Even with the benefit of 20 years of hindsight, it would be fair to say that the five-door Subaru Imprezas never quite hit the mark. Moving on from the familiar four-door shape was fair enough, as hot hatches became ever more popular; making one as dowdy as that one turned out wasn’t really acceptable. Without really moving the WRX STI experience on, nor rivalling the best hot hatches for fun, it was left appealing to very few people indeed. Less evocative than the car that preceded it, less entertaining than the cars it competed with, the STI hatches really weren’t a Subaru success.
So a saloon made a return for a little while, and it felt like a good move, but the demand just wasn’t there any longer. By 2013 the WRX STI as we knew it was gone again; miraculously, it returned again a couple of years later, as a new generation, but again without the significant advances needed to stay competitive with the latest all-wheel drive performance cars. Power still came from the 2.5-litre turbo as well, which was never as fondly regarded as the smaller 2.0-litre EJ. Less exciting and less reliable is the common consensus.
Peak STI, as we all know, is a 2.0-litre saloon - they’re the cars that everybody wants. Which, as a result, means they’re the expensive ones. Because UK market examples are now rare and at least 20 years old, there’s a premium attached, before anything is said about maintaining a car of that vintage. Imported cars tend to be special edition examples, because if you’re going to the effort of bringing a Subaru over from the other side of the world it may as well be the best. By their very nature, these cars are expensive as well. And as we say every time with cars like the STI, you don’t want a really valuable example, because then you won’t want to drive it. And that would really miss the point.
Which brings us to the Subaru you see here. As a best of both worlds scenario, it looks like a great compromise. While it looks just like any other Type UK third generation from the early 2010s, it’s actually a Japanese import, so it gets the 2.0-litre engine - 8,000rpm redline and all. But then as it’s not an S204 or similar, there isn’t a wild price tag attached to it: the asking price is £17,950.
Doesn’t it look great, too? Still not a beautiful car perhaps, but the paint and wheels look flawless. The interior, never typically a Subaru strong point, looks absolutely fine for a 75,000-mile car as well. Using something of this age and mileage regularly would surely be a lot less demanding than those Subarus already edging towards classic status. The owner of this one took it in part-exchange for their WR1 (excellent taste) and has only covered a couple of hundred miles since then. While keeping it in the garage, of course.
As a Subaru to use, enjoy and love, then, this particular STI looks like a winner. It has the most desirable engine, the preferred bodystyle, some cool upgrades and enough miles to continue as intended. This isn’t a Subaru to try and make money on, or covet as the ultimate example of originality, but as a reminder of all that we loved about STIs - while remaining eminently usable in 2026 - its appeal is plain to see.
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