Audi's bestselling crossover splits cleanly at the 2025 redesign. The 2018-2024 generation delivers what buyers expect, refined ride, solid Quattro grip, and genuine durability when you stay on top of the 60k water pump swap and control arm bushings. Owners routinely push these past 150k miles without drama. The 2025-2026 models are a different story: cars shutting down mid-drive, seven dealer visits in seven months chasing electrical gremlins, and an interior that swapped Audi's signature solidity for a screen-filled cost-cut mess. If you're shopping used, grab a CPO 2023-2024. If you're eyeing new, wait a year or walk to the X3.
The R1S is the electric SUV that actually goes off-road, with supercar acceleration and 410-mile range wrapped in a thoughtful three-row package, until you hit the systematic wind noise, suspension rattles, and software bugs that plague both generations. Gen 2's emergency door release requires removing interior trim panels to escape, a design choice that borders on reckless in a family vehicle. If you're willing to beta-test a startup's learning curve at $78k-$127k and can live with inconsistent service access, the capability is genuinely special; most buyers will find more polish and peace of mind in a Model X or established luxury brand.