RE: Citroen Saxo VTS | PH Private Area
RE: Citroen Saxo VTS | PH Private Area
Wednesday 4th June

Citroen Saxo VTS | PH Private Area

Save the Saxos at all costs - especially in super rare Magenta 


We’re all familiar by now with why you might buy a Citroen Saxo VTS in 2025. With a world full of overcomplicated, oversized and overweight cars of every stripe, so the appeal of the light, simple, honest stuff absolutely soars. Even by the standards of its time, the VTS was a proper little scamp of a hot hatch, lairy and lovable in best French style. Also why there aren’t very many remaining, which we all know far too well. 

The survivors more than 20 years after the end of production tend to follow a similar pattern. They’re either tired facelift versions, which really never looked quite as pert as the originals, or one of those early cars that’s been so mollycoddled that you’d be scared of driving it. No need to worry about lift-off oversteer - you wouldn’t want to lift off the car cover having paid what’s asked for some. 

Then there’s this one, a VTS for the ages if ever we’ve seen one. It’s a 1998 Phase 1 car, for starters, so it looks like a VTS always should have, complete with 16v badges and modest spoilers (though these look like VTR wheels to us). There’s a full size spare still lurking under the boot, in that bizarre but brilliant French tradition, and all the jazzy 90s seat fabric appears present and correct. It’s a real treat. 

Then there’s the Saxo’s USP - the Magenta paint. Typically we think of VTSes being blue, silver or black, and if it’s red Saxo you’re talking about it’s probably an old tarmac rally car. But here we have a glorious deep red, a wine-like kind of burgundy that’s nothing if not unusual on a car like this. The seller believes that there were only ever 42 of these, with just three remaining in the UK. In case a plain old Saxo VTS wasn’t rare enough already. 

A non-traditional hot hatch colour - imagine how good it might have looked on an XM - only serves to make this VTS even more interesting. The paint looks to have been cared for well, and gleams nicely for what’s now 27 year old paintwork. The mileage is low at 65,000, the service history is said to be good, and there’s nothing scary to report from the MOT. Having been off the road for a few years, it now looks back to its best. 

At almost three decades old, a Saxo VTS deserves fairer treatment now that it would have likely enjoyed at the end of the 20th century. That being said, for the simple joys of pocket rocket motoring, with a fizzy 16-valve up front and barely any weight to fling along, it’s hard to think of very much better. Certainly it’s hard to imagine a VTS being anything less than a seriously covetable classic Citroen. Even in the colour nobody knows about. 


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

mrclav

Original Poster:

1,608 posts

239 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
The amount of space in that engine bay - check out the clear air at the bottom left of the picture...!

Crazy.

Daniel-89u1d

69 posts

39 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
8 grand and comes with a pick and mix of tyres. I understand the condition is good but come on now.

s m

23,929 posts

219 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
Writer obviously not clued up on Saxos when he says the wheels look like VTR ones. VTS and VTR wore the same shoes until T- reg. My new one was the first at local dealer to arrive on the 15 twists - I didn t like them as when I ordered the 14 soup bowls were the wheel they wore with Michelin Pilot SX GT tyres on. That was April 99

The 106 GTI at the time came on Pirelli P700Z - a large part of the much talk d about handling differences between the 2 cars came from the tyres as my first set of replacements were the Pirelli’s as the Michelins were unobtainable for a while - the Saxos were very popular and used the Pilots


Edited by s m on Wednesday 4th June 17:01

Motormouth88

621 posts

76 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
8k!!! Madder than a mad hatters tea party

Shnozz

29,202 posts

287 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
Daniel-89u1d said:
8 grand and comes with a pick and mix of tyres. I understand the condition is good but come on now.
Also possibly the worst colour I’ve ever seen on a VTR/VTS. So bad I didn’t even know this colour was available.

Mabbs9

1,428 posts

234 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
I had an R reg VTR from new. A squeeze for someone as tall as me but it was really good fun. I really liked those alloys too. Plenty wasn't great but I remember it came with a years' insurance included which was good when I was young.

Good to see this one looking so fresh.

simonsaunders

28 posts

118 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
I had one as a track car for a bit 10 or so years ago. OK, it was tweaked, but it weighed less than an entry level Elise and had more power. And showed it on track.

But the really telling thing was that it was more of a laugh on the road than my Cupra 290, despite being objectively worse in all areas.

These little buzz-bombs and all there brethren are sorely missed in 2025.

fantheman80

2,052 posts

65 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
mrclav said:
The amount of space in that engine bay - check out the clear air at the bottom left of the picture...!

Crazy.
my eyes were drawn to that to...!

There was a very recent thread on the saxo (I remember someone piping on and on about cheap insurance being the only reason they sold - not true) and I had a W reg swirl wheeled black VTS I adored when I was 21 but everything was said then, so i am out ha

Shnozz

29,202 posts

287 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
Mabbs9 said:
I had an R reg VTR from new. A squeeze for someone as tall as me but it was really good fun. I really liked those alloys too. Plenty wasn't great but I remember it came with a years' insurance included which was good when I was young.

Good to see this one looking so fresh.
I too bought an R reg new. At 6’3” I didn’t recall any issues I have to say.

VR6 Eug

746 posts

215 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
These were underrated at the time and the VTS was as quick as a 1.9 205 Gti, which was still a good benchmark of performance at the time.

Leftfootwonder

1,339 posts

74 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
s m said:
Writer obviously not clued up


Edited by s m on Wednesday 4th June 17:01
You must be new here?

I used to have a Saxo VTR, then VTS. Both absolutely brilliant cars at the time. If memory serves, my VTS cost me £11k new in 2001. That's £20.5k in today's money! yikes £8k for this one seems very steep though.

dukebox9reg

1,653 posts

164 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
Dont kid yourself. Its Brown.

mooseracer

2,419 posts

186 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
VTS (especially) was and still is a brilliant little hot hatch.
Price doesn't seem crazy to me, they are a rare car now.

Chris Peacock

3,253 posts

150 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
I had a VTR back in 2000 when I was 19. Absolutely loved it, always wanted a VTS but insurance was too expensive.

I dont think the price is ridiculous, there are hardly any decent original examples left. I do regret not buying another a few years ago when you could still buy them for pennies.

AmyRichardson

1,766 posts

58 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
mooseracer said:
VTS (especially) was and still is a brilliant little hot hatch.
Price doesn't seem crazy to me, they are a rare car now.
If it's genuinely clean I don't see an issue with the price; the VTS was able and iconic, and it's coming around to its own "men of a certain age" period - utter dross Ford offerings from a few years before would attract far more, so why not?

helix403

237 posts

14 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
Scabby wheels and tyres of varying ages, one from 2012. Needs a good vacuum and clean inside.

jwigglesworth

406 posts

154 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
I think this car has just been sold in the May Manor Park auction?

OMITN

2,730 posts

108 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
Cracking!

I had 3 VTRs (sadly never graduated to a VTS). The first, an S plate with the square lights like this one, was my favourite. In the beautiful Poseidon blue.

How the hell I didn’t kill myself, I have no idea.

I’m now a man of a certain age and could happily have a decent survivor in the garage for sunny days.

Om

2,069 posts

94 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
'With a world full of overcomplicated, oversized and overweight cars of every stripe, so the appeal of the light, simple, honest stuff absolutely soars.'

Pah! To those brought up on the proper hot hatches of the early/mid-80s these are lardy, bloated mollycoddling behemoths! It weighed nearly a ton FFS! Airbags? ABS? Power steering? What was the world coming to?

Water Fairy

6,161 posts

171 months

Wednesday 4th June
quotequote all
simonsaunders said:
I had one as a track car for a bit 10 or so years ago. OK, it was tweaked, but it weighed less than an entry level Elise and had more power. And showed it on track.

But the really telling thing was that it was more of a laugh on the road than my Cupra 290, despite being objectively worse in all areas.

These little buzz-bombs and all there brethren are sorely missed in 2025.
Indeed. Sometimes less is more.

I drove a colleagues VTS maybe 20 years ago and it was the same colour as this.

I was impressed.