - no matter whether you’re pulling up outside the Ritz or heading through the McDonald’s drive-thru, people notice you.
It’s also an example of a design institution that’s been sympathetically updated over the years. The current G-Class looks very similar to the original model that debuted back in the late 70s, but it has up-to-date engines and a modern interior shoehorned into a body that feels very retro.
From the moment you open the bank vault-like door and clamber up into the driver’s seat, you feel a sense of imperiousness that you don’t even get from a Range Rover. In traffic, the only people sitting higher than you are those driving buses or lorries, so you can sneer down at those people who ‘only’ spent five figures on their cars.
Head into the rough stuff and you’ll find the G-Class’ rugged looks reflect reality. This is a car that can seriously go anywhere, as comfortable blasting across sand dunes as it is rock crawling.
You do compromise a little more than you do in more modern alternatives, though. Despite its size, passenger space in the G-Class is pretty poor, and if you carry a bit too much speed into the corner you’ll feel the effects of its old-fashioned chassis pretty quickly.
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The Land Rover Discovery is the less glamorous and marginally less capable sibling to the Land Rover Defender (above). It doesn’t quite have the off-road supremacy of its more roughty-toughty sibling, but it retains the same four-wheel drive system and Terrain Response features, which means it can go further off the beaten track than almost any other seven-seat ‘SUV’.
Inside the Discovery’s slightly bulbous body - it’s not exactly a looker - you’ll find one of the roomiest interiors on any SUV. Seven six-foot adults can genuinely get comfortable, with each row set slightly higher than the one ahead of it to give a stadium-style seating arrangement ensuring everybody gets a good view out.
The interior feels seriously luxurious as well - not as plush as a Range Rover or as overtly outdoorsy as the Defender, but a nice happy medium between the two.
If you want a Discovery for work rather than play, then you could always opt for the Commercial variant. This eschews the rear seats for a load area like a van, but one that still looks and drives just like a posh SUV.
And with some nice sensible diesel and petrol engines to choose from, the Discovery makes an excellent daily driver for large families, capable of surprisingly good fuel economy.
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The Dacia Duster range is almost unbelievably good value. It’s so well-priced that we gave it the Smart Spender title in the 2025 Carwow Car of the Year awards. For most people, the entry-level Duster, or even the super-efficient Duster hybrid will be the best options - but Dacia does still offer this SUV with proper four-wheel drive for those who want to go off the beaten track on a budget.
Paired to a modest 1.3-litre engine and a manual gearbox the four-wheel drive Duster makes no attempt to be a luxury car - it even looks pretty cheap, but it hides an impressive level of specification for something so affordable. The interior may not be plush but it’s robust and very usable, with a surprisingly good touchscreen infotainment system that covers all the basics.
The Duster is also great to drive - it has nice light controls, good visibility and feels agile in the corners. Some SUVs are sportier to drive - but those are the SUVs that’d be defeated by a slightly muddy driveway, whereas the Duster has already proven over on our YouTube channel that it’s something of a giant-slayer at off-roading, capable of holding its own against cars two or three times the price.
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Subaru is known for a few things, but the most notable is that almost all of its cars have four-wheel drive. Known by Subaru as 'symmetrical all-wheel drive', it's a system that performs extremely well on slippery or rough terrain.
The Outback isn't a bona-fide off-roader like some of the cars on this list - it's more like a jacked-up estate car, so it doesn't have the ground clearance or axle articulation of the best off-roaders. But it's still far more capable than most so-called SUVs, hence its popularity with farmers and countryside types.
Compared with posh estates from brands such as BMW and Audi, the Outback feels outdated - it has old-fashioned analogue dials, for example, and an interior blessed with plenty of physical buttons and switches. It's also resolutely set up for comfort rather than sportiness, so it leans a lot in the bends and has a CVT transmission.
But it's honestly all the better for it. If you can handle poor fuel economy and very little glamour, the Outback will be an extremely dependable companion.
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The Jeep Wrangler is another true off-road institution, being descended from the original WWII Willys Jeep. In fact, find a bumpy road and you may wonder if the suspension has received any sort of an upgrade since the 1940s - when it comes to on-road dynamics, the Wrangler is near the bottom of the pack, being bouncy, noisy, and thirsty.
But it makes up for it by being tremendous off-road - especially if you go for the chunky Rubicon model - and looking fantastic with its retro styling and bright colour palette.
You can even remove the roof and the front doors for the full California beach effect, though you’ll need to find somewhere to put them, of course - you might find it’s better to specify the full-length fabric sunroof instead.
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The Ineos Grenadier is what you get when one of the richest men in the UK believes that Land Rover should never have stopped building the old Defender. The Ineos Grenadier captures the spirit of off-roaders of old, but adds a modern twist with six-cylinder engines poached from BMW.
The Grenadier has a wild interior festooned with switchgear - almost too many switches, if we’re honest - and hose-down surfaces. It’s superlative offroad thanks to old-school tech - a proper ladder chassis and even old-fashioned recirculating ball steering, which reduces kickback from poor surfaces.
However, those factors do make it rather unappealing to drive on the road - the Grenadier is noisy, thirsty, uncomfortable, and the steering feels downright weird. It’s a real niche offering.
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Other cars on this list are off-roaders with luxury features - the Range Rover is a luxury car that just happens to also be a spectacularly good off-roader. Whichever seat you’re sat in you’ll enjoy truly sumptuous comfort in the plushest of surroundings, with air suspension taking the sting out of the worst road surfaces and wonderful refinement making for a hushed journey.
But if you ever feel like taking Blenheim Palace into the rough stuff, you’ll find the Range Rover as astonishingly capable as its less expensive siblings. The off-road tech works seamlessly, and the only consideration you have to make is that your paint, wheels and bodywork are rather more expensive to repair than they might be on lesser cars.
The Range Rover’s sheer size also means you won’t be taking it down any particularly tight passages, and it can feel a bit unwieldy through town too.
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The Ford Ranger is a vehicle of two personalities. For most people, the ‘normal’ Ford Ranger is a fantastic option - it’s the best pickup truck you can buy. Rugged and capable while still feeling comfortable and decidedly car-like to drive, it’s brilliant for those who need to carry lots but don’t want to suffer with a nasty commercial vehicle. It’s also pretty good off-road.
But if ultimate off-road supremacy is your bag, look to the Ranger Raptor. Instead of sensible diesel engines, it gets a barmy - and very noisy - V6 petrol. With wheels and tyres borrowed from a monster truck, suspension designed to land big jumps and even a special ‘Baja’ driving mode, it’s a totally different beast. With reduced payload, it’s less of a useful truck than the regular Ranger, but as an off-road vehicle it’s spectacular.
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