The writing appeared to be very much on the wall for the Alfa Romeo Quadrifoglios: new legislation loomed, as did a new direction for its parent company, to say nothing of the advances made by the competitor cars of the Giulia and Stelvio. We had written a Cars to be thankful for story on the former, grateful for the time we’d had with a brilliant super-saloon, and waited for the next (electrified) chapter to begin. Only for the next chapter to be unceremoniously binned - or at the very least, so significantly delayed that both Giulia and Stelvio V6s will soldier on for the foreseeable.
Today the brand has confirmed - by Alfa CEO Santo Ficili, no less - that European reservations will open again in early March (having been closed last year) and the two Quadrifoglios will continue ‘in Europe through 2027.’ He added that the reopening of order books is “the best way to celebrate one of the most famous symbols in the automotive world, which brings with it a century-old quest for technical excellence applied to competitions and production cars. The Quadrifoglio is the most authentic expression of Alfa Romeo sportiness and of our cars, designed for real fans of driving, with the focus always on the driver. We're sure it will continue to inspire our future.”
Alfa’s longer term challenge, clearly, is working out exactly what that future will be, as a previously EV-focused roadmap now looks even less viable than it first did. But that can of worms is for another day: for now at any rate, the much-loved old 520hp stagers continue.
However, while this extension is undoubtedly good news (because imagine how exciting collecting one of these brand new in 2027 will be), there really is a time limit this time around. While the first round of Euro 7 legislation comes into force later this year, the pair of Alfas can continue unaffected (as it only applies to newly launched cars), from 29 November 2027 all cars on sale must comply.
And it would be very surprising if the twin-turbo 2.9 can be homologated as they are, given the strictness is forcing BMW to significantly rework its existing engines to ensure their survival. So that’s why there’s an extension to 2027, but not beyond…
Still, some time left is better than none - they really are a sensational duo of performance cars. Plus, well, is a new Audi RS5 or Mercedes GLE 53 really much more appealing as a fast family car? Exactly. Currently in the UK the Giulia and Stelvio Quadrifoglio are priced from £86,885 and £95,890 respectively, but there are surely going to be deals to be done on such expensive cars approaching the end of their time on sale (again). Or, if there’s not, there are QFs in the classifieds from last year with almost £25,000 off...
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