2026 Alfa Romeo Tonale First Test: Style, Soul, and a Hint of Letdown
Lighter and livelier without the plug-in hybrid, the Tonale channels Alfa charm—but in Michigan’s real world, its flaws are harder to ignore.
Pros
- Supermodel looks
- Comfy couture interior
- Brio in the bends
Cons
- Aging user interface
- Brakes worse than it corners
- Lowest-in-class residual value
“Such a joyous experience on a winding road or even on a market run.” That line, from our first drive of the 2026 Alfa Romeo Tonale—conducted on glorious winding roads in the Italian Alps—rang in the ears of our Michigan test team tasked with quantifying said joyousness. Here, we’d have ample opportunity to assess that market-run assertion, but almost no winding roads and absolutely no house-made canederli, polenta, or pizzoccheri. In this environment, could that assessment hold up?
Recapping What’s New
The powertrain and chassis of the Tonale are essentially unchanged, apart from the pruning of the 285-hp, 347-lb-ft plug-in hybrid option. The remaining 2.0-liter turbo makes a bit less power and torque than the PHEV did, but it weighs so much less that the winding-road joy quotient rises (even as fuel economy sags). Beyond that, there’s a new front fascia and slightly wider track for the big-tire variants, which includes our midlevel Veloce trim’s optional 20-inch clover-style wheels. The Rosso Brera exterior and red leather seats on our test car are also new for 2026 and do much to enhance the car’s brio.
Joy, By the Straight-Line Numbers
With carryover powertrain output and a weight within 25 pounds of the average of every 2.0-liter Tonale (and sibling Dodge Hornet GT) we’ve tested, it’s no surprise that acceleration performance measured a tenth or two below that average in every test, with quarter-mile trap speed a little over 1 mph faster. The Tonale’s chief competitor—in size, price, and intended sportiness—is the BMW X1 xDrive28i. It’s down 27 hp and two gear ratios relative to the Alfa yet runs neck and neck to 30 mph before pulling away decisively. It’s ahead by 0.3 second at 60 mph and through the quarter mile, where it’s also traveling 3.4 mph faster. It’s the same story for the related BMW X2 and Mini Countryman S All4. The Alfa runs well ahead of the Acura ADX, Volvo XC40 B5 AWD, and Lexus UX300h AWD F-Sport. Note that in our luxury subcompact SUV Ultimate Car Ratings, the Alfa currently ranks right after all of the above in seventh place.





