Ford Escape Titanium
Suv · Gasoline
vs
Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid
Suv · Hybrid
Ford Escape Titanium
Car A
Ford Escape Titanium
The Ford Escape Titanium emphasizes family-friendly practicality and efficiency, pairing 5 seats with a roomy 1000-liter cargo area. With 8 L/100 km consumption and 0–100 km/h in 8.0 s, it suits commuting and road trips more than performance driving.
5 seatsSuvGasoline5-star safety
Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid
Car B
Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid
The Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid prioritizes family practicality and efficiency, pairing a usable 50 km electric range with very low stated consumption. Strong safety signals and generous cargo space make it a sensible everyday choice over performance-leaning options.
5 seatsSuvHybrid5-star safety1.6 L/100km265 hpHybrid
Why compared better on fuelbetter valuecomparison picksame body typesame ranking profilesame seats

Usage fit

Family 86 / 77
City 46 / 54
Budget / value 60 / 70
Road trip 64 / 51
Performance 28 / 30
Cargo 64 / 41
Practical 61 / 62
Premium 26 / 27
Winter 36 / 36

Scores out of 100. Blue = Ford Escape Titanium · Orange = Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid

Specs side-by-side

Spec Ford Escape Titanium Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid
Values are representative — confirm for your market and trim.

Pros & cons

Ford Escape Titanium

  • Efficient for its class at 8 L/100 km for lower running costs
  • Large 1000 L cargo space supports growing families and luggage
  • Signals highlight safety as a core strength
  • Good value in its segment at around 35,000

Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid

  • Efficient for its class with a 1.6 combined consumption rating
  • 50 km electric range covers many commutes when you can charge
  • 600-liter cargo area and five seats fit growing families
  • Strong safety standing in our rankings

Verdict

Pick Ford Escape Titanium if…
Efficiency & everyday ease
Ford Escape Titanium is the choice if fuel economy and city-friendly driving are your priority.
Pick Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid if…
More power
Hyundai Tucson Plug-in Hybrid puts out 265 hp vs 200 — meaningfully quicker and more confident on motorways.

Related comparisons