Renault — Welcome Naviextras
The system cross-references your current route, the exit ramps, and restaurant review scores to produce three options without you taking your eyes off the road. To test the feature, we spent a week in a Renault Austral, intentionally leaving our smartphone in the center console. We used only Renault Welcome with NAVIE-XTRAS.
Renault has bet big on NAVIE-XTRAS, and it is paying off. The "Welcome" screen is no longer just a greeting; it is an invitation to drive without anxiety. For the first time in a decade, the built-in GPS is no longer the punchline. It is the reason to buy the car. renault welcome naviextras
Byline: Technology Desk
It understands that a car is not a phone. A phone assumes you have perfect signal and unlimited battery. A car navigation system must be resilient, integrated with the vehicle’s CAN bus (to know fuel/battery levels), and legible from three feet away. The system cross-references your current route, the exit
Rolled out across the new Renault Megane E-Tech Electric, Austral, and Arkana models, Renault Welcome is the interface that greets you with personalized profiles, ambient lighting, and seat positions. But its beating heart lies in the navigation stack. While many manufacturers are forcing drivers to abandon built-in nav for Apple CarPlay or Android Auto, Renault has gone the opposite direction: they have made their native system so good that you will want to use it. Renault has bet big on NAVIE-XTRAS, and it is paying off