VOLVO: THE SCANDINAVIAN ALTERNATIVE NOBODY CONSIDERS (BUT SHOULD)
Why this quiet Swede deserves attention in a market dominated by Germans and Japanese
By Ricardo Rodríguez Long
I spent a full week behind the wheel of the 2026 Volvo V60 and discovered something interesting: in a market saturated with aggressive Germans and predictable Japanese vehicles, this quiet Swede offers a genuinely different alternative that most people ignore. V60 Cross Country
Not because it is deficient.
But because it is… different.



SCANDINAVIAN PHILOSOPHY VS. GERMAN PRESTIGE
The V60 Cross Country does not try to be a sporty BMW X3. It doesn’t attempt to match the luxury of the Mercedes GLC. It isn’t chasing Audi Q5 technology.
Instead, it offers something more subtle: Scandinavian serenity. That minimalist approach where less is more, where calm outweighs excitement, where thoughtful design replaces obvious prestige.
A 2.0-liter turbo mild-hybrid engine produces 247 horsepower. Modest numbers compared to the competition. But here is the revelation: power delivery is so smooth, so refined, so… civilized, that you never feel the need for more.
The 8-speed automatic transmission disappears into the background. It simply works without drawing attention. And that philosophy doing the job perfectly without drama defines the entire V60 experience.
INTERIOR: WHERE SWEDEN SHINES
You open the door and step into a space that feels different from the Germans or Japanese.
The upholstery is well executed, not aggressive like the Germans. The wood is responsibly sourced, not from endangered species it’s not about showing off. Carefully selected Nappa leather. Aluminum speaker covers. Everything intentional, nothing excessive.
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The seats are a revelation. Developed with Swedish surgeons and orthopedic doctors, they provide support that no German rival quite matches. After four hours of driving, you step out without fatigue. That rarely happens in a BMW X3 with sport seats or a Mercedes GLC with a firm suspension.
The panoramic roof also transforms the cabin. At night, the ambient lighting creates a serene atmosphere—without the Disneyland-style excess. The 11.2-inch touchscreen with integrated Google system meets modern needs. I found it intuitive because Volvo understands: technology should serve the driver, not impress your friends.
SAFETY AND COMFORT: WHERE VOLVO DOES NOT COMPROMISE
This is where Volvo fully justifies its existence.
Driver-assistance systems work without drama and inspire confidence. Pilot Assist and automatic braking can prevent headaches. That said, I did find it slightly intrusive when the steering wheel insists on staying perfectly centered.
The body structure is solid and designed to dissipate energy and protect all occupants. This isn’t marketing. It’s a philosophy where safety is never negotiable.
VS. THE COMPETITION: HONEST TRADE-OFFS
The BMW X3 is sportier. The Mercedes GLC is more luxurious. The Audi Q5 has more tech. The Lexus NX offers stronger reliability.
So why Volvo?
Because it offers a different balance. Comfort over power. Serenity over prestige. Safety over technology you rarely use. Nordic minimalism over excess on wheels.
With pricing starting around $48,000 and a 4-year/50,000-mile warranty with complimentary maintenance, it makes you think. And that interior simply makes you feel special in ways the numbers don’t capture.
HONEST FLAWS
Cargo space in the trunk is smaller than Japanese competitors. Performance is not as exciting as the Germans. It also didn’t strike me as the most efficient despite being a hybrid.
And here is the controversial part of the Swedish car: its presence and styling polarize. Perhaps underestimated—but different. A car that is not for everyone.
48-VOLT HYBRID: NOT OPTIONAL
This Volvo V60 is hybrid—but not like the others. The key is its 48-volt system and starter-generator that assist the combustion engine. With 247 horsepower, this Volvo moves confidently both in the city and on long trips.
It is a different alternative, well executed and very comfortable.
THE WEEKLY VERDICT
The Volvo V60 Cross Country is not for everyone.
If you want a family car that prioritizes your well-being over impressing the neighbors, that values safety over acceleration, that offers serenity over excitement, that demonstrates sophistication through subtlety this quiet Swede deserves serious consideration.
One week behind the wheel taught me this: in a market obsessed with more more power, more tech, more price the Volvo V60 offers something rare:
Here is enough.
That’s why I kept thinking about this Scandinavian alternative that few consider.
But they should.




