Best Mk2 Golf GTI you've ever seen for sale
36 years, 36,000 miles, 30 services, two keys - and just one previous owner

You wouldn’t be alone in pondering a Golf GTI purchase in 2026. It’s not every year a badge makes it to 50, after all, and there are plenty of crackers to choose from. The very latest GTI 50 has been warmly received, for one thing, and let’s never underestimate how special it would feel to buy the anniversary edition of the hot hatch in the anniversary year.
Plus the back catalogue, of course, is full of crackers. Maybe a Mk7 could be the one, as arguably the best all-round Golf GTI package ever; or perhaps the lesser seen Mk6. The Mk5, the car that reestablished the Golf GTI as a hot hatch great, is still around from just £3k - or £10k for a minter. The Mk3 may not have been the greatest GTI ever, but the nostalgic vibes of a 30-year-old Golf would be considerable.
As far as the GTI icons go, however, it’s the Mk1s and Mk2s that have always been (and probably will remain) the most collectable, desirable Golfs. Back in the '80s they were the perfect blend of style, speed and sophistication, hugely popular for offering all the great Golf attributes with a healthy dollop of performance on top. And because they looked so timelessly smart, because they were so durable and because they drove so nicely, people just kept on using - or kept on lusting after - early Golf GTIs.


The popularity has never really waned, those enthusiasts who loved them when new having passed the passion on to the next generation. Inevitably, though, numbers decline, but the desire for great Golfs never went away. This helps explain the appreciation of Mk1 and Mk2 GTIs in the past decade and a half. Good ones, bad ones and middling ones have all become worth more.
There can’t be many better than this one, though, a truly exceptional GTI the likes of which you just don’t really see any more. A one-owner example would be notable enough, as would just 36,000 miles of driving for 36 years on the road; unmodified, with a full service history and immaculate are all USPs on their own. Yet here we have a Golf GTI that can boast all that and more, with four Michelins, refurbished wheels, detailed paintwork and a recent cambelt. It appears to be a staggering example.
It was actually bought new by an uncle of the selling dealer, who kept it until they were too old to drive. The nephew then kept it in storage for the past four years, on a trickle charger, until making the - presumably difficult - decision to move it on. It’s for sale at £25,000, or the same as a pair of other early GTIs on PH. And not the most expensive, either, perhaps thanks to five-door, eight-valve spec. A comparable three-door 16v would surely be closer to £40k. Not the Golf to relive a misspent youth in, then, but as a GTI time capsule it looks unrepeatable. And 2026 is the year of the fast Golf…
SPECIFICATION | VW GOLF GTI MK2
Engine: 1,781cc, four-cyl
Transmission: 5-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 112
Torque (lb ft): 118
MPG: N/A
CO2: N/A
First registered: 1990
Recorded mileage: 36,000
Price new: c. £13k
Yours for: £25,000

However, I just cant get my head round paying that much for one that isnt a three door, one of mine was a 5 door and the shell is much less rigid than the already not that rigid 3 door, its a bit of a dull colour on the later steel wheels that dont look as good as the ones on the earlier models, I prefer the small bumper models nowadays as well.
This is me picking up the one I won in the Daily Mirror from Smith Knight Fay in Stockport in 1989 aged 18 !
They were great but not sure I want a fifth, and 25 grand buys a lot more interesting tackle.
I had two of these new back in the day, both Tornado Red 8v's one a 1988 with the old bumpers and a 1990 big bumper...they were great cars.
I still can't believe VW made the MK3 GTi such a dull slow car.
It was a great car, at the time. I thought about swapping it for a 5dr, tried one and didn't like it. The shorter front doors made it feel like I was sitting behind the B pillar and seatbelt mount.
I never liked the steel wheels however anyone looking for one will snap this one up. The spec isn't to everyone's taste but it'll be hard to find one in better condition.
Personally I prefer the look of the 5dr - I know I'm on my own on that but it somehow looks even more under the radar as a consequence. The holy grail is the oak green 16v on cross spokes etc, but a fun classic to punt about in now, I'd be ok with a good 8v - you don't need to rev the nuts off of it to get the best.
In terms of body rigidity, VW knew the 5 dr was stiffer with smaller door apertures - hence why the G60 used the 5dr shell (and small bumpers strangely despite being launched well after the big bumpers were in market) - unless they were trying to use up 5 dr shells and the rigidity claim was all a load of rhubarb to impress the nerds!
"Bright blue" was the official name, a rare colour (LPU5) and looked amazing in the sunshine. Mine was the 5 door, teardropped iteration of this....

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