Skip advert
Advertisement

Audi RS4 B9 review – performance and 0-60 time

Acceleration is faster than rivals only due to Quattro, and it is out-gunned by most direct rivals

Evo rating
  • Deftly tuned suspension, linear steering, desirability
  • Powertrain lacks punch and character, rivals sharper, harder and faster

Aside from the obvious benefit of improved wet-weather traction, all-wheel-drive also meant the RS4 was quick from a standstill, reaching 62mph in 4.1sec – near-identical figures to both the old Mercedes-AMG C63 S Estate and Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio. The obvious traction advantage of Quattro in RS Audis of old was of course extinguished by comparison to the M3 Touring, which remains on sale and was always exclusively all-wheel-drive.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Unfortunately this parity doesn’t last, as the Audi will quickly lose ground to almost all of its direct rivals in the mid-range. In-gear response isn’t prohibitively worse, but compared to the hypersonic responses that both the AMG and Alfa are able to muster, the Audi can feel a tad more cumbersome. When on boost, the V6’s willingness to rev right through to its red line was also less apparent than in its rivals.

There’s an industrial feel to the powertrains of B9 RS4s, like they’re extremely well-executed executive cars that have been given some aggressive mapping rather than an inherently performance car package. Unsurprising when you remember this engine’s shared parentage and the role it played in two Porsche SUVs and a mid-level Panamera.

The transmission was always well mannered when just pootling around, yet capable of impressively quick changes when the correct mode was selected. Gears change cleanly and smoothly, but select manual mode from the transmission’s Sport setting (the selected gear will turn red on the virtual cockpit) and the aggression rises in the RS4, with ignition cuts, fuel dumps into the exhaust and short, sharp downshifts.

The engine noise in the cabin was always underwhelming, but drive with the windows down and the turbochargers make themselves known with plenty of wooshy noises and pops coming from both in front and behind you. At least some induction noise would’ve been nice, though.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Porsche ditches Bugatti as tensions with Mate Rimac come to a head
Bugatti Tourbillon – side
News

Porsche ditches Bugatti as tensions with Mate Rimac come to a head

Mate Rimac joins forces with investment firm to take full control of hypercar company
24 Apr 2026
I fell in love with the Honda Civic Type R, until it started fighting me
Civic Type R interior
Opinion

I fell in love with the Honda Civic Type R, until it started fighting me

Porter can tolerate the tsunami of active safety features, but not their inaccuracy
23 Apr 2026
Why you've probably been driving the Audi TT RS wrong this whole time
Audi TT RS fast fleet front
Long term tests

Why you've probably been driving the Audi TT RS wrong this whole time

My Audi TT RS coupe reveals its strong suit on a most unlikely road
22 Apr 2026