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Car Review

Porsche Taycan Sport Turismo review

Prices from
£89,200 - £163,570
8
Published: 20 Jun 2025
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Driving

What is it like to drive?

The chassis and suspension are identical to the standard Taycan and the estate is only 15kg heavier. And since we’re talking about 2,310kg of mass, that weight difference is beyond negligible.

So aside from the rear glass being further away in the rear view mirror, there’s not much change for a driver to detect. Treat with extreme scepticism anyone who says the handling is more tail-happy because that 15kg extra mass is mostly over the rear axle.

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Noted. Is this very much a sports estate then?

It is. The Cross Turismo is a fairly racy crossover, and this is a fairly racy estate. However, the Cross Turismo is more languid, has detectable pitch and dive which we think actually suits the role of an estate car better.

The Sport Turismo is slightly harder, sharper and more immediate. It has lovely steering and is immaculately behaved through corners, doing a very impressive job of disguising its mass and maintaining impressive body control over rough surfaces. Certainly crisper to drive than an Audi RS6.

Does this only apply to the GTS?

It applies to the GTS most of all, since this is – and probably always will be – the sportiest machine in the range. Not that other Sport Turismos drift that far from the template laid down by the GTS though.

One thing about the GTS: it’s the most rear-biased Taycan. Because of how the motors work, the GTS shuffles a greater proportion of torque to the rear axle than even the Turbo S. In fact as far as it can, it’ll only send power to the rear axle, activating the front motor as it gets close to the fringes of grip.

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Can you feel it?

Not on the public road. But the Sport Turismo is a very well-balanced car. You’ll get some understeer if you really hurl it along, but on the whole it grips tenaciously and behaves neutrally at the limit.

You can up the ante with the Sport Turismo as well: £6,939 buys you the Dynamic Package that, alongside adjustable suspension, brings Porsche’s phenomenal Active Ride technology which works to keep the body level no matter the forces working on it.

It really impressed us in the Panamera, but the even lower centre of gravity here means it’s not something we would consider a must fit. Same applies to the £7,230 PCCB ceramic brakes (which have gone almost £1,000 in the last four years).

At least rear wheel steering is now standard, and helps give Taycans fitted with it crisper, more immediate turn-in.

How’s the powertrain?

More polished than just about any other electric car out there, but where electric motors are concerned those margins are small. The background fake engine noise is actually pretty decent and the calibration of the throttle is brilliant – gives you faith in the car no matter what mode you’re in or where you’re driving.

The GTS, as with all Taycans, is an effective deliverer of speed (0-62mph in 3.3secs, 100mph in 6.9secs – a whole second faster than the pre-facelift car). But that’s with Launch Control’s overboost function or keeping the push-to-pass button pressed. The rest of the time instead of 691bhp you have to make do with 597bhp. Don’t stress. It’s more than enough to put the hound in the boot on red alert.

Highlights from the range

the fastest

700kW Turbo S 105kWh 5dr Auto
  • 0-622.4s
  • CO20
  • BHP938.7
  • MPG
  • Price£163,200

the cheapest

320kW 105kWh 5dr RWD Auto [Revised]
  • 0-624.8s
  • CO20
  • BHP429.1
  • MPG
  • Price£89,200

the greenest

440kW 4S 105kWh 5dr Auto [5 Seat] [Revised]
  • 0-623.7s
  • CO20
  • BHP590
  • MPG
  • Price£97,570

Variants We Have Tested

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