Skip advert
Advertisement

Mitsubishi Ralliart Sportback

A 237bhp, hatchbacked junior Evo X? Er, no

Evo rating
RRP
from £21,500
  • A taste of Evo at a keener price
  • Doesn't do what it says on the tin

A junior Evo X? That’s the obvious first thought on encountering the Lancer Ralliart, whose prey-sniffing snout and multi-vented bonnet are almost exactly those of its evil sibling. The cabin is an Evo clone, too. But then you notice it lacks the bulged-out wheelarches, and that it has – yes – a hatchback.

Advertisement - Article continues below

It is, in fact, the Ralliart Sportback, the only form in which this four-wheel-drive, but Active Yaw Control-less, machine will be sold in the UK. That’s partly to distance it from the Evo, and partly to align it with obvious rivals such as the Focus ST, Impreza WRX and Golf GTI.

Here, Mitsubishi’s 2-litre ‘world engine’ (it’s also used by Hyundai and Chrysler) is in 237bhp tune. For the UK it’s matched exclusively to the SST double-clutch transmission, and on paper the whole thing seems a very attractive package at around £21,500. Especially as 62mph should be reachable after a brisk seven seconds.

Pause for thought. Perhaps seven seconds isn’t quite so great, given the getaway advantage of four-wheel drive. Cue doubt. The problem is that the Ralliart is a heavy machine, what with all that transmission, and the SST transmission has an annoyingly tardy getaway.

All would be forgiven were the Ralliart a rousing drive, but for all its claimed power the engine never really lets rip. You find yourself revving it to death to goad it along, easily done given the strange shortness of the intermediate gear ratios, and it’s much harder work than a torquey turbomotor should be. It sounds nondescript, too.

But it will all come good in the corners, yes? No. This Lancer really misses its tougher brother’s AYC and the resultant favourable torque distribution to each rear wheel. There’ll be no lovely powerslides here; go too quickly into a tight bend and it understeers like the nose-heavy car it is.

There’s promise here, though, and these were pre-production cars with calibration still tweakable. Get to it, chaps.

Specifications

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Toyota GR Corolla review - why the GR Yaris’s big brother will be worth the wait
Toyota GR Corolla
Reviews

Toyota GR Corolla review - why the GR Yaris’s big brother will be worth the wait

It's been on sale for three years and until now only in select markets, but now it's built in Britain it's coming to the UK. We're just waiting for To…
1 May 2026
Best BMW M cars – the ultimate driving machines
Best BMW M cars
Best cars

Best BMW M cars – the ultimate driving machines

M is one of the fastest letters in the motoring alphabet. We pick our favourites from over 50 years of BMW M icons
1 May 2026
I daily drove a £525k Ferrari 12 Cilindri, and it was as fabulous as it was frustrating
Ferrari 12 Cilindri Spider – front
Long term tests

I daily drove a £525k Ferrari 12 Cilindri, and it was as fabulous as it was frustrating

We already know Ferrari’s latest V12 grand tourer is immensely exciting, but what’s it like to use every day for every journey?
4 May 2026