Steve Cropley
14 June 2012

What is it?

The Toyota GT86 is the firm's near-perfect recipe for an affordable, uncomplicated sports two-seater, a car in the Mazda MX-5 mould except for the roof. But in corporate terms, it’s much more important than a mere fun car. The GT86 is the flagship for a complete change in the way Toyota does things, a strong signal from its recently installed president, Akio Toyoda, that his company wants to build enjoyable, involving cars, rather than the reliable, dour machines for which it has lately become famous. It wants relive days when the MR2, Celica and Supra lifted the image of the whole range.

However, Toyota’s new rear-wheel-drive coupe could never have been built without the involvement of Subaru, who provide some of the know-how, the factory and the 2.0 litre flat-four that allows the GT86 its low nose (and therefore its compact dimensions and low centre of gravity). Subaru is launching its own near-identical model, called BRZ, made on the same production lines to improve economies of scale and allow the car to be sold at the comparatively affordable entry price of £24,995, or £1500 more if you want to substitute a six-speed automatic for the six-speed manual. Toyota wants to sell 2000 cars this year after the car hits showrooms at the beginning of July, and plans to do 5000 a year thereafter.

What is it like?

In a word, brilliant. From the first, the GT86 is simplicity itself to drive, coping with typical British suburban bumps quite well even though the suspension is obviously sporty in intent. The body feels rigid and well-made, the car rides flat, and the suspension is commendably quiet. When you get going on the open road, the damping provides terrific body control and the cornering grip is excellent.

There is a delicacy balance and an easy adjustability in its rear-drive chassis simply not available from front- or four-wheel drive. The GT86 can change direction with cat-like speed and grace. The steering is firmer than you’d find in a saloon of this size, but sharp and beautifully informative. The easy-changing gearbox suits the whole mix perfectly.

Around town, the flat-four engine doesn’t feel like something with an advertised power of 197bhp, though it’s flexible and you’ll always enjoy the flat-four Subaru throb. To get the best from it you must use revs: keep the needle between 5000 and the 7500rpm redline and the GT86 goes very well indeed. The 0-62mph sprint time is 7.6sec, brisk enough, and you can get to 140mph flat out. Best of all, the ’86 always feels a responsive, willing car on Britain’s challenging and variable open roads.

The Toyota is barely a hand-span longer than a typical supermini so its well-equipped interior has the snug, low-roof, tailored feel of a much more expensive GT. The trim materials don’t really live up to that — they lean more to mass-market durability than bespoke quality — but the GT86 cabin is still a very pleasant place to be with sporty dials and nicely arrayed switchgear.

Should I buy one?

What’s stopping you? Only the paucity of rear room, probably, if you have a family. If that’s not an issue, you’ll enjoy every mile you drive. Even more comforting is the fact that this is still an affordable Toyota so dealer support, residuals and reliability can be expected to be first class.

The usual uncertainties of sports-car ownership are missing, yet the GT86’s fun qualities are unaffected. Now, what’s your trade-in worth?

Toyota GT86 2.0l manual

Price: £24,995; 0-62mph: 7.6sec; Top speed: 140mph; Economy: 36.2mpg (combined); CO2: 181g/km; Kerb weight: 1240kg; Engine: 4cyl horizontally opposed, 1998cc, petrol; Power: 197bhp at 7000rpm; Torque: 151lb ft at 6400-6600rpm; Gearbox: 6-speed manual

Join the debate

Comments
31

If you don't get it...

1 year 5 days ago

... don't buy it.

Comparing it to a 320d is ultimate proof that you don't have the faintest. And this is coming from someone who owns BMW's smallest rwd with a 270hp 2l diesel...

 

bomb wrote:For me, this is

1 year 5 days ago

bomb wrote:

For me, this is a little like the MX-5 where outright grip/pace/time against a stopwatch are meaningless when driving pleasure is the only benchmark.

then why does it have 197bhp rather than, say, 83bhp? Or 126bhp? Who decides these things and on what planet is it the law that you can't have driving pleasure AND more performance than Aunty Flo's 3-Series?

I'm not so stupid (or should that be special?) that I can't understand how it's more fun to drive a slow car fast than a fast car slow, but when the car you're talking about was originally touted as a cheap and rapid coupe yet has arrived not that cheap and not that rapid, all the semi religious bollocks coming from the driving purists here is pretty funny.

And incidentally, the notion that a new BMW 320d is no comparison just shows where the real ignorance lies. The BMW might have connotations and image baggage but it's a five star, perfectly balanced, rear drive gem with sports car credentials and 61.4mpg; a car which Autocar described as almost flawless and "head and shoulders above its competition, towering clearer of the pack...or any other class-leading car". So it's miles better than the Toyota and at £29K remains cheaper to run, cheaper to finance and holds its value better. And if it's so unaffordable, why is it a consistent top ten seller? Answer me that.

Anyway, come on boys, if you love the GT so much, money where your mouth is please. You didn't save Saab but maybe you can help here!

Toyota GT86

1 year 5 days ago

Well I for one have been waiting what seems like ages for this to finally become a reality.

Because I have no family space is not an issue, so in order to get smallish RWD cars my last two have been BMW's because nobody else makes them (3 Series Compact followed by 1 series).

Thank God another manufacturer has finally seen sense! I know there is the MX5, but I have never wanted a convertible, and like to have rear seats even if they are only used rarely. I would have liked an RX-8 if only it didn't have such a massive drink problem!

Hence my allegiance to Munich's finest until now.

Anyway I was lucky enough to win a competition run by Toyota and as a result will be test driving a GT86 at Goodwood on 28 June, so will find out for myself what it is like soon - am really looking forward to it as well.

why?

1 year 5 days ago

 

chaps, get real!

25k quid for this thing is, overpriced too much.

Look at it, just look at it: headrests lifted from old Yaris, switch gear that can be found in 8~10 year old anonymous toyotas (mind you, you get them absolutly free in the new Lexus ES also...)

Worse is, you have the real feeling that this one could have been proposed as it is way back in the `90s, there`s nothing on it screaming 2012... apart the bluetooth thing...

Bad execution. £20K for it would have been fine.

Then, we have the paid fan-boys coming here to say this is a great car and anything other than that is to be biased...

Seriously, comming from paid fan-boys such statement.

Whats more, even considering the BMW 3-series diesel as a snob-only default choice, guess what? Missus will be upset without it, were she can unload all groceries bags & shopping mall packages on that numb 2 seater?

Even 4 spare tires as they say, only can fit with effort.

...In the end of the day, you will be able to do the same (or better) drifts with the Bimmer too.

 

This needs to find a small

1 year 5 days ago

This needs to find a small but steady number of buyers, and i imagine it will. Afterall its afordable, and good looking, and apparently drives very well

Could it be cheaper? Yes, but the devaluation of sterling has done us no favours there.

Could it be faster? Yes, but if you want the purity of a naturally aspirated engine, you wont get huge torque without a huge engine, and that doent really go with a light, low car.

Is it desirable? To me yes. will i buy one? maybe one day, but i would prefer a soft top.

But even if i never buy one i am very pleased it exists 

is this a review or a sponsored advert?

1 year 5 days ago

this explains nothing about the handing and steering feedback of the car, nor mentions oversteer which is the main selling point.

from other magazines reviews I've read this is supposed to be a disapointment. is it?

coolboy wrote: ...In the end

1 year 5 days ago

coolboy wrote:

...In the end of the day, you will be able to do the same (or better) drifts with the Bimmer too.

 

Ha..this is hilarious! Diesel brain-washing has worked.

Respectfully, you're missing the point. I'd suggest waiting for the 5-7000rpm powerband in the 320D then reporting back to us.

coolboy wrote:paid

1 year 4 days ago

coolboy wrote:

paid fan-boys

Reminds me of a bar crawl just off Las Ramblas in 1997...

Honda CR-V ES 2.2 i-DTEC/Citroen DS3 1.6 VTi DStyle Plus

... still not getting it.

1 year 4 days ago

The 320d is indeed objectively the better car. That is why they sell more. The GT86 is wholly about the driving experience and makes no real sense as a transportation proposal. Considering all objective facts and their likeness, the GT86 and 320d will still provide a wholly different driving experience.

If you don't get that, you are indeed either ignorent or naive.

25k may be too much

1 year 4 days ago

but it could be a great used buy in a couple of years time.

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Our Verdict

This light, uncomplicated coupé promises so much. Can the Toyota GT86 deliver?

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