Skip advert
Advertisement

Alfa Romeo Giulia laps the ‘Ring 13sec faster than the BMW M4

7min 39sec lap confirms new hot saloon’s potential. Pricing also revealed

Alfa Romeo claims that the new Giulia ‘Cloverleaf’ has lapped the Nürburgring a considerable 13 seconds faster than its main rival, the BMW M4. The new Italian super-saloon is said to have circulated the 12.9-mile lap in 7min 39sec, suggesting its sports-car-like chassis setup and turbocharged V6 make for a seriously compelling package – one that’s also a second faster than the Lamborghini Murcielago and McLaren-Mercedes SLR on the Nordshleife.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Though the exact spec of the car that set the time is yet to be confirmed, we can assume it’ll have featured the Giulia’s optional electronically controlled active dampers. As standard, the car is suspended on double wishbone front and multi-link rear suspension, and features a ‘semi-virtual steering axis’ designed to maintain a constant caster trail in corners for more accurate steering. The car’s active aero bodywork can also generate as much as 100kg of downforce.

Firepower is provided by a Ferrari-developed twin-turbocharged 3-litre V6, which is 78bhp more powerful than the M4’s twin-turbocharged straight-six unit. It produces a peak output of 503bhp, enabling the Giulia to accelerate from 0 to 62mph in 3.9sec and on to 191mph – four-tenths quicker and 36mph faster than the electronically limited BMW.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

Add this kind of muscle to a car that's 47kg lighter than the M4 – the Alfa weighs 1525kg, equating to a power-to-weight ratio of 335bhp/ton versus the M4's 288bhp/ton – and that lap time starts to make sense.

>Listen - Alfa Romeo’s 503bhp Quadrifoglio Giulia in action

Doubts have been cast over Alfa Romeo’s ability to build a high-performance, rear-driven super-saloon that could seriously mix the practicality of a four-door with the performance of a sports car. The Germans have been doing it for a long time, but Alfa Romeo hasn’t created a serious contender in this market for many years.

If the lap time is genuine (and so far we have little reason to doubt it), it confirms that Alfa is deadly serious about taking it to BMW and Mercedes. On paper and also now against the stopwatch, the Giulia looks like a real achievement.

>Read - More on the Alfa Romeo Giulia

At the Frankfurt motor show, Alfa Romeo also confirmed that the Giulia will be available in five colours: Competizione Red, Trofeo White, Vulcano Black, Vesuvio Grey and Montecarlo Blue. Italian pricing has also been revealed, with the car starting at the equivalent of about £53,000. UK pricing is yet to be confirmed, but order books will open in 2016.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale 2025 review – a rare Italian jewel beyond compare
Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale front
Reviews

Alfa Romeo 33 Stradale 2025 review – a rare Italian jewel beyond compare

What’s Alfa Romeo’s near-£2m hand-built supercar like to drive? We find out, on the Balocco test track
12 Jun 2025
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

VW Golf R faces off against Cupra Leon 333 – car pictures of the week
Golf R v Cupra Leon
Features

VW Golf R faces off against Cupra Leon 333 – car pictures of the week

Hot hatches are getting thin on the ground, but the VW stable is still in the game with the Cupra Leon 333 4Drive and Golf R. These are our favourite …
31 Jan 2026
New Toyota GR Yaris Aero Performance review – more aero, still brilliant
Toyota GR Yaris Aero Performance
Reviews

New Toyota GR Yaris Aero Performance review – more aero, still brilliant

A wilder-looking winged variant of the GR Yaris joins Toyota’s GR range – and the best news is it’s coming to the UK
28 Jan 2026
Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50 review – finally a match for Honda’s Civic Type R?
Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50 – front
Reviews

Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50 review – finally a match for Honda’s Civic Type R?

With the Edition 50, Volkswagen has produced the most hardcore road-going Golf since the Clubsport S – and the best Mk8 yet
30 Jan 2026