Next-generation Volkswagen Golf GTI Teased

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Denizens of the United States, you should forget about the word “Golf” and just focus on the “GTI” designation. That’s all you’ll really need to know about, what with Volkswagen opting to ditch the slow-selling Golf in favor of the hotter (GTI) and hottest (R) variants of its compact hatch.

The final inhabitants of a rejiggered U.S. product lineup have yet to be set in stone, but the GTO variant of the upcoming eighth-generation Golf is surely on its way. Today brought our first glimpse of the model.

Teased by VW in a cropped rendering of a “near-production concept car,” the next GTI is what you’d expect — a sportier take on the base Golf, retaining the same profile as its predecessor but gaining a tiny bit of size and a whole lot of tech.

Fog lights peek out from behind honeycomb mesh that fills the GTI’s expansive mouth, one which actually calls to mind Toyota’s Corolla. It looks like it’s ready to hoover up anything in its path, including, perhaps, your money. Above it, an LED light bar connects the slim headlamps to the center badge, ensuring instant nighttime recognition.

Never before have automakers been so adventurous with front-end lighting. That red stripe remains, thankfully, as the look-at-me light bar is an optional feature.

Due for a reveal at next month’s Geneva Motor Show, the 2021 Golf GTI will offer a very digital experience behind the wheel. VW’s Digital Cockpit is “a completely digitalised interior landscape of displays and controls,” something youngsters will like and old-timer purists will surely loathe. See a preview of it here. VW’s Travel Assist driver-assist system will also make an appearance, offering lane holding and smart cruise at speeds of up to 210 km/h (130 mph).

As for the powertrain, Volkswagen had no specifics to give. All the automaker can say is that the “power delivery of the GTI turbo engine will exceed expectations. The same can be said of the running gear, which can be set precisely by the driver in conjunction with a new DCC generation (adaptive chassis control).”

The current-gen GTI hosts a turbocharged 2.0-liter making 228 horsepower and 258 lb-ft. Expect more grunt when the new one launches (beginning in Europe) in the second half of 2020.

[Image: Volkswagen]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Whatnext Whatnext on Feb 21, 2020

    I assume since the base models won't be offered in the USA that these will be coming from Europe and not Hecho en Mexico?

  • Namesakeone Namesakeone on Feb 22, 2020

    I wonder if the aforementioned base model will eventually be available with a diesel (meant sarcastically).

  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X Congestion pricing is the best idea since pay toilets. /S🙄
  • EBFlex Amazing they finally made a good decision in NY. Golf clap
  • EBFlex Not at all. The solution to congestion is to make more lanes for vehicles. No bike lanes, no trains, none of it. Another solution is to make your public transit a place people actually want to be and not a septic tank of violent criminals and drug users.
  • Firehawk I had two of these with lean and misfire codes. He changed the plugs you say??? has he inspected them? One of the two times it was a brand new plug that cracked. The other lean condition was some random threaded hole on the bottom of the throttle body that needed to be closed up, whatever was in there came out and was letting a lot of unmetered air into the intake. I love the Mark VIIIs my 97 and 98 would still be here today if it weren't for other drivers and their proclivity for hitting things. 97 was rear ended and totaled the 98 was t-boned while parked. Moved on to bigger Lincolns. Got an MKT and Aviator now.
  • Seth1065 Hell No, why should I as a driver have to pay for the subway repairs? I already pay over $250 a month in tolls to get into NYC, ( all of it not just Midtown) ( do not tell me to move closer I am less than 20 miles from midtown) the roads are crap as it is now , the trains are not much better and I have no faith in the port Authority ( referred around metro NY as the 51 state) to spend the money properly. They want no drivers in midtown , they already allowed over a 1000 parking spots to be taken up by restaurants out door dining. Most folks can not afford to live in midtown ( and the ones who can may not want to live in a city) but the city wants its workers back in their office buildings. People need to drive into the city for various reasons and they work there, want to eat at a restaurant trucks need to deliver food there, they will pay and pass teh bill on to the restaurant who will pass it on to the consumer. I did laugh yesterday when I read NYC has already spent a half billion dollars on the trackers. BTW I am pretty sure port authority personnel do not pay for their expats so who should they car. Show me a plan where everyone pays for this , train riders, subway riders, car drivers and I may agree but until then I will just not go to the city as often. I do think this will pass around Nov. 8 after election day. and a train to midtown from LGA , yeah that will happen , cost ten billion and 90 years. they can not even finish the 2 ave subway and that's been going on about 75 years at least.
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