This twin-turbo V6 coupe delivers 400 horsepower and head-turning retro styling for less than a loaded Camry costs, a genuine performance bargain that embarrasses the Supra on price. The driving experience is engaging and surprisingly livable for daily use, with strong aftermarket support for those chasing more power. The tradeoff: an interior that feels lifted from 2009, a notchy manual shifter that demands commitment, and the reality that you're buying a heavily refreshed 370Z platform, not a clean-sheet design. Early dealer greed and a resolved transmission stop-sale left some scars, but the mechanicals are solid. Buy this if you want analog thrills and heritage on a budget; skip it if you need modern refinement or cutting-edge tech.
Quick enough to embarrass pricier metal, practical enough to haul a 65-inch TV, and genuinely fun in a way most modern performance cars forgot how to be. The Mk7 and 7.5 (2015-2021) hit the sweet spot: bulletproof EA888 engine, sharp handling, and interiors that punch above their weight. The catch is maintenance, skip an oil change or ignore a clogged sunroof drain and you'll meet your VW specialist more than you planned. The Mk8 stumbled with maddening touchscreen controls and software that occasionally forgets how to play music, though the 2026 refresh claws back the driving feel. If you're the type who actually enjoys cars and doesn't mind being on a first-name basis with your mechanic, this is still one of the best daily drivers under $40k. Skip it if you want appliance-grade reliability.