A funny thing happened on the way to the diesel emissions scandal—Volkswagen still sells cars. There are no diesels until they get a clean bill of health, but as VW must rely solely on gas-fired sales in the US right now, the Golf TSI SEL sits squarely in the middle of their lineup globally. Through some recent updates, VW has improved its latest edition. We cohabitated with the new Golf TSI for a week and agreed to not even bring up the “d” word.
The biggest Golf changes for this year are on the inside. The most immediately apparent is a new 5-inch display on the base model and a 6.5-inch display on all other trim levels. Running VW’s Modular Infotainment Platform II (MIB II), it supports Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and MirrorLink. More importantly, this display looks and works much better than the previous infotainment system, which took forever to respond to menu selections.
Beyond MIB II, the car’s buttons are logically placed, switchgear is vastly better, and the standard seats offer above-average support and bolstering. The steering wheel and gauges even exude greater-than-VW quality—everything you touch inside would be equally at home in a BMW or Audi.
Our SEL trim-level test car also comes with a backup camera as standard, found under the rear hatch’s “VW” handle. Select reverse gear, and the handle rotates about 25 degrees in its little cavity to expose the back-up camera.
VW’s $1,495 Driver Assistance package—our car’s sole option aside from the no-cost automatic transmission—is surprisingly comprehensive for a sub-$30,000 small car ($29,740 as tested). It includes adaptive cruise control, forward collision warning, emergency automatic braking (when the forward collision sensors calculate an imminent impact), blind spot monitoring, rear traffic alert, lane departure warning with corrective assist, and park distance warning with park assist (steering assist for parallel parking).

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