RE: Toyota GR Yaris Aero Performance | UK Review
RE: Toyota GR Yaris Aero Performance | UK Review
Sunday 19th April

Toyota GR Yaris Aero Performance | UK Review

If you've got £50k, and you can find one, the edgier, bonnet-scooped GR still makes a terrific case for itself


“I’ve been thinking about getting one.” You hear this a lot when driving a Toyota GR Yaris. This time it’s a chap in the petrol station, putting air in the tyres of a Land Rover Defender. He should, I tell him. He might be the perfect customer: middle-aged, middle-class and by the look of his hat and tinted windows, with disposable cash to burn. It’s good that he wants one because at £49,145 on the road, this is surely the niche audience being targeted by the new Aero Performance version. Who else has sufficient cheese to lavish so much of it on a puffed-up supermini? 

When we first drove the Yaris, an aeon ago (2021), it was £33,495 with the Circuit Pack. We went mad for it. So did you. The forum originally devoted to the subject contained enough confirmed deposits to qualify as a small bank. Famously, of course, Toyota built the car with one eye on the WRC, and appeared content almost to let the commercial chips fall where they may. At any rate, it made a good job of seeming shocked when the customer stampede - many of them darkening a Toyota showroom door for the first time ever - kicked off. People wanted one bad. 

If it is somewhat disheartening now to consider any Yaris as a £50k prospect, it is worth reminding yourself of the opposite end of the scale. For one thing, the model’s continued existence - in any format, and even allowing for Toyota UK’s extremely limited supply - seems a minor miracle. Virtually every other mainstream OEM has thrown in the towel when it comes to hot hatches, let alone those equipped with manual gearboxes, bespoke petrol engines and sophisticated AWD systems. For another, and despite an incentivised effort to foist an electrified alternative on customers, people are still intrigued by those ingredients. And evidently prepared to pay through the nose for them. 

How satisfying then to report that much here is as it ever was. Vanishingly few cars currently for sale new rival its capacity for joy - especially if you like it delivered without airs and graces. The GR Yaris does not require you to be a dyed-in-the-wool, petrol-for-blood enthusiast to comprehend its greatness: it is small and fast and very nimble. And deceptively simple. Your nan would get something out of it. Though she would need you to explain why your Aero is different from the variants that have preceded it. 

Mercifully, this would involve plenty of good-natured pointing. Most notably, the Aero gets a ‘large cooling duct’ atop the engine bay, one previously preserved for the GRMN. Elsewhere, it is about better harnessing the airflow, with a front lip spoiler, flat floor undercover and (yep) a three-way, manually adjustable rear spoiler. Smaller ducts proliferate elsewhere, too, in the front wings and either side of the rear bumper. Much of this, as you might expect, is the result of experience gleaned by Toyota in motor racing, and doubtless results in the sort of marginal gains that help to lower lap times. 

In the real world, they serve the same purpose, of course, though the pleasure of looking at a chunkier, racier Yaris is perhaps the more noticeable upshot. The GR’s three-door body has always distinguished it from the standard model, but there is now an appreciable edge to proceedings, and even if these pass the average punter by, it’s frankly hard not to like a supermini with a large hole cut in its bonnet. It’s quite possible the Aero Performance might not get around the local one-way system any quicker than a non-Aero Performance car - but it will look like it has. And that’s half the battle. 

Considerably more might be made of the one item that Toyota previously glossed over: the presence of a ‘racing-style vertical handbrake’ adjacent to the gear lever. Technically speaking, there appears to be no difference to previous iterations (which would also enthusiastically lock the back wheels, though not hydraulically); except now it’s rerouted to be right there, practically daring you to pull on it. Clearly, we wouldn’t recommend you do this in full view of other road users, though if your commute involves negotiating umpteen deserted T-junctions or mini-roundabouts, the temptation will likely prove too great. Ditto the pay-off. 

Either way, you’ll be enjoying yourself. There is simply too much to savour here for it to be any other way. Sure, the car's vertical stiffness seems more abrupt than it was in 2021, the damper settings having again been tweaked (the Aero Performance is a midget gem best enjoyed alone, unless your other half has a high jiggle tolerance), but the GR still does a marvellous job of hunkering down without ever seeming like it's running short of spring travel. It bobs and weaves congenially. And thanks to the unchanged limited-slip diffs front and rear, it corners voraciously. The amalgamation is as addictive as ever. 

Reports elsewhere suggest that Toyota, in search of greater structural rigidity, might have found room for yet more spot welds. At any rate, the software overseeing the power steering has definitely been updated, and while a new, smaller-diameter wheel (by 5mm) doesn’t dazzle you with newfound feedback, it certainly feels weightier and happier for you to lean into it, especially under high loads. This is useful because you might be inclined to carry more speed in a car that, somewhere between 2024 and now, has been forced to lose 34lb ft of torque to satisfy the latest EU emissions regulations. 

No shortfall in output is welcome in a hot hatch - particularly one so well equipped to cope with it - though it's worth mentioning that you seldom reflect on a lack of clout in the new Aero. Probably because power is unchanged at 280hp (an amount you will encounter frequently, given the raspy appeal of remaining near 6,500rpm), but also because the GR seems so brilliantly attuned to pushing on in the UK. It is still furnished with more than enough energy to ask searching questions of its bushy-tailed chassis, yet not so much that you’re endlessly backing off to keep your speed in check. Added to which, of course, it is ideally sized to make the most of what little space the average B road has to offer. 

Granted, when considered alongside its familiar limitations, the reduction in peak twist does feel more of an issue at £50k than when the GR was closer to £30k. It remains perfectly usable on a motorway, but this is not the first car you’d recommend to someone clocking up considerable distances, and nor would you buy it if you were planning on regularly using the back seats for anything more cumbersome than a raincoat. The boot’s luggage capacity celebrates a single lifestyle, too, which is convenient because you won’t be impressing anyone with the interior decorating - relocating the handbrake may have gained the Aero a leather-lined pouch for your mobile phone, yet the flagship Yaris remains roughly on par with a flagship Transit in the quantity and quality of its dash plastics. 

Is this a problem? Well, perhaps if the likes of the FL5 Civic Type R were still available for similar money, you might contemplate the superior practicality and (comparatively speaking) plushness of its cabin and secondary ride, among many other fortes. But it isn’t. Excluding the likes of the even costlier RS3, the alternatives are either electric (i.e. dross) or a Mini JCW (decent, but not in the same league) or a Golf R/GTI Edition 50, either of which would mean no manual gearbox. For our money, and for all the ways in which the GR prioritises driving nous over pretty much any ancillary concern, the Aero Performance justifies its cost. And if it cements the GR’s status as a coddled second car for the lucky few, then so be it. Succour for the rest of us, after all, can be found on sale in the classifieds, starting at £25k. Bargain, right? 


SPECIFICATION | 2026 TOYOTA GR YARIS

Engine: 1,618cc three-cylinder, turbocharged
Transmission: six-speed manual, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 280@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 254@3,150-4,600rpm
0-62mph: 5.2 seconds
Top speed: 143mph
Weight: 1,280kg
MPG: 32.1
CO2: 197g/km
Price: £49,145

See every used GR Yaris for sale

Author
Discussion

GT4P

Original Poster:

5,825 posts

209 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Personally prefer the 25MY but then I am bias.
If I wanted one with spoilers etc I would go for limited Ogier of 24/25

PSB1967

441 posts

180 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
As an exercise of function over form, this has gone a tad too far for me. It's straying into the Halfords / Barried / Max Power club. It's only a pair of vape vents away from full membership.

JohnnieX

3 posts

58 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
The hand brake is excellent. Nice to get into a car that is pleased to see you

Hoofy

79,526 posts

306 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
That dashboard. rofl It's like a plastic version of a 1980s interior.

GianiCakes

621 posts

97 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
I like the car but I’m more curious about the Defender driver’s hat that denoted his superior disposable income?

SE2

334 posts

160 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Hoofy said:
That dashboard. rofl It's like a plastic version of a 1980s interior.
Which was their intention, I believe.

Unreal

9,369 posts

49 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
PSB1967 said:
As an exercise of function over form, this has gone a tad too far for me. It's straying into the Halfords / Barried / Max Power club. It's only a pair of vape vents away from full membership.
I love my Mk1 but I also think the addenda are too much and another who thinks the revised dash is grim. Still, I'm not buying it and if others like it, good luck to them.

Jon_S_Rally

4,375 posts

112 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
The early cars are still the one for me, as I don't think the facelift looks as good, but I have to admire how Toyota continue to develop the car and make incremental improvements. It's just a shame that, for UK customers, cars like this have become expensive and with limited availability. The UK and Europe were masters of fun, affordable cars, but now we're not allowed them because of our dimwitted politicians. That makes me sad.

GT4P

Original Poster:

5,825 posts

209 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Nothing wrong with the dash especially when you’re sat inside driving, for me the biggest ball ache is the passenger seat tilts and slides one lever but the driver’s doesn’t.
As mentioned before not a fan of the trying to hard look prefer the stealth looks of the regular model.

Itsallicanafford

2,917 posts

183 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
I think these are great, however I’ve always harboured the suspicion that on track, our Ohlins equipped Megane 275 cup-s would be as fast, if not a little quicker. One day I will find out either way!

Clad-Hach

338 posts

12 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Its getting ruined now...I knew the GR-Yaris would go the way of Subaru's and Evo's sticking on tacky parts to make it a pretend rally car...which it was never meant to be, the MK1 is a Homologation Special this one is not.

Phil.

5,760 posts

274 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Much prefer my MY22. Couldn’t buy one with the big rear wing that does absolutely nothing for performance or handling. Too max power for me. I prefer the understated GR look.

georgeyboy12345

4,335 posts

59 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
The earlier models of this were nicer. The new interior looks crap

wc98

12,401 posts

164 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Itsallicanafford said:
I think these are great, however I ve always harboured the suspicion that on track, our Ohlins equipped Megane 275 cup-s would be as fast, if not a little quicker. One day I will find out either way!
I think it's pretty much guaranteed that in the dry your 275 cup would be quicker on both track and b road. I will get one of these one day but the only issue i have and i know i will get slaughtered for it on here, is the top speed. One of the very best B roads (for very best think cross cambered bends, lots of undulations, crests where you get varying levels of air and plenty of elevation changes, none of the straight bits are very long and even then require driver input because of the nature of the surface) around here has an uphill left hand kink with a bit of off camber on it.

Both cars and bikes get air on it before scrubbing some speed off for the following uphill right into a blind crest with aforementioned cross camber variation along with some air and the car will load up differently each side as the suspension compresses the other side of this crest again due to camber variation.

Trouble is in/on modern cars and bikes with modern tyres that kink can be taken at a higher speed than the Yaris flat out in top, so if out for a play with some friends in cars like a Focus RS or some even older 4wd stuff from Subaru and Mitsubishi never mind modern stuff the Yaris is in for a hard time. Would be even harder work on a flowing A road. Won't put me off getting one and it would be a different story in the wet which is handy given i live in Scotland.

SHIFTY

994 posts

260 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Is that a private number plate?

Murph7355

40,976 posts

280 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
wc98 said:
....but the only issue i have and i know i will get slaughtered for it on here, is the top speed. One of the very best B roads (for very best think cross cambered bends, lots of undulations, crests where you get varying levels of air and plenty of elevation changes, none of the straight bits are very long and even then require driver input because of the nature of the surface) around here has an uphill left hand kink with a bit of off camber on it.

Both cars and bikes get air on it before scrubbing some speed off for the following uphill right into a blind crest with aforementioned cross camber variation along with some air and the car will load up differently each side as the suspension compresses the other side of this crest again due to camber variation.

Trouble is in/on modern cars and bikes with modern tyres that kink can be taken at a higher speed than the Yaris flat out in top, so if out for a play with some friends in cars like a Focus RS or some even older 4wd stuff from Subaru and Mitsubishi never mind modern stuff the Yaris is in for a hard time. Would be even harder work on a flowing A road. Won't put me off getting one and it would be a different story in the wet which is handy given i live in Scotland.
I didn't think I was a prude. Maybe I'm getting old.

But on a road as described...143mph is a "problem"? What should it be - 160mph? 170mph?

SE2 said:
Hoofy said:
That dashboard. rofl It's like a plastic version of a 1980s interior.
Which was their intention, I believe.
Then they've taken nostalgia too far IMO smile I feel the same as hoofy.

I do like the size of these and the spirit/intent. The roads by me would suit it nicely.

But not sure I could live with looking at that dash' daily.

JustGREENI

603 posts

204 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
GianiCakes said:
I like the car but I m more curious about the Defender driver s hat that denoted his superior disposable income?
It's probably a Holland & Holland hat. Though don't let that kid you, when I'm driving my pre-Defender Defender I have worn my Holland and Holland hat, though it's all I can afford from there! My Beretta shotguns have to 'do'.

Why am I in this thread? I have a mk1 GR Yaris and I'd love the Aero's wang..... the dash, however they can keep.

Never judge a book by its hat.

militantmandy

3,836 posts

210 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
For me, one of the big advantages of the GR Yaris is that it's pretty stealth. From any distance it's just a blob and it's not very loud. I think if you want to drive quickly it's pretty beneficial to go under the radar.

RSstuff

969 posts

39 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
You can add a few years of luxury car tax to that £50k too. I thought about an auto Gen 2 for a while, but decided on a Gen 1 with only 2.5 k miles. For a lot less dosh.

grumpynuts

1,023 posts

184 months

Saturday 18th April
quotequote all
Regarding the Focus RS and mitsubishi and Subaru being faster across a B road.You clearly haven't driven a GRY, there is very little that will stay with one on cross country dash.The top speed of only 143 mph certainly isn't a problem,only on motorways and dual carriageways would other cars find a way passed.