There’s an all-new Volkswagen Atlas coming for 2027, and I’m excited because I think this is the first company press release for a new car (or SUV or whatever) I’ve read that specifically makes a point to note how dynamic their turn signals are, and that they have three animations. You may think I’m being sarcastic here, but I’m not. I genuinely appreciate interesting turn-indicator developments, and VW definitely is delivering on that here.
I mean, I think they are? They just mentioned those three animations, but that was it. No pictures or videos just yet.
As far as the rest of the new Atlas, it looks like this second-gen one is continuing in the direction of the first: a big, modern SUV for the American market. It’s got some new features, some new fancy tech stuff, 13 more horsepower, an all-new design and, according to VW, “real wood.”
This is an evolutionary sort of change, not revolutionary, but that makes sense since Atlas has been a good seller for VW. The Atlas will still be built in VW’s Chattanooga, Tennessee plant, which makes sense considering all the tariffs and whatnots. The SUV is based on the new MQB Evo platform, which was first introduced with the latest Tiguan. The new platform should provided an easier path to hybrid versions of these cars, and, like the Tiguan, uses VW’s trusty EA888 2-liter turbocharged engine, now in EA888 Evo5 form, which makes 282 horsepower and 258 lb-ft of torque.
That’s the most power an Atlas has ever had, if you were keeping a journal. Also, look how low-set that engine is in the engine bay; it must be some pedestrian protection thing:

It’ll tow 5,000 pounds, so that means you’ll likely need to opt for a female hippo instead of a male, but most consumers in the Atlas’ target demographic are generally able to find that a female hippo meets most of their day-to-day hippopotamus needs. For Atlas customers that actually do need regular access to a male hippo, there are Atlas owners’ groups that will have a co-owned male hippo available to all members based on a time-sharing plan and housed at a central, shared location.
So far, Volkswagen does not have an official plan to address the fact that the Atlas is generally not capable of towing an adult male hippopotamus, though there are unconfirmed reports that VW has been testing towing adolescent male hippos with Atlases, and this could form the basis of a work-around. We’ll keep looking into this issue.

The redesign of the Atlas isn’t necessarily radical, but it is significant. Most notable are the lighting changes, which are quite pronounced and fit with VW’s evolving design language. The new Atlas is above; the outgoing one is below:

There’s been some simplification and elimination of detail and trim in the update. The little angled kick by the D-pillar window is gonbe, as is much of the brightwork and trim around the grilles, upper and lower. There’s a few less character lines and the grille and overall front end have been simplified and cleaned up as well.

There’s now a dual illuminated bar motif on the grille, with the lower one bisected by an illuminated VW logo. The base model will lack the illuminated bars, I’m told by the press release. The lower grille is interesting, as it lacks a strong visual lower border, which reduces the visual thickness of the front, making it appear to kick up dramatically in the middle. I like that.
The lighting design is now based on a series of blocks that seem to form the DRLs (and maybe those turn indicators? It’s not clear yet), and this motif continues to the rear:

The lighting design is now a grid of rectangles, forming angled sides under a full-width red light bar and red-illuminated VW logo.

I like the taillight design from what I can see so far; I’m curious if it’ll have amber rear indicators.

One thing I’m not crazy about is what the press release describes as
“At the back, the spoiler is more pronounced, and the tailgate lies flush with the rear bumper, for a more modern shape.”
This feels like a bad idea, because a tailgate flush with the rear bumper means the tailgate is vulnerable in impacts to the rear. It looks like the bumper juts out a bit beyond the tailgate, which is good, but I’d like more protection there, not less, as a careless low-speed roll back into a pole or something should put my tailgate latch at risk.

There are 20 and 21-inch alloy wheel options and the entry-level car rolls on 18-inch wheels.

It looks handsome enough, I guess, dignified and slightly imposing. I think I’d still lose it in a Target parking lot, but for the target market, it seems good, and I do think the styling updates were welcome.

Based on this picture from VW’s press kit, an R version will be available, so that’s fun.

VW seems to have spent the most effort on the interior, and seems to have had the most fun with ambient interior lighting:
“Innovating ambient lighting sets sophisticated tone. A 10-color setup is standard, and thetop two trims receive 30 color options; a standard “Atmospheres” feature coordinates lighting and audio settings. On most trims, the ambient lighting flows through the dashboard loop and front footwells. The top two trims add an organic spiral pattern to the dash, which twists and morphs through innovative perforated backlit door panels in the first and second rows.”
That’s fun, right? Why not. I’m not sure if this is what makes people decide to buy a particular car or not, but it does add some flavor, and I’m all for that.
VW says there are three interiror color palettes available: “an airy pebble grey, a moody black and dark grey,” which I take to mean there are no actual interior colors available. Just three kinds of gray.

There’s some of that real wood, though! That’s nice! And the ambient lighting adds some color into those non-color color options for the interior.
The seats look nice, and there’s three rows of them:

Front…

…back…

…and, of course, way back. Even that way back seat looks pretty decent?

The seats seem to fold nice and flat, making a pretty even loading/sleeping/baby hippo resting surface with all the seats folded.

All the expected electronic candy is there, with 12.9 or 15-inch screens, which would have been decent kitchen TV sizes back in the day, and there’s a standard 9-speaker audio system with an option for 14 Sparkomatic speakers. I’m kidding, they’re Harmon Kardon speakers. Sparkomatic doesn’t exist anymore.

Look! That’s one of the speakers right there!

There’s power windowshades now, too, for enhanced privacy! Enjoy all the nose-picking you’d like with these babies up!

There’s a Level 2 driver assist system with driver-initiated lane change ability, but what I find most interesting is this:
“Emergency Assist can now guide the vehicle to the side of the road if it senses a medical emergency.”
Semi-automated vehicles being able to pull off an active traffic lane has proven elusive for a long time, so I’m very curious to learn more about this. I’ll reach out to VW for more information and, hopefully, some testing.

Overall, this seems to be a well-considered update to VW’s largest SUV, and I suspect it’ll do pretty well for Volkswagen. I suspect we’ll get a chance to drive it and test one out before too long, so we should know more. Pricing is not revealed yet, nor is an actual date for when it’ll be in dealer lots. Will there be a new Atlas Cross Sport two-row version? Maybe?
I’ll report back when I get a statement from VW regarding the male hippo situation.









All I the only grumpy old man (or woman) who HATES animated indicator lights?
All these indicators which use multiple LEDs to show ‘sliding’ animations are horrible and unintuitive.
Personally I prefer a simple amber blinker, front AND rear. On, off, repeat.
I shall return to yelling at the clouds now
100% was coming here to say this. I am positive these complicated signals create more cognitive load for your brain to process vs a simple blinking signal. Add in that many now also fade in and out. Which in a vacuum would be fine, but in traffic you’ve already got many bits of info requiring cognition. Studies have proven these little mental interaction costs add up. And if you can imagine being in a line of cars taking a left and every car has some different variant on these. IMO the US DOT has often been overly proscriptive in lighting regs in the past but I think they need to write some stricter rules on some of this newer lighting stuff, I can’t believe we don’t mandate amber turn signals here at the least. Turn signal functionality should be decorative and their design should focus on instant recognizability without ambiguity.
Damn. Right.
As one does, I suppose.
Speaking of dung, here’s a lukewarm take: the new Atlas it just as fugly as the old Atlas. Why would anyone buy this over an offering from Kia/Hyundai?
Looks really decent, and a nice upgrade from the current model.
Something like this shouldn’t be offered in FWD.
Why? Front wheel drive is perfect for most of the US, and is adequate even for a lot of the snowy states as long as you buy decent tires. And it’s cheaper to make, and cheaper to maintain. And as it’s lighter and has less mechanical drag, it’ll have slightly better fuel economy.
Is the interior disco lighting not a huge fucking distraction when you are driving at night?
Saab’s “night panel” must be turning in its grave.
For real. I’ll add to that the infotainment usually doesn’t get nearly dim enough either, and lord help you find how to turn off the screen. Of course now they’ve put all the controls in it. I’m sure the idiotic decorative lighting controls are buried 10 menus deep too. I’ve found it especially irritating on a road trip in a rural area at night, the screen constantly tugs at your attention. A night real night mode would be great, bare minimum of controls and gauges, what little remained light in red or orange…
The got rid of the worst part of the old Atlas in my opinion. The large beltline crease that humps over the wheel arches, God I hated that.
Also, when I read Sparkomatic speakers, I immediately though, no freakin way! They are still around! I WAS DISAPPOINT. Not really.
Also just give us back the wagon already. I would have replaced my B6 4Motion wagon with the new version 6 years ago when I got the Q3 if it was just brought over here. This is almost there. That side profile is on target, but too chunky.
Agree. The old atlas was not a pretty vehicle.
I have it on good authority that by the time these Atlases make it to destination said towed adolescent hippos are all grown up into adult males.
Seems like the pinnacle of meh, with competitive differentiation courtesy of a different type of indicator.
The morbidly obese Golf gets a fancier light show… So what?
I’m on my third Tiguan right now (a 2024 Wolfsburg) and I know our next vehicle is going to be another SUV. Possibly larger, maybe of similar size. I sold VWs, I enjoy my current VW, has VW been on my list for another vehicle? Absolutely not. The one thing that was not addressed here was the CarPlay/Android connectivity. On current VWs it aggressively sucks. Almost every single day of my commute there is a place that disconnects my phone and it will not reconnect. It just asks if I want to turn on WiFi and then…doesn’t work. So, for the rest of my commute I don’t have access to my playlists. First world problems, I know, but this is a glaring issue for vehicles that are not exactly cheap. I really wish VW had some encouraging words addressing a well known issue that their mechanics really don’t have a fix for. It is a bit of a nightmare when you are utilizing navigation and lose access to your navigation being displayed.
Worth noting, the central screen sometimes just goes black and doesn’t work at all, or the backup camera doesn’t display, or the backup camera becomes stuck on, or on rare occasions (but there have been multiple) the display screen with my speedometer, gas gauge, and temperature gauge will go out. The only solution is to pull over, turn off the car, open the driver door, wait a couple minutes, and restart in hopes that you can access your gauges again. The UI in VW needs a major overhaul and I’m nervous this new generation will continue the problem.
I had an Atlas as a rental last summer and it had all of those problems that you mentioned. It looked and felt nice when I first hopped in, but didn’t take long before it became annoying in numerous ways. Not VW’s fault, but I had to take that one back to the rental place and swap it after noticing some shaking at highway speeds. Upon further inspection, I discovered a mismatched set of tires. Four bald tires, three different brands (on a car with like 20k miles on it, thanks Budget). It was swapped for a Grand Cherokee L which was a superior vehicle in every way.
problem only on the current tig? other 2 were good ?
My 2012 was pretty much perfect. Did some major mechanical work which was not out of line as it was over 100,000 miles. Got rid of it because the drains for the sunroof clogged and during a major storm water got in and it was all downhill from there.
My 2022 SE and the current 2024 Wolfsburg both had these issues. My current one has 15,000 miles on the odometer and these issues have been happening since about 5,000? 7,500?
From everything I can tell, the redesigned Tiguan has the same tech driving the UI which has me incredibly reluctant to go back when my current lease is up. I love the CrossSport…but not enough to deal with these same issues for another few years if there haven’t been major changes.
How much more black could it get??
Just wait for the Atlas SEL Premium R Line Black Edition model, then you will know if more can be done.
None. None more black.
Lol. Precisely.
Yes, that’s all well and good, but how many window switches are there on the driver’s door?
It’s not as ugly as its predecessor, which I suppose is a positive.
It’s still ugly though.
I really like the look of the outside lights and signals, but I hate that manufacturers are going further and further from repairable housings and lighting internals. Now we just pay $2000 to replace the entire assembly.
The Atlas was the only rental car I have ever heard my wife complain about. I don’t recall the exact complaints, it was a work trip for her. Most rental cars she doesn’t even mention, but the Atlas stood out as a pillar of hate.
Every time an automaker makes a decision like this flush rear bumper or these fancy lighting modules on a mass-market vehicle, all of our insurance rates go up a tiny bit, simply by virtue of having to share roads with them.
Talk about planned obsolescence! A male hippo is an adolescent for 7-12 years.
Hmm, wait. Is this VW showing optimism at this vehicle’s longevity?
10 color or 30 color interior lighting? So every car has multi-color LEDS, and some programmer had to do extra work to artificially limit the colors. That’s some primo trim level bullshit there.
No physical buttons, BOOOOO! This is such a bad idea. What happens when that screen dies?
The engine is low set cause the Atlas is huge and the ea888 is tiny. I’d find a used low mileage VR6 if I was brave/foolish enough to own a VW.
I’m here for the hippo fact sheet. And also, that engine bay has enough room for it’s own frunk!
It might be a little toasty in there for luggage in a frunk. But you could install a WeenieMatic Hot Dog Cooker! Now with AI grease fire detection!
Toasty? Yes, for certain. But on a cold winter day maybe I want my jacket warmed up for me before I go outside
The exterior shots with the LED lighting on black looks very Tron:Legacy
Occasionally I think it would be nice if there was a way to differentiate turn signals for people making U-turns vs left turns so thanks to those VW engineers solving this mild annoyance that I sometimes have instead of useless crap like making critical cooling system components that don’t fall apart.
This is refreshing. I have a 2018 with 180k on it. I love the VR6 and the turbo 4 stopped me from buying a 2025. This refreshing got me thinking again!
“…look how low-set that engine is in the engine bay; it must be some pedestrian protection thing”
It’s a VW Golf in bodywork that’s three sizes too large.
Same thing with all the Subarus. They’re all just Imprezas in various levels of dress.
Oddly, the oversized zip-up hoodie aesthetic seems to appeal to Americans.
the press release says the interior will also be available in an “all-new deep wine” so that’s a color i suppose
i hope they sell a million if it keeps the GTI and Golf R alive in the united states but i’m still sad they took the regular Golf and Alltrack away so they could sell us the godforsaken Taos
Deep Wine, part of the Tiger Woods Signature Collection
Or Deep Whine? That transmission feature comes in at about 50K miles.
HarmOn Kardon? Come on, Torch!
Not you.
Another o zero swap! It was fixed by the time I read the article though. Strange things are afoot at the Circle K!
VW says there are three interiror color palettes available:
The little angled kick by the D-pillar window is gonbe,
Oi, Torch, have someone proofread these before they get posted! Your prose should be better than that of the commentariat.