Skip advert
Advertisement

Renault Megane RS vs Honda Civic Type R vs Volkswagen Golf R - Supertest review - On track

Renault’s trick new Mégane RS is out to steal its crown back from Honda’s Civic Type R, but could Volkswagen’s Golf R actually be the hottest hatch of all? The rigours of an evo Supertest will provide the answers

First to roll out onto the West Circuit is the Golf. Race mode is engaged, ESP disabled and the gearlever tapped to the left for full manual control. Initial impressions are good, with strong traction out of the hairpin and a gloriously measured, well-oiled feel to the steering. Yet there’s an underlying softness that effectively undermines the Golf’s bid for circuit supremacy as you up the pace. It simply feels a bit lost here. On standard passive dampers the R rolls and pitches more than you’d expect, and the Bridgestones’ strong initial bite melts away, particularly through the fast turn of Palmer and quick direction change of Pif-Paf, forcing you to wait before you get back on the throttle. The Golf gives up its best time of 1:27.7 on the first flying lap, subsequent laps seeing times spiral up as tortured tyres and wilting brakes cry ‘enough’.

Instantly the Renault feels like a more focused proposition, its meaty steering weight, taut ride and flat cornering stance sending all the right track-honed messages. With the four-wheel steer on high alert in Race mode, the Renault initially feels a handful, as the combination of cold tyres and aggressive rotation from the rear axle give the impression you’re permanently on the brink of turn-in oversteer disaster. It calms down a little with some tyre temperature, but that sensation of the rear end getting involved never goes away. However, once you trust that the grip is there, the Renault carries eye-widening speed through corners (it’s the quickest through Beckham Esses and O’Rouge). It has its advantages through the slow stuff, too, where the Mégane nails a higher minimum speed and straighter exit, allowing its limited-slip differential to work more effectively, finding traction where the Honda spins an inside front. It never feels totally natural (there’s a curious sense of detachment right at the limit), but a 1:26.3 lap proves it’s fantastically effective.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The Honda feels like a track natural the moment you hunker into that low-slung driving position. A lazier early throttle response means it doesn’t feel as initially eager as the others, but beyond 2500rpm the Civic accelerates with intent. Yet it’s the chassis that makes the Type R special. It’s not quite as keen to change direction as the hyperactive Mégane, but it’s not far off and its steering is more measured. More importantly it communicates more, telling you just how much grip you’ve got, which is lots. Factor in brakes that bite hard throughout and it’s no surprise the Honda turns in a blistering 1:25.9. A time you feel it’ll happily nail lap after lap. Remarkable.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Toyota’s new 400bhp four-cylinder aims squarely at Mercedes-AMG
Toyota GR Corolla
News

Toyota’s new 400bhp four-cylinder aims squarely at Mercedes-AMG

Toyota’s pushing on with the development of an all-new, high-performance four-cylinder power plant that could make its hot hatches hyper
10 Nov 2025
Four brilliant used V8 Jaguars for the price of a new Volkswagen Golf
Used Jaguars
News

Four brilliant used V8 Jaguars for the price of a new Volkswagen Golf

Jaguar’s next era looms with the all-electric Type 00, but these used supercharged V8 icons are hard to ignore in a soulless EV world
12 Nov 2025
Bugatti Mistral review – behind the wheel of the £5m W16 swansong
Bugatti Mistral
Reviews

Bugatti Mistral review – behind the wheel of the £5m W16 swansong

When you’re invited to drive the 1578bhp, 282mph, convertible Bugatti Mistral, the one thing you don’t need is rain. But when it’s the final outing fo…
9 Nov 2025