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2025 Volkswagen Amarok Life TDI500 review

ahmadchaudari@gmail.com July 5, 2025

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The Volkswagen Amarok continues to be an underdog in Australia’s huge ute market, even if it shares its DNA with the country’s current head honcho.

Its twin-under-the-skin is, of course, the Ford Ranger, which not only continues to be Australia’s top-selling ute, but also the country’s favourite new vehicle bar none, with no fewer than 22,000 examples sold so far in 2025.

The Amarok, meantime, has found 2434 new homes in the same period, making it the lowest-selling established ute nameplate locally. Of course, unlike almost all of its rivals, the second-generation Amarok is available in Australia exclusively in dual-cab 4×4 ute form, meaning there’s no single-cab or extended cab versions, and no manual or 4×2 options, so there’s a smaller range with higher prices and more equipment to reflect its premium positioning.

But there’s also increasing competition in the ute market, including from new rivals like the BYD Shark 6 and other cheaper Chinese dual-cabs, as well as overhauls for popular models like the Mitsubishi Triton and range expansions for utes like the Ranger, with the addition of four plug-in hybrid (PHEV) variants. And there’s still no concrete word on a similar powertrain for the Amarok.

Volkswagen’s ute did bring a recent MY25 update that shifted some pricing and specifications, and added a tray option to several variants to create the first double-cab/chassis versions. Hardly groundbreaking updates, but did they need to be?

WATCH: Paul’s video review of the Volkswagen Amarok Life

The Amarok already offered one of the more diverse powertrain lineups of any ute in Australia, even without electrification. There are three turbo-diesel powertrains including a V6, and turbo-petrol engine that not even the Ranger offers here, despite the fact it traces its roots to high-performance Fords like the Focus ST and Mustang EcoBoost.

On test here, however, is the 2025 Volkswagen Amarok Life TDI500 double-cab pickup. That sounds like a mouthful, but it’s almost as simple as the Amarok gets and it’s positioned second from the bottom of the range.

The Life TDI500 is powered by a four-cylinder biturbo-diesel, has cloth seat trim and 17-inch wheels, along with an unlined tub and other such stripped-back amenities. The only way the Life can get more barebones is by fitting an aluminium tray, but that adds $4000 to the $62,000 drive-away price as tested here.

Is this the sweet spot in the Amarok range? Do other variants do it better, or should you just go for a Ranger?

How much does the Volkswagen Amarok cost?

The Life sits one rung above the bottom of the Amarok range, and costs $61,990 drive-away. That’s $6000 up on the base Core, and a whopping $10,750 less than the next permanent variant above it, the Style TDI500 with the same engine.