RE: Audi reveals new RS3 Competition Limited
RE: Audi reveals new RS3 Competition Limited
Today

Audi reveals new RS3 Competition Limited

Hyper hatch celebrates 50 years of Audi's in-line five with coilovers, ceramic brakes and lots of carbon


Audi has a lot going on in 2026. It kicked the year off by launching the new RS5, a 639hp plug-in hybrid replacement to the RS4; meanwhile, its Formula 1 project is now officially underway with a points finish on debut at last weekend’s Australian Grand Prix. You’d be forgiven for forgetting that this year also marks the 50th anniversary of its five-cylinder engine, which it marked back in December with the radical GT50 concept inspired by the 90 Quattro. Turns out that wasn’t all it had planned for the occasion, as it’s continuing the festivities by introducing the RS3 Competition Limited.

Being an Audi anniversary model means there’s an obligatory nod to one of its many legendary Quattros, though it’s clearly nowhere near as drastic as the GT50 concept’s IMSA-style makeover. Instead, the RS3 Competition Limited can be spec’d with the iconic Malachite Green paint originally found on the Sport Quattro, which looks especially good when paired up with the standard 19-inch Neodymium gold wheels, though less interesting Daytona Grey and Glacier White matte options can also be had. If that wasn’t enough, Audi has developed an exclusive new light signature where segments of the matrix LED headlights illuminate in a 1,2,4,5,3 pattern as a reference to the five-pot’s firing order. 

Elsewhere, there’s a revised aero package comprised of two small carbon canards on either side of the front bumper, below which sits a deeper splitter finished in matte carbon. Tweaks have also been made to the rear spoiler, with the centre section filled in to improve airflow, while the shroud around the diffuser is now finished in, you guessed it, matte carbon fibre. On top of that, the standard RS badges have been exchanged for the same red, grey and black heritage badges seen on the RS6 GT, while the Competition Limited logo has been subtly etched into the rear quarter glass.

Speaking of the RS6 GT, Audi has worked the same sort of chassis magic on its new hyper hatch: specifically, slapping three-way coilovers on each corner, which can be manually adjusted for ride height, rebound, plus low and high speed compression. They’re paired up with stiffer springs and a beefed-up rear anti-roll bar, while carbon ceramic brakes are included as standard. What’ll cost you extra, however, are a set of Pirelli P Zero Trofeo R semi-slick tyres for those who genuinely intend on taking their RS3 Comp on track.

For a car built to celebrate five decades of the five-banger, Audi’s left the RS3’s 2.5-litre five-cylinder turbo engine largely untouched for the Comp. That means 400hp and 369lb ft of torque, which is good for a 0-62mph time of 3.8 seconds - just 0.2 seconds shy of the new (albeit vastly more weighty) RS5. The minor tweaks it has made include lifting the top speed limiter from 155mph to 180mph, and a reduction in sound deadening around the front bulkhead to allow more five-pot burble into the cabin.

On that note, the interior has been jazzed up with Neodymium and Ginger white carbon-backed sports seats, and there are Competition Edition logos in gold on the headrests, too. Each model gets its own build plaque denoting its position in the 750-strong production run. That’s split between 585 Sportbacks and 165 Saloons, but we’re only getting 11 examples of the hatchbacks, all of which are said to have been finished in green. And if you thought a regular RS3 was expensive, consider that the Comp will cost £89,330 when it arrives in the summer. Even at a near £20k premium over the range-topping Carbon Vorsprung, it’s hard to imagine Audi will have any difficulty selling them.


Author
Discussion

MonteCarlos1

Original Poster:

65 posts

18 months

Yesterday (13:14)
quotequote all
£90k for an RS3 or a BMW M3 instead? Not real argument considering the RS3 has the interior from a £30k car. Only reason anyone would buy one of these is as an investment opportunity, by virtue of its rarity.

For that price I'd have expected a bit more effort with the engine, especially if it's going to be the final iteration of the 5 cylinder for Audi. Not just coilovers and a bit of tarted up bodywork for a £30k jump over a standard RS3.

Edited by MonteCarlos1 on Tuesday 10th March 13:20

chrisironside

908 posts

185 months

Yesterday (13:23)
quotequote all
Ninety-thousand British pounds is bonkers for an R3!

Glenn63

3,738 posts

107 months

Yesterday (13:28)
quotequote all
MonteCarlos1 said:
£90k for an RS3 or a BMW M3 instead? Not real argument considering the RS3 has the interior from a £30k car. Only reason anyone would buy one of these is as an investment opportunity, by virtue of its rarity.

For that price I'd have expected a bit more effort with the engine, especially if it's going to be the final iteration of the 5 cylinder for Audi. Not just coilovers and a bit of tarted up bodywork for a £30k jump over a standard RS3.

Edited by MonteCarlos1 on Tuesday 10th March 13:20
Yeah price is silly, but is the M3’s interior any special upgrade from a standard 3 series?

gotoPzero

19,912 posts

212 months

Yesterday (13:30)
quotequote all
Hm, this or a really nice low miles 991 Turbo S.

Hm indeed.

CMTMB

926 posts

18 months

Yesterday (13:32)
quotequote all
I thought this looked great until I saw the price.

ukwill

9,942 posts

230 months

Yesterday (14:13)
quotequote all

Article: "Even at a near £20k premium over the range-topping Carbon Vorsprung, it’s hard to imagine Audi will have any difficulty selling them."

How does this happen? Who TF buys these things?

90k buys you a whole lot of nice choices. Nowhere in that price point would I contemplate an RS3.


Gary Woodland

2,585 posts

185 months

Yesterday (14:25)
quotequote all
For every single one of those ninety thousand pounds you get an extra line. What an absolute bag of dilz.

triathlonstu

346 posts

172 months

Yesterday (14:28)
quotequote all
My dad was a big S3 guy, he probably had 5 over his lifetime with his last being the generation before this one. The build quality in his last car was bang average and there were constant issues, albeit sorted by warranty claims.

I'm aware the RS3 is a bit more special but regardless of the 5 pot, I cannot imagine parting with £90k and feeling like a satisfied customer.

Quhet

2,781 posts

169 months

Yesterday (14:29)
quotequote all
The rather tasteful colour combo does de-Bradford it a bit but this RS3 is still a dreadfully fussy design and rather too chintzy. Price is obv bonkers too

matherto

113 posts

19 months

Yesterday (14:39)
quotequote all
MonteCarlos1 said:
£90k for an RS3 or a BMW M3 instead? Not real argument considering the RS3 has the interior from a £30k car. Only reason anyone would buy one of these is as an investment opportunity, by virtue of its rarity.

For that price I'd have expected a bit more effort with the engine, especially if it's going to be the final iteration of the 5 cylinder for Audi. Not just coilovers and a bit of tarted up bodywork for a £30k jump over a standard RS3.

Edited by MonteCarlos1 on Tuesday 10th March 13:20
Because a 3-Series interior is so much nicer than an A3’s right?

Couldn’t possibly be because they want a 5-pot, or they like the way it looks, or (more likely) don’t like way the M3 looks or any number of other reasons


matherto

113 posts

19 months

Yesterday (14:46)
quotequote all
gotoPzero said:
Hm, this or a really nice low miles 991 Turbo S.

Hm indeed.
Maybe they have a small family and want a new car rather than a used coupe?

Tarmack

45 posts

19 months

Yesterday (15:18)
quotequote all
It looks great but shame they didn’t give it more power.

I think the 3 series comparisons are because this is a C segment size car so no matter if you get the top RS model it ultimately is still a Golf equivalent. M340i feels more quality inside and to be expected being based on a more expensive bigger platform.

Mr Moley

541 posts

213 months

Yesterday (15:28)
quotequote all
matherto said:
MonteCarlos1 said:
£90k for an RS3 or a BMW M3 instead? Not real argument considering the RS3 has the interior from a £30k car. Only reason anyone would buy one of these is as an investment opportunity, by virtue of its rarity.

For that price I'd have expected a bit more effort with the engine, especially if it's going to be the final iteration of the 5 cylinder for Audi. Not just coilovers and a bit of tarted up bodywork for a £30k jump over a standard RS3.

Edited by MonteCarlos1 on Tuesday 10th March 13:20
Because a 3-Series interior is so much nicer than an A3 s right?

Couldn t possibly be because they want a 5-pot, or they like the way it looks, or (more likely) don t like way the M3 looks or any number of other reasons
I really like the RS3, in fact I had one and it was fab, but the 3 series interior, particularly in the M3 is (understandably) a level above and £90k is really pushing it for a hot hatch, even one as fast as this


silencepoint

7,240 posts

122 months

Yesterday (15:34)
quotequote all
I love an RS3. But looking at the photos of the current gen, I'd rather have the previous one.

dukebox9reg

1,690 posts

171 months

Yesterday (15:38)
quotequote all
Quhet said:
The rather tasteful colour combo does de-Bradford it a bit but this RS3 is still a dreadfully fussy design and rather too chintzy. Price is obv bonkers too
You say that, they have thrown on a Bradford tastic, aliexpress F1 fog light

fantheman80

2,392 posts

72 months

Yesterday (15:49)
quotequote all
It is bonkers money, but I think they will shift the 12. Id rather an new Rs5 Avant for a bit more on the monthlies, but I did hear a sound clip and its got a bit of the over-run sound back the previous gen was infamous for and think the body additions looks great. Not a fan of the wheels though.

Funk

27,317 posts

232 months

Yesterday (15:51)
quotequote all
CMTMB said:
I thought this looked great until I saw the price.
Same.

You'd have to be certifiable to buy one of these.

WPA

13,599 posts

137 months

Yesterday (15:58)
quotequote all
CMTMB said:
I thought this looked great until I saw the price.
Agreed, crazy price

CH80

333 posts

20 months

Yesterday (16:06)
quotequote all
That grill needs a redesign.

N.A.R.T Spyder

182 posts

83 months

Yesterday (16:10)
quotequote all
triathlonstu said:
My dad was a big S3 guy, he probably had 5 over his lifetime with his last being the generation before this one. The build quality in his last car was bang average and there were constant issues, albeit sorted by warranty claims.

I'm aware the RS3 is a bit more special but regardless of the 5 pot, I cannot imagine parting with £90k and feeling like a satisfied customer.
Yes same here, disappointed with my latest Audi - there have been several issues although the local dealer has been superb.