Currently reading: Audi TT RS Iconic Edition is five-pot finale for sports coupe

Special edition is 395bhp, £87k celebration of Audi TT as it enters its 25th and final year

The third-generation Audi TT is to exit with the highly exclusive RS Iconic Edition, landing next year during the final months of production. 

It arrives at the same time as the Audi R8 RWD GT - a 612bhp swansong for the TT's V10-engined sibling, which will also bow out in 2023.

It is marked out from the standard Audi TT RS by bespoke badging and trim inside and out and standard fitment of the usually optional aerodynamic package, which brings bespoke side flics, air intakes and front and rear diffusers and a prominent rear spoiler for boosted downforce. 

Audi TT RS Iconic Edition 2022 first drive

The mechanics are unchanged, though, so the Iconic Edition draws 395bhp and 354lb ft from Audi’s 2.5-litre turbocharged five-cylinder engine (driving both axles through a seven-speed DSG gearbox) to sprint from 0-62mph in 3.7sec and reach a top speed of 174mph. 

Its extremely limited availability and commemorative billing mean it commands a hefty premium over the standard car at £87,650 – slightly more than the Porsche 718 Cayman GT4, for reference. Just 11 of the 100 cars are bound for UK customers.

Audi tt rs iconic with old car

The third-generation TT will bow out 25 years since the original car arrived in dealerships, wearing a minimalist, "almost symettrical" body shell heavily inspired by the Bauhaus design movement and nearly completely unchanged from the radical concept shown at the Frankfurt motor show in 1995. 

Sebastian Grams, managing director of Audi Sport, said: “The name of the Audi TT RS Coupé iconic edition says it all. The edition model is reminiscent of the iconic TT design language, which at the same time stands for courage and elegance in uncompromising form. 

"Thanks to the exclusive exterior and interior highlights, the much-loved performance of our ultimate sports coupé, with its multiple award-winning five-cylinder engine, is not only palpable, but also visible to fans". 

Advertisement

Read our review

Car review
The third generation Audi TT
The first generation Audi TT was launched in 1998

Can the juggernaut sports coupé roll on to even greater success, or has Audi's icon lost its edge against more purpose-built machines?

Back to top

After the TT retires, the five-pot motor will continue to serve in the Audi RS3 hot hatch and its mechanically identical Audi RS Q3 sibling - as well as in more obscure sports cars like the Donkervoort D8 GTO and KTM X-Bow. It has also been used by Audi sibling brand Cupra for its limited-run Formentor vZ5. 

Felix Page

Felix Page
Title: Deputy editor

Felix is Autocar's deputy editor, responsible for leading the brand's agenda-shaping coverage across all facets of the global automotive industry - both in print and online.

He has interviewed the most powerful and widely respected people in motoring, covered the reveals and launches of today's most important cars, and broken some of the biggest automotive stories of the last few years. 

Join the debate

Comments
7
Add a comment…
Zeddy 4 October 2022
£87k the headline states.
The article states £87,650.
We tend to round things up when over halfway.
No need to be Audi's PR department.
squelchuk 4 October 2022

How can they justify a thirty-seven grand price increase over the standard TT-RS?

Peter Cavellini 4 October 2022
squelchuk wrote:

How can they justify a thirty-seven grand price increase over the standard TT-RS?

Quite simply really, it's a last edition, only 11 are coming to the UK, and diehard Audiests will willingly pay the increase just to have what they not only see as a great drive, but an asset which for a few years will still be at least worth what they paid for it.

xxxx 4 October 2022
squelchuk wrote:

How can they justify a thirty-seven grand price increase over the standard TT-RS?

They don't have to as it's 27k over the base car price and 17k over the current top version. 

scotty5 4 October 2022
squelchuk wrote:

How can they justify a thirty-seven grand price increase over the standard TT-RS?

If they sell them then it's justified.

Unlike heating our homes, nobody buying a TT is being forced to pay high prices.

567 4 October 2022
scotty5 wrote:

squelchuk wrote:

How can they justify a thirty-seven grand price increase over the standard TT-RS?

If they sell them then it's justified.

Unlike heating our homes, nobody buying a TT is being forced to pay high prices.

I agree and also some people don't care about how much money they need to heat their homes because they have lots of money.

markinapub 4 October 2022

Exclusivity.