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Audi e-tron GT review

The Audi e-tron GT is a four-door electric saloon with sleek styling. It’s closely related to the Porsche Taycan, although the e-tron GT has room for five compared with just four in the Porsche. There are a few versions – the e-tron GT and the RS e-tron GT – with a range of up to 298 miles. Continue for a complete Audi e-tron GT review.

Sam Sheehan from cinch

By Sam SheehanUpdated on 30 September 2024

Pros

  • Very fast
  • Solid near 300-mile range
  • Comfortable and well-equipped interior

Cons

  • Expensive
  • Compromised rear passenger space

Interior

Our rating: 8/10

Audis have been famed for their quality interiors for years, and the e-tron GT’s is up there with the very best.

Driving position

Both the front and rear seats are comfortable for tall adults, with decent head and legroom on offer. The centre rear seat is narrower and best reserved for kids or used for shorter trips.

Tech and features

It doesn’t feature the wrap-around screens seen on some electric cars but that’s good in many ways because you get more physical buttons for instant access, rather than having to dip into on-screen menus.

There’s a digital screen in front of the driver – Audi calls this the Virtual Cockpit – and a 10-inch widescreen infotainment display (MMI Touch).

Below this, you’ll find controls for the ventilation as well as a few other buttons and automatic gearbox controls.

The infotainment system comes with a variety of goodies as standard, including sat-nav, wireless charging for compatible phones, Android Auto and Apple CarPlay (both of which allow you to use some of your phone’s apps with the car) and a great-sounding stereo – although the latter gets upgraded to a B&O system on the RS e-tron GT.

Other standard equipment on the entry-level Quattro-spec e-tron GT includes vegan leather upholstery, trim made from recycled wood or plastic bottles (yes, really), a reversing camera, front and rear parking sensors and more.

The Vorsprung trim gets you a night vision camera, a head-up display for the driver, adaptive cruise control and parking assistance.

Performance

Our rating: 9/10

Electric motors and power

The Audi e-tron GT might weigh more than two tonnes but it’s extremely quick.

There are two electric motors powering all four wheels, so traction is excellent and goes some way to explain how the car can get from 0-62mph in as little as 2.5 seconds and on to a limit top speed of 155mph, where permitted.

Handling and ride comfort

All of that power would be useless if the GT couldn’t go around corners well. It does – the body remains flat and the suspension, while firm, manages to deal with most road surface imperfections incredibly well.

The e-tron GT isn’t quite as adept in this area as the Porsche Taycan, but it’s easier to live with on a daily basis.

Practicality

Our rating: 6/10

Storage solutions

There’s plenty of room for your odds and ends inside the e-tron GT: a couple of cup holders sit between the front seat, there’s room to place and charge your phone, a lidded box, a glove box and decent door bins.

Rear seats

Those in the rear also get door bins and storage in the rear armrest when the centre seat isn’t being used.

Boot space

The e-tron GT’s boot space is reasonable, with space for around 6 cabin suitcases with the rear seats in place.

Fold the seat backs (they’re split 40/20/40) and you’ll fit in a lot more – the boot floor on models without the B&O stereo has room beneath for the charging cables, and there’s also more storage room under the bonnet.

Running costs

Our rating: 7/10

As a new car, the Audi e-tron GT costs more than £80k, so you can see why buying used makes a lot of sense, once it’s shed some of its value.

Range

Quattro trim cars have an official range of 298 miles and RS trim can cover 280 miles.

Both can be recharged very rapidly, if you can find a fast enough public charger: you can add 62 miles of range in just 5 minutes and top up the battery from 5-80% in 23 minutes.

Reliability

Audi’s technology is shared across the VW Group and generally proves reliable.

The e-tron GT gets an industry-standard three-year warranty from Audi, but its battery warranty lasts for eight years or 100,000 miles.

The verdict

Interior

8/10

Performance

9/10

Practicality

6/10

Running costs

7/10

There’s lots to love about Audi’s electric marvel: its searing performance and handling, its sleek styling, the ultra-quick charge times and its comfortable interior.

The closely related Porsche Taycan might be the (slightly) more focused sports car, but the Audi e-tron GT is the better all-rounder because it majors on comfort rather than outright handling ability.

It’s still a driver’s dream, though, is packed with safety kit and can be recharged incredibly quickly. It’s a phenomenal used buy.

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