Plush, quiet 2022 Range Rover’s 7-seat model is exactly what owners want

SONOMA COUNTY, California — The 2022 Land Rover Range Rover is bigger, more advanced and more luxurious than ever before in the upscale SUV’s 50-year production run.

It’s also less likely than ever to be used off-road. The vehicle’s appeal rests at least as much upon James Corden shooting immensely popular carpool karaoke segments in a Range Rover’s quiet, cushy interior as on images of British royalty carousing through fields of gorse, which is a flowering shrub for those of you who do not live in the U.K. or in the far eastern U.S.

Despite any cavils I raise later in this column, Rover was probably wise to acknowledge that fact in its flagship’s engineering and design. Decades of off-road adventures built Land Rover’s image, but the 2022 Range Rover is essentially a tall limousine, the replacement for Jaguar Land Rover’s discontinued Jaguar XJ sedan.

It’s not without off-road ability, but neither is that its main purpose.

The new 2022 Range Rover's P530 First Edition model stickers at $164,000.

Prioritizing comfort and electrification

The key development goals were increasing the SUV’s refinement — particularly interior quiet, ride comfort, design and materials — and preparing this fifth generation of the Range Rover for its first electric model, a battery-powered SUV due for sale in 2024.

To most owners, the big news about the new 2022 Range Rover has nothing to do with off-roading or electrification, though: It’s the addition of the SUV’s first three-row, seven-seat version.

My inbox overflows with notes from readers complaining that SUVs’ soaring popularity has driven sedans and coupes to the brink of extinction. Now I’m bracing for a flood of letters insisting the influx of nouveau SUV-istas has destroyed the purity of off-roading purpose that made brands like Land Rover special. 

Comme ci, comme ça. It proves one of the laws of journalism. We don’t number our laws, because, as a rule, journalists are awful at math, but for every vitriolic complaint, there’s an equal and opposite complainer.

The rest of the world will motor on, in ever-increasing comfort and efficiency.

The seven-seat new 2022 Range Rover has a 13.1-inch touch screen and multipurpose climate control dials.

Advanced new EV-ready architecture

The new 2022 Range Rover is the first vehicle to use Rover’s MLA-Flex architecture.

MLA stands for modular longitudinal architecture. “Longitudinal” means the engine sits longwise, or front-to-rear, under the hood, as opposed to transverse engines fitted sideways between the front wheels in vehicles like the Range Rover Evoque.

The flex part of the name refers to drivetrains. The architecture was developed to accommodate internal combustion engines, mild hybrids, plug-in hybrids and a 100% electric model.

More from Mark Phelan:2022 Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe plugs into electric power for higher performance, efficiency

2022 GMC Hummer EV: How does an electric pickup beat Porsche and Mercedes AMG? Like this

Unlike recent aluminum-intensive Rovers, the MLA architecture uses a mix of steel and aluminum, putting each material where it will do the most for acoustics, strength and efficiency. The MLA’s torsional rigidity — loosely speaking, its stiffness — rose 30% from the previous model.