Subaru BRZ (12 on) - Review

Review by Gareth Evans on
Last Updated: 03 Aug 2012
3.5
The Subaru BRZ sports car is the result of collaboration between Subaru and Toyota. It is the sister car to the Toyota GT86, and shares many parts with the highly acclaimed lightweight, rear-wheel-drive coupe.

Subaru BRZ (12 on)

Agile handling, characterful engine sound, simple dashboard layout.

Interior quality isn't great, shorter warranty than equivalent GT86, small dealer network.

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Summary

Parkers Rating:

3.5 out of 5

The Subaru BRZ sports car is the result of collaboration between Subaru and Toyota. It is the sister car to the Toyota GT86, and shares many parts with the highly acclaimed lightweight, rear-wheel-drive coupe. In fact, only the rear suspension (which is slightly softer and grippier), the badges and the interior are noticeably different.

Excellent chassis

Handling is a big part of what the BRZ is about. The rear-wheel-drive configuration is music to driving purists’ ears, while the low-mounted bonnet and low seating position mean the centre of gravity remains extremely low, which in turn means this is a car which simply loves corners. The steering is excellent, the driving position is brilliant and the clever electronic stability and traction control systems ensure fun without inevitable death.

Versatile engine

The engine, a 2.0-litre four-cylinder petrol-powered unit, makes 197bhp. Coupled with the six-speed manual transmission, that means a sprint to 62mph in 7.6 seconds and a top speed of 140mph. If you’ve gone for the paddle-shift-equipped automatic version you’ll hit 62mph in 8.2 seconds and top speed drops to 130mph. Although the auto is slower, it’s still a very engaging drive – the throttle blips on downshifts never fail to make you smile.

Surprising comfort, excellent aftercare

Although a sports car, the BRZ isn’t what you’d call uncomfortable. Its sports seats are very supportive without being hard, and long journeys pose no real problem. The ride is cossetting thanks to 17-inch tyres with relatively fat tyres, so there’s not much of the choppiness associated with other focused sports cars. Subaru’s aftersales package, known as the Subaru Everything Taken Care of aftercare package, includes a monthly wash, minor dent and scratch removal, lost key replacement, an annual valet, an annual wheel alignment check, service collection and delivery, first MOT cover and winter wheel/tyre storage. That’s quite a bit more than Toyota is offering, yet the both BRZ and GT86 start at the very same price. So can this car do enough to command sales over its close relation, the GT86? Will it attract buyers from hot hatches or larger coupes? Read on for our Subaru BRZ review to find out.

Parkers Ratings

Overall

3.5 out of 5

Performance

4 out of 5

Handling

5 out of 5

Comfort

4 out of 5

Practicality

3 out of 5

Behind the wheel

3.5 out of 5

Safety

4 out of 5

Reliability

4 out of 5

Running costs

3.5 out of 5

Green credentials

3 out of 5

Buying new

4 out of 5

Buying used

4 out of 5

Selling

4 out of 5

Equipment

4 out of 5

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