British experts from the WhatCar portal and the insurance company MotorEasy surveyed 32 thousand car owners and compiled a rating of the most unreliable crossovers on the UK market.
The leader in the anti-rating was the petrol Nissan Juke, which was produced from 2019 to 2025, with a reliability rating of only 55.2%. Although over the past two years only 24% of owners of this model have experienced breakdowns, in 64% of cases the car spent more than a week in service, and 60% of repairs cost each owner more than 1,500 pounds sterling (about 143.6 thousand rubles). The Juke’s main problems lie with the engine, battery, fuel system and electronics.
Second place was taken by the Volkswagen Tiguan 2024 and newer with a reliability of 64.2% – 81% of owners complained about breakdowns, most often this concerned navigation, multimedia, brakes and body elements.
The 2016–2021 Kia Sportage closed the top three most unreliable models with a score of 72.9%—56% of owners of diesel versions and 20% of gasoline versions experienced breakdowns.
The top ten most problematic crossovers also included the Mazda CX-60 (76.2%), Audi Q7 (78.6%), Volkswagen ID 4 (79.6%), Renault Austral (80.4%), Nissan Ariya (80.9%), BMW iX (81%) and Land Rover Discovery Sport (81.8%).
Earlier it became known about Volkswagen’s plans to build an army assault vehicle.







