Skip advert
Advertisement

Should I keep my VW Golf GTI mk6? - evo Market

If you can’t face selling your car, take a look at the latest options to upgrade and improve it instead

After the "dark ages" of Volkswagen's mk3 and mk4-generation Golf GTIs, the mk5 GTI of 2004 came as something of a revelation. Punchy and dynamic, it belied slightly dumpy looks with a spirit recaptured from the first two generations of Golf GTI.

The mk6-generation GTI continued this when it launched in 2009. It was more of an evolution than anything else, but slightly sharper styling and small refinements throughout made it a great all-rounder.

Advertisement - Article continues below

That hasn't changed now the car is a used buy. Our 'Should I keep it?' series isn't a buying guide as such - you can find a full run-down on the mk6 GTI in issue 189 - rather inspiration for owners perhaps tempted by newer, faster alternatives.

Golf GTI mk6 upgrade ideas

Superseded by the current Golf GTI and outpunched by the Golf R, the Mk6 GTI still has plenty of potential, and most of that is locked up in its 2-litre turbocharged engine.

Superchips’ popular Bluefin ‘plug-in’ ECU remap (superchips.co.uk) liberates an extra 75bhp and 113lb ft of torque in ‘Stage 2’ spec for outputs of 282bhp and 320lb ft. The company does, however, say you’ll need to install a quality replacement sports catalytic converter, a cat-back exhaust and cold-air intake system to realise those impressive figures.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

Brake and suspension upgrades are also worthwhile. VW specialists Awesome GTI (awesomegti.com) will sell you Tarox front discs for £228, rear discs for £192 and a full set of Tarox pads for £134.40.

A set of KW coilovers comes in at £920, also from Awesome GTI. Then you’ll just need some tyres. We’d recommend Continental’s ContiSportContact 5s (our Tyre Test 2015 winners), at £279.60 delivered from blackcircles.com for 17-inch wheels.

Golf GTI mk6 key facts and figures

EngineIn-line 4-cyl, 1984cc, turbo
Max power207bhp @ 5300-6200rpm
Max torque207lb ft @ 1700-5200rpm
TransmissionSix-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Weight1318kg
Power to weight160bhp/ton
0-62mph7.2sec (claimed)
Top speed148mph (claimed)
Price new£22,000
Price range now£8500-£20,000

Servicing

Variable service interval: Up to 20,000 miles

Recommended service interval: 10,000 miles or annually

DSG service interval: 40,000 miles at the latest

What we said at the time

'There’s more grip than you might expect, so even when the car does slide you never feel like the slide is going to go on for hours and land you miles off line. And it slides neutrally rather than extravagantly, which makes the fact you can’t completely turn ESP off less of an issue. The fun comes in carrying speed and taking a road apart with the chassis, playing on a high-grip limit that feels tense but exploitable. From the first run through the corner I’m remembering why we rate the GTI so highly. By the fourth time through I’m turning in, the car’s sliding with all four wheels to the white-posted apex and then the XDS is helping to drag us out the other side. Then the road turns less interesting again and so does the GTI.' Henry Catchpole (evo 130) Read the full review here

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50 – specs and initial driving impressions
Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50 front
News

Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50 – specs and initial driving impressions

Volkswagen is finally letting the Mk8 Golf GTI off its leash with a hardcore, track-honed version called the Edition 50. If it’s anywhere near as bril…
14 Jul 2025
Volkswagen Golf GTI (Mk4) – the car world's greatest misses
Golf GTI Mk4 – front
Features

Volkswagen Golf GTI (Mk4) – the car world's greatest misses

The Mk4 Golf was a classic piece of design, but the GTI version was barely warm, let alone hot
2 Jun 2025
Volkswagen Golf GTI Clubsport v Cupra Leon 300 – what's the best mainstream hot hatch?
Volkswagen Golf GTI Clubsport v Cupra Leon 300
Group tests

Volkswagen Golf GTI Clubsport v Cupra Leon 300 – what's the best mainstream hot hatch?

As high-priced heroes steal the headlines, a real-world hot hatch battle rages between Volkswagen’s refined Golf GTI Clubsport and Cupra’s rebellious …
23 May 2025
Volkswagen Golf GTI 2025 review – the quintessential hot hatch improved but not perfected
Mk8.5 Volkswagen Golf GTI
In-depth reviews

Volkswagen Golf GTI 2025 review – the quintessential hot hatch improved but not perfected

The eighth VW Golf GTI is fast, capable and easy to live with, now with improved if not perfected HMI and driving dynamics
7 Mar 2025
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Aston Martin Vantage (2006) Fast Fleet test – living with a £30k V8 Aston
evo Fast Fleet Aston Martin Vantage
Long term tests

Aston Martin Vantage (2006) Fast Fleet test – living with a £30k V8 Aston

How much does an early V8 Vantage really cost to run? We’re starting to find out
21 Aug 2025
Best cars of the 1980s – performance icons from the decade of excess
Best '80s cars
Best cars

Best cars of the 1980s – performance icons from the decade of excess

The performance car as we’ve come to adore it has its origins in the 1980s. Family cars got fast, fast cars got faster, all of them were huge fun
19 Aug 2025
Used Porsche Cayman GT4 for under £60k – A Porsche GT model for less than a new A110
Porsche Cayman GT4
News

Used Porsche Cayman GT4 for under £60k – A Porsche GT model for less than a new A110

Porsche 981 Cayman GT4 values have reached the point where they are on a par - or below - the current crop of sports cars, so a former Car of the Year…
21 Aug 2025