RE: Porsche 911 Turbo (991.2) | PH Auction Block
RE: Porsche 911 Turbo (991.2) | PH Auction Block
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Porsche 911 Turbo (991.2) | PH Auction Block

A new Turbo S is £200k - we can do four-wheel drive, a PDK and 200mph for less than that... 


As we rid our minds of January and begin to focus on all the good car stuff that might happen in 2026, there’s a new 911 Turbo S to be excited about. Driven towards the end of 2025 and arriving in the UK imminently, the 992.2 promises to be one of the best cars of this year. As the super duper 911s so often are. Nevertheless, it is now a £200,000 prospect, and that feels like a significant threshold for the flagship rear-engined Porsche to have breached. To those of us who can’t keep up with the cost of cars, that still feels like supercar money for ‘just’ a 911 (supercars now, as the Lamborghini Temerario has demonstrated, are the best part of £400,000).

Probably the new car will put paid to a lot of those configurator doubts with the driving experience, because that’s what the best 911s tend to do - although you wouldn’t be alone in seeing a £200k Turbo S and wondering about alternatives. Because once the 911 Turbo was above 500hp and came as standard with a PDK, it really established itself as the all-season, all-scenario supercar above all others. A new Turbo S will be faster and better than this one, no doubt, but there won’t be a gulf. And this one won’t be £200,000… 

It’s a 2016 992.1 Turbo, so that means 540hp, 0-62mph in three seconds, and a top speed close enough to 200mph not to make much difference. Introduced at the end of 2015, it introduced new turbos and Dynamic Boost for the flat-six, plus standard Sport Chrono and PASM. It looked familiar, and offered up a familiar 911 Turbo feel: totally agreeable as required, and totally ballistic when that was needed as well. A 2+2 tourer and supercar scarer, all in one. 

This particular Turbo is one of the first 992.1s, on a ‘16’ plate. Having begun its life in Germany (as a RHD, UK car), it’s been here since 2019. Despite its epic mile munching ability, it sits on just 22,431 miles - not much more than 2,000 a year. It only notched up its first MOT advisory last September, after years of first-time, fault-free passes. There are loads of Porsche stamps in its history, including a visit last month that inspected the underneath - and found absolutely nothing to report. 

Check out the spec, too. Those tired of black, grey and white 911s will find plenty to appreciate here with a Carmine Red Turbo. And then even more red inside: on the doors, the glorious carbon bucket seats, the lower half of the dash. It’s certainly not a spec you’re going to see at the next club meet. As expected given the miniscule mileage, everything presents very smartly indeed. And those fond of buttons for interior functions will be in heaven…

With a transferable warranty as well as that recent service, this Turbo is ready for whatever the rest of 2026 has in store. And that really could be anything - that’s the joy of these cars. It could be a comfy commuter, fast and fun on track, plus a mighty long-distance tool. It could do all three in fact, with more in that front boot than you’d ever expect. It’s an attractive proposition, which is probably why, despite the advent of so much technology, it’s easy to see the link between a 10-year-old 911 Turbo and a new one. After all, what would you change?


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Author
Discussion

pescot

Original Poster:

2 posts

93 months

991.2 not 992.1...

pb8g09

2,969 posts

91 months

As a childless man with an inner child, I'd love that. I'm not familiar with markets - what sort of price would this command?


PistonTim

645 posts

161 months

'Less' likely to be subject, this won't be cheap especially in that spec.

tjw110

504 posts

244 months

I've recently moved back to a 2018 991.2 Turbo convertible (Crayon Grey) as my daily driver after owning an SL63, R8v10, M5. The 991.2 turbo is awesome car, seems to just do everything very well, still looks good (IMO) and gives me enough confidence to enjoy enthusiastic & spirited driving all year, all weather, key to me was it can clear a speed bump and is still small enough to use without worrying about where I take it

Plasticedd

51 posts

140 months

Not sure I could live with the colour of the seats and red is not ideal for the outside if plod still play speeding snooker (showing my age, not sure that's a thing in these days of speed cameras, still see vascar markers on the road though, probably says more about road maintenance than anything else).

Davy Jones

70 posts

71 months

Lovely cars. Had the 'S' version. Do everything other than give you the theatre you get with a Lambo or Ferrari. Quite a bland driving experience IMO.

trickywoo

13,498 posts

252 months

pb8g09 said:
As a childless man with an inner child, I'd love that. I'm not familiar with markets - what sort of price would this command?
£80k to £100k. The auction format is probably trying to tap into the unusual spec aiming for a higher price.

nismo48

6,135 posts

229 months

Like that in the less common colour and looks in beautiful condition.

Earthdweller

17,339 posts

148 months

I love a red car and guards red must be one of my favourites along with BMW's Imola and I've currently got a red car a BMW in Melbourne

But I don't think I could live with a red car and a red interior, it needs a contrast either light or dark

andrewpandrew

1,971 posts

11 months

Carmine Red with the black/luxor beige two-tone interior would have been nigh on perfect. As it is you've got three shades of red (exterior paint, brake calipers, interior). Doesn't work for me, but I do love a 991 Turbo.

Cristio Nasser

469 posts

15 months

Starting life in Germany as a RHD UK spec car is notable. Likely a forces or diplomatic tax free purchase that was flipped as soon as it was eligible for resale.