Regardless of the outcome of this showdown, if you’re talking about hot hatches in the conventional sense, the current Civic Type R is the best money can buy.
No other front-driven car for which you can lay down a deposit at your nearest dealership marries such crushing pace with such a deep-seated sense of mechanical involvement. In fact, the only reason this magazine’s road testers elected to bestow upon it four and a half stars is because those so inclined were a little more vociferous in their sentiments than the ones who would give it five. Although it no longer rages, the debate lingers.
As you’ve probably surmised, we haven’t committed editorial hara-kiri and given up the verdict in the first line. Rather, the Honda is the only car in this duo that you can actually buy. Why a nation famous for loosening the purse strings in the pursuit of agile, affordable, peppy shopping carts should be allocated a paltry 24 cars from a run of 799 is anybody’s guess, but each right-hand-drive example of the lava-hot Seat Leon Cupra R is now spoken for, which renders this twin test both academic and fascinating.
This article was originally published on 5 May 2018. We're revisiting some of Autocar's most popular features to provide engaging content in these challenging times.
Academic, because even should this £34,995 newcomer bury its esteemed rival in a win that would come as a considerable but welcome surprise, you still can’t have one. Fascinating because this is the last Cupra model before ‘Cupra’ becomes an independent, performance-oriented institution in the manner of Mercedes-AMG. What this car portends–its relative strengths, drawbacks, focus and, most important for us, the ability to entertain is therefore the concern of anybody who might at some point seriously consider buying a hot hatch.
This battle is for the moral victory. Perhaps for you, it’s a conflict that the Japanese car has already surrendered. You will by now have formed your own opinion of the FK8-generation Civic Type R’s aesthetics, and it may not be entirely favourable. However, with the distinctive-looking Honda sitting longer and wider but no taller than the Seat Leon Cupra R, for sheer presence we’re talking cold-blooded murder here.
Join the debate
Add your comment
Important omission in the review
Now I know that 4 people entered my house in the middle of the night while my children slept, pretty much the most important factor in my next car is the likelyhood of a repeat.
As the former custodian of one of the first cupra 300's in the country, a multi-car theft through burglary have left me unwilling to consider a VAG group car again. They are just too popular with the oxygen thieves. Although I gave up after one, another car supplied by the same dealer was also stolen along with its replacement. Admittedly I did have an attempted theft of an Integra type R many years ago but that was just an chancing addict in a rough area.
Like most fast cars in the vw group, no tracker was standard on the 300. Coming from a line of Subaru's, I had honestly not even considered the possibility it wouldn't have. (The other car stolen was recovered that way, unlike the Leon which was used for armed robberies before disappearing forever).
Having since looked closer at the current epidemic of car thefts, I realise that what I thought was extreme bad luck was
actually incredibly common. Golf R, S/RS Audis and Cupras feature nighly on the stolen car forums.
As for the car, while my 300 was spectacularly fast, it wasn't the whole package and the driver assistance was too numbing (and on occasions when the car decided to brake, downright dangerous).
In terms of reviews, I do feel you could at least address the theft risks as there will still be many out there who were unaware of the massive increase in car crime over the last 2-3 years.
That is shocking but I would
That is shocking but I would have thought the same would apply to all performance cars. I remember a neighbour had an impreza 555 on the reg and IIRC it was a P1, it was kept in a locked garage with a removeable pillar in front of the door and another car parked up against it, he was followed from work one evening and went on a random drive to confirm the car was following, it only stopped when he parked in a police station for a while. Takes the shine off owning it. I'll be honest I thought those days were over.
What’s your flavour......?
It’s a matter of choice, your money and so on......
Type R
Guys, I bought one last week. It looks terrific in red. It is astounding to drive. I've previously had a S.T. (5 cylinder Volvo engine), Megan R.S. 250 and an Astra VXR. This is far superior to all these. It's abilities far outweigh my talent. It's shockingly fast, and the acceleration is unbelievable. Buy one!
cwm honda wrote:
If I could, I definitely would.
As for the leon, it is absurd
As for the leon, it is absurd that they offer so few to such a large hot hatch market as they'd probably sell all they've made quite easily, if they all came here.