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Ferrari 488 vs Audi RS5

What's the difference?

VS
Ferrari 488
Ferrari 488

$410,488 - $489,990

2017 price

Audi RS5
Audi RS5

$54,999 - $115,950

2019 price

Summary

2017 Ferrari 488
2019 Audi RS5
Safety Rating

Engine Type
V8, 3.9L

Twin Turbo V6, 2.9L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
11.4L/100km (combined)

8.9L/100km (combined)
Seating
2

4
Dislikes
  • Breathtaking option prices
  • Some shake on rough surfaces
  • Atmo engine noise MIA

  • Misses out on a proper wide track stance
  • No capped servicing for RS models
2017 Ferrari 488 Summary

James Cleary road tests and reviews the new Ferrari 488 Spider with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.

It’s almost inevitable. Tell someone you’re a motoring journo and the first question will be, ‘So, what’s the best car you’ve ever driven?’ 

Without getting into an esoteric analysis of what the word 'best' actually means in this context, it’s clear people want you to nominate your favourite. The fastest, the fanciest, the car you’ve enjoyed the most; the one that’s delivered a clearly superior experience.

And if I enter the room of mirrors (where you can always take a good hard look at yourself) the answer is clear. From the thousands of cars I’ve had the privilege of sliding my backside into, the best so far is Ferrari’s 458 Italia, an impossibly pure combination of dynamic brilliance, fierce acceleration, howling soundtrack and flawless beauty.

So, the opportunity to steer the open-roof Spider version of its successor, the 488, is a significant one. By rights, the best should be about to get better. But does it?

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2019 Audi RS5 Summary

If you think about it, Audi’s high performance machinery tends to buck bodystyle convention.

Arguably the coolest cars in the lineup are station wagons - a bodystyle seemingly destined for extinction with the Gremlin-like multiplication of SUVs. Go on, argue against the je ne sais quoi of the RS 4 and RS 6.

Yes, the R8 at the very top of the tree is the ideal layout for performance, but the previous RS 5 was the brand’s first front-engined proper hi-po coupe in 2010, and the Ur-Quattro that started it all was a three door liftback.

On the other hand, the German competition from BMW and Mercedes built their performance pedigrees on conventional coupes and sedans, a lot like the US and Australia.

These days the other premium brands will make you a very fast mid-sizer in most shapes, but not a liftback.

I’m yet to see the word ‘liftback’ appear on any car nut’s Christmas list, but Audi has now lived up to its convention-bucking reputation, with the five-door RS 5 Sportback continuing the tradition started by the RS 7 Sportback and sitting alongside the RS 5 Coupe and RS 4 Avant mechanical twins.

We were among the first to drive the closest thing (on paper) to the original Quattro at its Australian launch this month. We’re already big fans of the RS 5 Coupe and RS 4 Avant, so expectations were high.  

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Deep dive comparison

2017 Ferrari 488 2019 Audi RS5

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