Currently reading: First ride: £200k R5 Turbo 3E is a 533bhp electric drift monster

We strap into the passenger seat at Goodwood to see if it justifies its supercar price

Here it is: the most expensive Renault to date. Prices for the slightly awkwardly named Renault 5 Turbo 3E will start at £140,000, rising to £220,000 once options are ticked.

In truth, it is vastly different from the standard Renault 5 with which it shares its name. Only the mirrors, door handles and tail lights are carried over. It sits on the Alpine Performance Platform, which will also underpin the new electric Alpine A110.

It has been designed from the outset to look like a supercar – and it succeeds. Before taking to the passenger seat for a lap of the Goodwood circuit, I had to fight through throngs of awestruck influencers and journalists who'd been drawn to its cartoonish silhouette.

Being a passenger in an EV can often induce a specific kind of nausea, stemming from the sensory conflict between fierce acceleration and a distinct lack of noise. Conversely, riding shotgun on track in a fast petrol car can overwhelm for the opposite reason: too much speed and too many sensory inputs to keep track of.

It speaks volumes about this electric hooligan that it is too visceral to trigger the former, yet raw enough to provoke the latter.

The 533bhp EV was piloted by long-time Renault test driver David Praschl. It is a hugely important halo car for the Renault Group. Only 1980 examples will be built – a nod to the original car’s launch year – and they are already close to selling out.

Slipping into the cabin, you appreciate just how low and tightly formed the car is, giving a cocooning sensation that is amplified by six-point harnesses and a beefy roll cage. It is not your mum's Renault 5 Campus.

This is an unfinished pre-production model, but what struck me most were the interior's contrasts. The seats are bespoke items with a steampunk, retro-futuristic quality. Their shape, fit and feel resemble a professional video-gamer’s set-up, finished in an upmarket, GTI-aping tartan. Yet the screens are lifted almost directly from the standard Renault 5.

Alongside the obligatory fail-safe switches, mysterious control boxes and general prototype addenda, a bright yellow hydraulic handbrake springs proudly upright like the first daffodil of spring. Joy.

We pull away in silence, as you would expect, and at low speeds the car settles into a restless chunter reminiscent of every other piece of specialised hardware that resents travelling slowly – before zipping out of the Goodwood pit lane with just a touch of wheelspin. Praschl tells me the car isn’t operating at full power owing to a low battery percentage, but from the passenger seat, it certainly feels like 533bhp of instant EV muscle. The 0-62mph sprint is expected to take about 3.5sec, which feels entirely plausible.

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The pit-lane chunter is replaced by an eerie cacophony of whirrs and buzzes as this pre-production car attempts to rattle its fixtures loose. As we reach Madgwick, Goodwood’s first corner, the chassis movements beneath my seat make it instantly apparent that the car has a tremendous ability to turn in with minimal inertia. Its carbon-composite structure keeps the kerb weight to around 1450kg – just 1kg more than the standard Renault 5. It's not exactly light compared with a Lotus Elise, but in EV terms it's a featherweight.

The fast sweep of Fordwater demonstrates the car’s rock-solid high-speed stability, while the left-hander at St Mary’s requires a firm stamp on the brakes. There is a prodigious amount of stopping power, though I can tell it demands an equally mighty effort from Praschl’s racing boot. Not that it deters him: at Lavant, a long right-hander, Praschl elegantly yanks the hydraulic handbrake.

I laugh out loud as the rear wheels lock and we slide into a drift. Production-spec cars will feature a dedicated drift mode, and I can only begin to imagine its effectiveness.

Goodwood’s tight chicane reaffirms the car’s ability to change direction rapidly and without fuss before we return to the pit-lane chunter. By now, my laughter has subsided, slowly replaced by a creeping queasiness. But it is a queasiness earned in a bona fide race car, rather than just another fast EV.

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Murray Scullion

Murray Scullion
Title: Digital editor

Murray has been a journalist for more than a decade. During that time he’s written for magazines, newspapers and websites, but he now finds himself as Autocar’s digital editor.

He leads the output of the website and contributes to all other digital aspects, including the social media channels, podcasts and videos. During his time he has reviewed cars ranging from £50 - £500,000, including Austin Allegros and Ferrari 812 Superfasts. He has also interviewed F1 megastars, knows his PCPs from his HPs and has written, researched and experimented with behavioural surplus and driverless technology.

Murray graduated from the University of Derby with a BA in Journalism in 2014 and has previously written for Classic Car Weekly, Modern Classics Magazine, buyacar.co.uk, parkers.co.uk and CAR Magazine, as well as carmagazine.co.uk.

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MisterMR44 18 March 2026

I like it. It's quite a funky looking thing and that 'toy car' look really appeals to me (like Hyundai's 'Insteroid' concept)... but it's just SO MUCH MONEY...!!

Peter Cavellini 18 March 2026

Ultimately it's a toy,you wouldn't use it as your daily driver,but, who cares, if it can put huge grins on your face at the weekends that's enough,now, whose got the spare £200K?