2025.5 Volvo XC90 Interior Review: What Tricks Does This Cabin Hide?
Volvo updated the XC90’s interior tech and style this year. This is what you need to know.Rarely do attractive cars also offer great all-around visibility but, then again, the 2025.5 Volvo XC90 is no ordinary car. Volvo takes its own path with the XC90, and nowhere is that more evident than the interior. A tiny Swedish flag attached to the side of the front seat subtly celebrates the brand’s unique heritage, but the 2025.5 XC90 interior needs more than charm to succeed among three-row luxury SUVs today.
Luckily, the newly updated XC90 enters the 2025.5 model year (no, that’s not a typo) with interior changes a previous owner will spot instantly. Here are the highs and lows of the 2025.5 Volvo XC90’s interior.
Check This Out!
From the driver’s seat, the 2025.5 XC90 can drop its second-row headrests down. Like magic! Or like someone pressed an on-screen command in the infotainment system. Either way, this is an awesome trick Volvos have been able to do for years to easily increase rear visibility for when you’ve dropped off the little ones and it’s just you inside.
The 2025.5 XC90 is offered in a six-seat configuration with captain’s chairs, as well as a seven-seat variation. What’s especially nice is that both versions are available on every powertrain, from the 247-hp B5 to the 295-hp B6 and the 455-hp T8 plug-in hybrid.
At Last, a Bigger Screen
Volvo’s central infotainment screen was feeling outdated and quite small in a world of ever-bigger automotive displays. But that’s less of a problem for the 2025.5 XC90. The 9.0-inch vertically oriented touchscreen has been replaced by an 11.2-inch unit that necessitates slimmer, vertical air vents. More screen space isn’t always better in a luxury car; sometimes the extra digital space can be exhausting if you think of your luxury SUV’s interior as a respite from the outside world.
Here, Volvo meets modern expectations better than before. The screen’s larger size allows for a much better split-screen experience, whether you’re using the Google Built-In system’s integrated Spotify app with Google Maps or Apple CarPlay as shown above. Even so, a horizontally oriented display would prevent so many song titles from being cut off.
The digital driver display is also well-done, even if the design is limited. You get an analog-style speedometer and hybrid-power display (on the T8) flanking a big map in the center. Your other option is no map in the center, a good option for those who want to keep it simple. We’d like to see more design creativity in this display in the future, but what's here works.








