RE: Peugeot 306 GTI-6 | Spotted

RE: Peugeot 306 GTI-6 | Spotted

Wednesday 22nd March 2023

Peugeot 306 GTI-6 | Spotted

Standard, low mileage, the best colour and £10k - which way to Aberdeen?!


Hot hatch legends don’t come cheap, do they? From Focus RS to Civic Type R and Renaultsport Megane to Golf R32, the icons of the 21st century (and V6 Golfs) now command a pretty penny. Which is a pity when the very essence of the genre should be about affordable fun. But then they’re hardly alone; plenty of even vaguely interesting fast cars have very optimistic price tags currently attached to them.

Help might be at hand, however, in the shape of this very lovely Peugeot 306 GTI-6. You may have noticed this wasn’t in our recent PH25 hot hatch vote, but only because the Rallye got the nod instead. Regardless, this is one of Peugeot’s finest. If you were feeling particularly kind, you could even say that the hot hatch glory days we enjoyed from the late 1990s began with this car. Before there was a Clio 172, a good Golf GTI or a Ford Focus of any kind, the GTI-6 was wiping the floor with pretty ordinary cars like the Bravo HGT, Almera GTI and Civic VTI. Using the formula that served so many subsequent hot hatches well - a brawny 2.0-litre engine, six-speed manual and agile chassis - the 306 was Peugeot at its very best. Pert good looks did the GTI’s appeal no harm, either.

We all know what happened next. If the 1980s and 1990s represented Peugeot at the peak of its hot hatch powers, the GTIs and Rallyes still rightly revered as icons, then the start of the 21st century was its nadir. The 206 GTI was crap, the 207 was even worse, and let’s not even mention the 307. It wasn’t until the 208 GTI 30th and 308 GTI, almost 15 years after the last 106 GTI was made, that Peugeot remembered how to make good hot hatches. For fans of the brand, it felt even longer. Seldom has a manufacturer fallen so far, so fast, in the estimations of enthusiasts. Only Citroen managed its hot hatch heritage worse.

It was during the time of rubbish Peugeot hot hatches that people were enjoying the great ones, back when they were dirt cheap. And, as can happen when enjoying a great hot hatch a little too much, a few were crashed. They were cheap and disposable and available, people thought little of it. Then the good Peugeot hot hatch returned, people remembered how much they loved the old ones, went to buy one again… and found that dwindling numbers had pushed the prices way up. You don’t need us to remind you what a good 205 GTI now costs.

However, while all the heroes have enjoyed some appreciation, the GTI-6 still looks vaguely attainable. Which we’ve been saying for years, it seems, so perhaps they may just stay that way. But for a car of the 306’s reputation and rarity, standard down to the tape player and peashooter exhaust, with 60,000 miles and a great colour, £9,995 doesn’t seem daft at all. ‘The last GTI-6 for £10k!’ sounds hyperbolic, but having watched them slowly but surely climb over the past few years there won’t be many left advertised at four figures. Not in the world of the £45k Rallye, at least.

This one needs an MOT soon, and while its fabulous condition is not up for dispute, this is a 27-year-old example of a car launched, in standard form at least, more than 30 years ago - a GTI-6 is going to need caring for like a classic. And not the cheap and cheerful pocket rocket we remember it as. Don’t forget about regular cambelt changes, too. But with miles under those glorious Cyclone wheels, this could definitely still be used and enjoyed as intended. All for less money than a 106, let alone a 205 GTI. Told you there were still canny buys out there.


SPECIFICATION | PEUGEOT 306 GTI-6

Engine: 1,998cc 4-cyl
Transmission: 6-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 170@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 142@5,500rpm
MPG: 30.1
CO2: 224g/km
First registered: 1997
Recorded mileage: 60,000
Price new: £17,258 (1996)
Yours for: £9,995

See the original advert here

  

Author
Discussion

Code Black

Original Poster:

108 posts

49 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Love the colour of this one and seems good value. I will hang my head in shame and admit to never driving one but always wanting to. Went in a DTurbo though and thought that was great!

mk1coopers

1,205 posts

152 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Enjoyed one back in the day, just remember turning left is more of a challenge as the steering lock is less in that direction because of the extended case on the 6 speed box, I’d have that in a heartbeat if I had the space

asci.white

372 posts

73 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Was fortunate to get to drive one for a day.

Felt really solid and was great fun on country roads. One of the most fun cars I got to drive in my 20s

sjabrown

1,915 posts

160 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Jeepers I really missed the boat on these. It seems like only yesterday that they were sub £1500 cars. Then again the same happened with 205s and I can’t complain as the daft prices mean that I can afford to get mine restored and not be out of pocket so to speak.

Peugeot 104 S tick
Peugeot 205 gti tick
Peugeot 306… nope. the holy trinity of sporty Peugeot hatches will have to wait for a lottery win.

Dombilano

1,136 posts

55 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Not sure I'd call the civic vti ordinary, as a young teen sat in the passenger seat of my cousins new company car, it was a rocket ship.

Court_S

12,932 posts

177 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
That’s lovely.

I like the 306 anyway and have a soft spot for them because I learned to drive in d turbo, which felt like an absolute rocket ship compared to my Nova.

Assuming that’s not rotten, it looks pretty good value to me.

BadOrangePete

626 posts

44 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Brilliant cars. Had a 1998 phase 2 that sadly got bumped and broken for parts and a 1996 phase 1 thats now a track toy AFAIK. Miss them both! Not the best cars in traffic, heavy clutches and a tendancy to run rather warm but on an open B road mega fun. Always fancied another before prices go silly.





Excuse the odd iffy mod on the phase 2, I was younger then hehe

GreatScott2016

1,181 posts

88 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Was close to ownership back in the day. Looks like a great example but I'd pass at £10k. Not my favourite colour either but great to see an unmolested one in such great condition.

j4r4lly

596 posts

135 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all

Very nice. I went for a test drive in one of these at a Pug main dealer back in around 2003. Whilst it was excellent to drive and had the novelty of a 6-speed 'box, I just could not get comfortable in it.

The dealer told me that the 306 GTI-6 all had standard sunroofs in the UK market (not sure if that is actually the case) which for me, made headroom a little tight. Shame as I really liked it. Went on to buy a Golf GTI 20V turbo which was also very nice but not a patch on the 306's ride and handling.

Interesting that a 306 like this with low mileage and original condition is up for £10K, (£17K new was a lot of money in 1997) while a Focus ST170 which is very similar in terms of power, ride and handling etc. in this condition could be picked up for half that at least. Good clean ST170's are still a bit of a bargain and the 306 for £10K also looks very reasonable.

biggles330d

1,540 posts

150 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Still one of the best looking hot hatches in my view. I had a 'P' reg DTurbo in Sigma Blue that was a great thing. The ride / handling was superb and it was a lot of fun to punt able despite the engine. It was definitely one with masses of turbo lag, but that made it more fun.
I hankered after a 2.0 XSi at the time, but this would do nicely.

Terminator X

15,072 posts

204 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
I had a S16 then a GTi6. Both great cars.

TX.

dontlookdown

1,720 posts

93 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
The 306 was the best riding and handling car of its size back in the day, IMO. Also unfussy styling (come back please) and nicely proportioned.

They were even pretty reliable despite all the French car jokes. Interior let them down a bit - ropey seat fabric and rattly trim.

I never drove a gti-6 but would have loved one. Too rare and expensive for me at the time though.

bumskins

1,368 posts

15 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
'Saffron' is the one colour I don't think I would have..! paperbag

Sure it's nice to see nowadays amidst a see of monochrome, in the same way it's nice to see a Phoenix Yellow E46 M3. Would I own one though? Never.

Black S2K

1,471 posts

249 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Dombilano said:
Not sure I'd call the civic vti ordinary, as a young teen sat in the passenger seat of my cousins new company car, it was a rocket ship.
You had to know how to drive them - no torque off-cam was actually useful in slow traffic and the mania at the top-end was very addictive.

The mid-corner lift/re-apply to trip up the clever rear suspension meant they handled superbly with no risk of reversing off the road.

Mind you, the passenger-seat ride could be awfully jiggly (a trick the Evora also strangely pulled!) so I'd imagine the 306 rode somewhat better - Peugeot still had that, back then.

I dunno which would now win in the rear tin-worm competition...

I only drove a cooking 306 and that was a very good basis for the featured car.


s m

23,223 posts

203 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
j4r4lly said:
Very nice. I went for a test drive in one of these at a Pug main dealer back in around 2003. Whilst it was excellent to drive and had the novelty of a 6-speed 'box, I just could not get comfortable in it.

The dealer told me that the 306 GTI-6 all had standard sunroofs in the UK market (not sure if that is actually the case) which for me, made headroom a little tight. Shame as I really liked it. Went on to buy a Golf GTI 20V turbo which was also very nice but not a patch on the 306's ride and handling.

Interesting that a 306 like this with low mileage and original condition is up for £10K, (£17K new was a lot of money in 1997) while a Focus ST170 which is very similar in terms of power, ride and handling etc. in this condition could be picked up for half that at least. Good clean ST170's are still a bit of a bargain and the 306 for £10K also looks very reasonable.
I went on a Peugeot dealer drive day at Weston Park in the late 90s. Had a few drives in these but found the 106 slightly more fun although it didn’t have the extra 6th gear and a/c

Couple of the 306s got spun on the narrow and heavily cambered estate roads ( used for the RAC Rally Sunday stages years back )

Not keen on the colour of this one to be honest but a great drivers car - had the 309 GTi and that had the same handling fluidity.

As above, also worth considering an ST170 if you can’t stretch to one of these - the gearing blunts initial acceleration but once you’re up and running they handle beautifully. Friend has had a couple as cheap dailys but they’re starting to creep up too for good ones

Water Fairy

5,503 posts

155 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
Dombilano said:
Not sure I'd call the civic vti ordinary, as a young teen sat in the passenger seat of my cousins new company car, it was a rocket ship.
Ditto

Mate had one back in the day and it easily kept up with my GM 900 turbo.

As a side note these old HHs are great but I would worry about crashing into anything more substantial than a wheelie bin. And before someone says 'don't crash' remember it's not always your fault. I've seen what happens when people crash in cars with little structural integrity.

florian

291 posts

274 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
If there was ever a right time for this image, it´s now:



My cousin had a 306 GTi-6 from new. Was a great drive. I remember the rear axle had passive steering which took getting used to and the Brembo brakes were rather bitey. But for 10k GBP, I think that´s not too bad a proposition. And it has the right colour!

86wasagoodyear

395 posts

96 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
I really struggle with this colour. Marvellous in all other respects.

rasto

2,188 posts

237 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
I had one of those in that colour for 3 years, it was my first company car. Build quality was not good, it was in the garage 30 times in 3 years I had it. Colour was great but did seem to lead to "hassle" from other road users which wasn't great when my wife was driving it.

The last year of ownership was the worst, I managed to hydrolock the engine when the ford I was driving through turned out to be a bit deeper than it looked. The engine was rebuilt, but they didn't do a great job and shortly after picking it up the sump plug fell out just as we left the M25. Luckily I only had to keep it for a few more months.

Driving wise, for me, it never quite lived up to my expectations. It was fun enough but nowhere near as good as reviews claimed and the engine (even before the above incident) never seemed that powerful - maybe I just got a "bad" car though?

TrotCanterGallopCharge

423 posts

90 months

Wednesday 22nd March 2023
quotequote all
bumskins said:
'Saffron' is the one colour I don't think I would have..! paperbag

Sure it's nice to see nowadays amidst a see of monochrome, in the same way it's nice to see a Phoenix Yellow E46 M3. Would I own one though? Never.
Agreed, anything 'brown', 'dark orange', or dealer advert 'blaze yellow', just says 'rust' to me, or something that's passed along a digestive tract.

Would like to try out the car, looks a lot of fun, but not in this colour. Glad it exists for variety though.