Skip advert
Advertisement

Honda Civic Type R (FL5) – interior and tech

It’s perfect. Driving position, tactility, material quality, design. Honda got it so right

Evo rating
RRP
from £50,050
  • Astonishing capability, engagement and quality
  • Finds its limits when the roads get really rough

If we were to write a handbook of how to design and package the perfect hot hatchback interior, it would read something like this. The Civic Type R combines an almost perfect driving position with a simple, easy-to-use interior that’s high quality, distinctive and visually interesting.

The key touch points we’ve already gone over, but they’re worth mentioning again as they’re so important. Step into the cabin and shut the door behind you, the FK8’s tinny clang is replaced by a reassuring thud. The seat is mounted low, and while it is very soft, it’s also brilliantly supportive and wrapped in about the grippiest material we’ve ever tested in a modern car. Once you’re sitting comfortably, even the Type R’s immense lateral adhesion won’t wrench you from your perfect driving position.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The steering wheel is next; it’s small without feeling toy-like, and the rim is thin, with the bare minimum of padding and only the slightest of indentations at the three- and nine-o’clock. It’s also perfectly round – a novelty these days – and finds a good balance of useful controls on the steering wheel without being excessively busy.

Behind sits a high-resolution driver display that by default will show two round dials with red background hues and yellow needles. This is a direct reference to the NSX Type R and one we can definitely get behind. Within each of the round graphics is a customisable space for any relevant information, but with a bit of fiddling you can remove these altogether. Comfort mode has a similar layout but ditches the red hues, and +R will swap these for a bar chart rev counter and much bigger speed display. Regardless of chosen mode, there is a separate set of rev-dependant LED lights that sit above.

The dash and centre console are simple, clean and well built, with no faux carbonfibre in sight. Instead the trim materials are either a textured aluminium or yet more Alcantara. The infotainment screen is perhaps a little small by modern standards, and isn’t the most sophisticated, but the screen is a good resolution and phone mirroring apps work seamlessly.

Within the embedded system is a Nissan GT-R-like RLog system that will display real-time dynamic and technical performance information, too.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Ford Focus ST (Mk3) – the car world's greatest misses
Ford Focus ST Mk3
Features

Ford Focus ST (Mk3) – the car world's greatest misses

We’d hoped the 2015 Focus ST would share a good dose of its little brother’s magic. Sadly, it didn’t
28 Apr 2025
The Ferrari 296 Speciale has arrived, and it could be the most thrilling Ferrari ever
Ferrari 296 Speciale – front
News

The Ferrari 296 Speciale has arrived, and it could be the most thrilling Ferrari ever

The 296 Speciale is the latest in Ferrari's line of mid-engined road racers, packing 868bhp and LaFerrari-beating pace on track
29 Apr 2025
Gordon Murray Automotive T.50 2025 review – the ultimate analogue hypercar
GMA T.50 front
Reviews

Gordon Murray Automotive T.50 2025 review – the ultimate analogue hypercar

The GMA T.50 is the car we thought would never come: Gordon Murray's sequel to the ultimate hypercar, the McLaren F1
26 Apr 2025