Skip advert
Advertisement
In-depth reviews

Audi RS6 Avant (2019-2023) review – a monstrous all-rounder

The C8-generation RS6 covers all bases; it's practical, comfortable, fast, and fun

Evo rating
  • Pace, space, surprising agility and driver enjoyment
  • Air suspension blunts driver appeal; heavy; ceramic brakes pricey

If there was a default choice when faced with the need for a practical car in a ‘dream garage’, it might just be the Audi RS6 Avant. Now in its fourth iteration, Audi has taken everything that made previous RS6s brilliant and just improved upon it, while adding a dose of driver interaction that its predecessors lacked. 

Advertisement - Article continues below

Things have only gotten better with this latest model, with the new RS6 Performance having replaced the base car with more power, more focus and a touch less weight. But even the base car exhibited a feeling of impenetrability, huge performance and long-distance refinement until it went off sale in 2023. 

Drive quickly down a twisting road and the car’s agility, responsiveness and adjustability are all qualities that we’ve only really seen from Audi Sport with cars such as the R8. The RS6 is technologically advanced, but not simply for the sake of it.

There is the thorny issue of price, as the basic car crept up beyond £100,000 by the end of its life. And despite good cruising economy, the RS6 is still likely to be quite expensive to run too, for something that will probably serve as a family vehicle for many owners. But that shouldn’t take away from the car’s undoubted talents – this wagon is both fast and fun.

Audi RS6 Avant: in detail 

  • Engine, gearbox and technical specs Big power from a twin-turbo V8, all-wheel-drive traction, and fancy rear-wheel steering.
  • Performance and 0-60 time Mighty off the line, but the V8’s so refined it doesn’t feel quite as quick as you’re actually going.
  • Ride and handling The first RS6 to deliver genuine driver engagement rather than just massive straight-line pace.
  • MPG and running costs Official economy in the low 20s, but capable of 30mpg on a cruise.
  • Interior and tech Cabin is slightly dour but well made, and screen set-up feels high-tech. Some will be put off by the touchscreens though.
  • Design Long, low and wide, and much more aggressive than previous RS6s. Looks like a grown-up Hot Wheels toy from some angles.

Prices, specs and rivals

You should probably be sitting down for this, because the basic, option-free RS6 Avant was priced at £100,750 (the Performance model is even dearer at £112,045). Of course, you’re getting a lot of car for the money – very literally, at over two tons – but the RS6 is well-stocked in terms of equipment, too. Standard kit includes 21-inch wheels, matrix LED headlights with laser technology, a pair of MMI Touch screens, leather sports seats, and in the UK market, standard rear-wheel steering and a sport rear differential.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

The Carbon Black upgrades the wheels to 22-inchers, and adds a styling package consisting of carbonfibre trim for the front spoiler, skirts and diffuser insert, with a gloss black Audi badge and black window trim. The Vorsprung also gets 22-inch alloy wheels, RS sports suspension plus with Dynamic Ride Control, a top speed bump to 174mph, gloss black styling elements and a panoramic glass sunroof.

Audi’s standard colour palette is little to shout about, but paying £3000 unlocked access to Audi Exclusive paintwork options, which brighten things up considerably. Wheels of the 22-inch variety were a £2000 option on the basic car, and a host of other options were available on top of that, from a £1450 sports exhaust to £1300 for the DRC suspension.

The most obvious rival for the RS6 Avant was the Mercedes-AMG’s E63 S Estate. Similarly potent and similarly priced but with quite a different feel – more organic, more rowdy, but less capable – the fast AMG is as much a reassuring constant in this class as the Audi.

Porsche’s Panamera Sport Turismo was another contender, with the Turbo S being the closest in terms of outright performance, but the GTS being both sweeter to drive and more on-par in terms of price – even if it gives up over 100bhp to the Audi. Our most recent comparison between the RS6 and Panamera (and the E63 S) used a Turbo S E-Hybrid which also sails above the £140k mark and struggled with its weight, so we’d certainly be tempted to keep it a little simpler – the basic Panamera package drives well and looks great these days too.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Best cars of the 2000s – the best cars from the best of times
Best cars of the 2000s
Best cars

Best cars of the 2000s – the best cars from the best of times

The 2000s was a decade that went supernova for the performance car market. We count down just a few of the very best cars of the decade
6 Oct 2025
When Performance Car magazine closed, two writers and a Subaru kept driving
Subaru Impreza Turbo
Opinion

When Performance Car magazine closed, two writers and a Subaru kept driving

Porter recounts the extraordinary day that led to the birth of evo
6 Oct 2025
Toyota Land Cruiser review – is it worth £15k more than a Defender?
Toyota Land Cruiser – front
Reviews

Toyota Land Cruiser review – is it worth £15k more than a Defender?

The new Land Cruiser promises to be better than ever on and off the beaten track, and has Land Rover’s Defender firmly in its sights – we put it to th…
2 Oct 2025