Matt Saunders

Matt Saunders Autocar
Title: Road test editor

Matt is Autocar’s chief car reviewer, and manager of the brand’s wider test team. Among his responsibilities is the regular contribution of detailed road tests, group tests, drive stores and other features for Autocar’s magazine and website, plus videos for Autocar’s YouTube channel. Matt maintains Autocar’s exacting standards of objectivity and rigour with the testing and assessment of all new cars, and leads the team’s collective conversation that drives the thinking on test verdicts and comparative judgements.

Matt has been an Autocar staffer since the autumn of 2003, having done work experience stints on the magazine beforehand, and was editorial assistant at Stuff Magazine from 2002. He’s been lucky enough to work alongside some of the magazine’s greatest and best-known writers and contributors over that time, and served as staff writer, features editor, assistant editor and digital editor before joining the road test desk in 2011.

Since then he’s driven, measured, figured and reported on cars as varied as the Bugatti Veyron, Rolls-Royce Phantom, Tesla RoadsterAriel Hipercar, Tata Nano, Renault Twizy and Toyota Mirai. He loves the variety his job affords, and nothing matters more to him in his working role than understanding a car in its entirety, on behalf of those for whom it has been designed. Only by doing that can you earn the right to criticise.

Matt is an expert in:

  • In-depth performance testing and circuit benchmarking
  • Objective road test reviewing
  • Back-to-back comparison testing
  • On-road ride and handling assessment
  • The luxury, performance car and sports car segments

Matt Saunders Q&A

What was your biggest news story?

Autocar broke a world exclusive about a safety problem with the Suzuki Celerio city car that involved collapsing brake pedals; and I was in the car, at Millbrook proving ground in 2015, when it was first discovered. New road test recruit Lewis Kingston was learning our brake testing regime at the time, and got a shock he wasn’t expecting!

What’s the best car you’ve ever driven?

The answer changes every time I’m asked, the returning protagonists being the Ferraris 458 Speciale and 599 GTO, the McLarens F1 and Senna, and the Porsche ‘991’ 911R. But I don’t think I’ve ever had more fun than when driving an Ariel Atom 4 as fast as I possibly could. It’s exhausting, and a test of commitment; but exhilarating like absolutely nothing else. 

What will the car industry look like in 20 years?

The ban on combustion engines will have been extended several times, and then abandoned. Synthetic fuels will have been made viable - not least by much more punitive taxes on petrol. Full electrification will have expanded hugely, but still have yet to penetrate beyond about 70 per cent of new car sales. And, while sales by volume will have fallen off, car enthusiasm will still be going strong. Because, as a very knowledgeable colleague once assured me, the very last new car that the world makes will be a sports car, made for the love of it.

Car review

Mercedes-Benz CLE 300e Coupe

Does a technically progressive PHEV powertrain work in a coupe that exudes such old-school vibes?

Mercedes-Benz CLE 300e Coupe
Car review

Mazda CX-80

Mazda's new flagship – a seven-seat SUV – arrives to challenge the likes of the Skoda Kodiaq

Mazda CX-80
Car review

BMW X3

BMW reaches for mini-iX design appeal and lots of digital interior tech in renewing its best-selling model

BMW X3
Car review

Mini Aceman

Mini plugs the gap between Cooper and Countryman with a fun-loving, high-riding rival for the Volvo EX30

Mini Aceman
Car review

Maserati Grancabrio

Need a genuine four-seater, £170,000 luxury convertible for the school run? Maserati has you covered

Maserati Grancabrio
Car review

Audi A1

Chic supermini promises class-leading luxury and sportiness, but is it now past its prime?

Audi A1
Car review

Lexus RC F Ultimate Edition

Lexus's line of V8 hotrods ends with a fiery-sounding feast of carbonfibre

Lexus RC F Ultimate Edition
Car review

Mazda 3

Japanese firm puts its new-age petrol engine into its fourth-generation family hatchback, and adds 2.5-litre option alongside

Mazda 3
Car review

Analogue Automotive Supersport

Lotus Elise S1 owners with a spare six figures are offered the most stratospheric restomod makeover you can think of

Analogue Automotive Supersport
Car review

Volkswagen Polo

In most areas, the VW Polo trumps other superminis, but its clinical excellence makes it slightly joyless

Volkswagen Polo
Car review

Kia Ceed

Will it be third time lucky for Kia’s Europe-only hatchback - or are established rivals from Ford, VW, Seat and Honda still the better buy?

Kia Ceed

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