RE: Volkswagen Beetle RSI | Spotted
RE: Volkswagen Beetle RSI | Spotted
Saturday 2nd May

Volkswagen Beetle RSI | Spotted

There are cool, classic VWs, and then there's the vanishingly rare, V6-powered RSI...


The early '00s really were an incredible time for wild VW projects. There seemed to be no holding back on any kind of idea, be it Lupo 3L or Bugatti Veyron. And let’s not forget a 4.0-litre W8 in a Passat, a V10 TDI in a Touareg, or a 6.0-litre W12 in a Phaeton. Truly, it was an incredible period for new VWs, and while those times are very much in the past, the cars that have survived make for truly fascinating modern classics. Let’s face it - who isn’t just a little bit intrigued, even if it would cost a fortune, by a truly spectacular engine in a very ordinary Volkswagen? 

As far as collectors’ items are concerned, however, there’s one from the barmy era that beats them all hands down - Veyron included. And that’s the Beetle RSI, perhaps the most unlikely performance flagship in history. Here was a base car all about customisation, freedom and good vibes, totally overhauled to make it into a specialised road racer. And even if there is a stranger specimen from the era, none is likely to be rarer than the RSI, with just 250 of these uber Beetles made early in the 21st century. 

Which would be understandable to some extent if it were merely a slightly different Golf V6 4Motion. But it wasn’t. Just look at this thing. Inspired by the Beetle Cup race car of the time - but with the 3.2-litre version of the VR6, not the 2.8 from the competition car, which is cool - there were a host of bespoke parts for the RSI. Just imagine that: VW tooling up for 250 special units of a Beetle. They included bodywork to house the drastically wider tracks (45mm at the front, 59mm at the rear), the spoiler, and a wealth of interior changes: the stereo was in the roof (with the standard space reserved for additional gauges), there was a shift light, a start button, carbon fibre, a rear strut brace… this was not merely a V6 engine dropped in. 

And who could forget the front seats, arguably the car's most distinctive feature (besides that engine). The orange Recaros look like something direct from a concept car, and were yet another component of the RSI that seems astonishing in these more austere times. They must have cost a fortune to install in so few cars. 

Despite all the razzmatazz, it probably won’t come as any surprise to learn that the Beetle RSI was never considered remarkable to drive. Underneath it all, let's not forget, is a Mk4 Golf. An R32-spec Mk4 Golf, but still - a roadgoing Cup car this was not. Not that it really matters now, of course, with the rarity, design and powertrain in favour as a modern classic curio. Imagine turning up to a VW meet (which would be very easily done, of course; it’s a Golf) in this. You’d be treated like royalty. 

The RSI was never sold in the UK, making it a very rare sight. According to the ad, there are eight here, with this one having arrived in 2021. Since then it’s obviously been road registered for use in the UK (albeit kept largely in a collection), but also sent to Volkswagen Little Chalfont for a ‘recommissioning service’. This is said to have happened recently, and this 25-year-old VW still sits on just 19,000 miles, so there should be nothing to stop a new owner from doing as they wish with their Beetle. That VW refresh must have saved the next owner some cash, too. 

Not that this is the VW to get into for a cheap and cheerful retro experience. Because of how few were made, and how specialised the RSI was, they’re now hugely collectable. One sold at auction in 2024 for £63,000, and that was with 12,000 miles. It’s hard to imagine they’ve become any less desirable in the past couple of years, so the POA attached to this one must surely be in that region. If not potentially a little more - we all know how crazy the classic fast VW scene can be. 

Still, with nothing quite so crazy ever going to happen again, whatever an RSI is worth now seems unlikely to change very much in the immediate future. And there can’t be much else out there that requires so little in terms of driving effort to generate so much in terms of interest and excitement. As easy to drive as a Golf and as attention-grabbing as a Veyron (not to mention rarer), the appeal of an RSI to collectors doesn’t need very much explanation. It’d fit alongside the W8s, V10s, W12s and W16s absolutely perfectly…


SPECIFICATION | VOLKSWAGEN BEETLE RSI

Engine: 3,189cc V6
Transmission: 6-speed manual, 4WD
Power (hp): 224@6,200rpm
Torque (lb ft): 236@2,000rpm
MPG: 23.7
CO2: 286g/km
Recorded mileage: 19,256
First registered: 2001
Price new: c.£35,000
Yours for: £POA

See the original advert

Author
Discussion

SydneyBridge

Original Poster:

11,128 posts

183 months

Normally hate this era of Beetle, but love this

MightyBadger

4,137 posts

75 months

Fantastic car.

Dombilano

1,378 posts

80 months

POA for a beetle haha, hard to value of course, but it's not a Pagani is it. Chuck a £40k sign in the window and stop hoping.

Sway

33,939 posts

219 months

Wouldn't go so far as to say I love it, and with all the bespoke bodywork you'll never drive it properly for fear of a prang - but I think I'd love a 'mental 00s VAG garage' when I win my euro millions jackpot.

And this would get a spot.

richinlondon

844 posts

147 months

Wouldn’t want it, but glad it exists! Crazy thing.

LordHaveMurci

12,326 posts

194 months

Pretty sure my mates Dad owns, or owned, one of these.

amongst many others!

GreatScott2016

2,322 posts

113 months

Hilarious looking thing. Remove the rear spoiler and exhausts, and I m struggling to differentiate the front end from the rear hehe

DodgyGeezer

47,130 posts

215 months

That is rather cool. Would I actually want one (especially at £60,000+)? I'm not sure. Would I want one instead of what's currently in our garage? Absolutely not

Jonny1984

305 posts

187 months

Always liked the look of these RSI.

Had a 1.9TDI as a cheap stop gap... wish I'd just saved my money and walked everywhere! Worst car I've ever owned, just felt awful to drive.

Trevor555

5,170 posts

109 months

POA???

I don't think I've ever called up about a car that's POA.

Some SOR dealers do it so the owner doesn't know what it's been sold for.

Or maybe someone's getting divorced and doesn't want other half to know the value of the car?

Anyhow, POA???

Why??

Buster73

5,545 posts

178 months

Dombilano said:
POA for a beetle haha, hard to value of course, but it's not a Pagani is it. Chuck a £40k sign in the window and stop hoping.
POA , exactly the way I’d be trying to sell it , only takes one offer more than the value they’ve put on it and they’re quids in.

Hippea

3,426 posts

94 months

Such a cool car

Firebobby

960 posts

64 months

If I had to have a reshelled mkIV golf it'd be a 3.2 Audi not one of these!

GTRene

21,296 posts

249 months

At the time those came out I went to the Dutch auto RAI in Amsterdam, I believe that was also the last time I went there, but anyways, there was the RSI Beetle, I asked if I could sit in it and was aloud to.

at the time way to expensive for me, but I found it a very cool example at the time and that special leather and seats and engine and so on, it was uber cool at the time.

many many years later I saw some for offer, I could buy but at the time 220hp was euhm not enough to feel special or fast etc, so I did not looked at those anymore, It would have needed at least 300++ hp to get a little bit of want such, back.

but still very special and with just 250 made, well, very interesting to put a big part of your savings in in those crazy times to come... digital wallet or analog car in your garage which you can drive and look at.

ex-devonpaul

1,665 posts

162 months

Firebobby said:
If I had to have a reshelled mkIV golf it'd be a 3.2 Audi not one of these!
Exactly.

There's a reason they only made 250 of them.

Terminator X

19,878 posts

229 months

I do remember when this first came out. All these years later it does feel cool for some reason.

TX.

biggbn

30,736 posts

245 months

Absolutely brilliant. Loved this

Lester H

4,096 posts

130 months

Trevor555 said:
POA???

I don't think I've ever called up about a car that's POA.

Some SOR dealers do it so the owner doesn't know what it's been sold for.

Or maybe someone's getting divorced and doesn't want other half to know the value of the car?

Anyhow, POA???

Why??
All plausible reasons from Trevor. Also, once someone calls the dealer, he has their details. In sales terms, this is a lead. You, as the enquirer are asking the seller. Presumably the amount of time wasting this engenders is outweighed by the details which the dealer now has. “ That car is now sold, but we do have……./ next week something is coming in that might just suit you …’












Edited by Lester H on Sunday 3rd May 11:00

NGK210

4,668 posts

170 months

Lester H said:
Trevor555 said:
POA???

I don't think I've ever called up about a car that's POA.

Some SOR dealers do it so the owner doesn't know what it's been sold for.

Or maybe someone's getting divorced and doesn't want other half to know the value of the car?

Anyhow, POA???

Why??
All plausible reasons from Trevor. Also, once someone calls the dealer, he has their details. In sales terms, this is a lead. You, as the enquirer are asking the seller. Presumably the amount of time wasting this engenders is outweighed by the details which the dealer now has. That car is now sold, but we do have ./ next week something is coming in that might just suit you
Dealers use POA is to protect themselves from classics’ fluctuating values.
And it’s useful for when an enquiring punter sounds like the type who’ll pay over the odds.
Anyhoo, POA is the least concerning aspect of this dealer’s MO – not giving the option to select or reject cookies is very poor show imho. Slippery bunch.