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McLaren 720S vs Mercedes-Benz AMG GT

What's the difference?

VS
McLaren 720S
McLaren 720S

$388,888 - $419,990

2017 price

Mercedes-Benz AMG GT
Mercedes-Benz AMG GT

$294,077 - $399,900

2024 price

Summary

2017 McLaren 720S
2024 Mercedes-Benz AMG GT
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Twin Turbo V8, 4.0L

Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

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Fuel Efficiency
10.7L/100km (combined)

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Seating
2

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Dislikes

  • Definitely heavy
  • Less practical than you'd expect
  • EV range less than helpful
2017 McLaren 720S Summary

Years ago, McLaren wasn't really making McLarens. The ill-fated SLR was still in production, but was an oddity that made little sense - it was a highly specialised Mercedes and built to sell for crazy money to mega-rich F1 fans. Production was down to a trickle,and  the iconic and legendary F1 had completed its run a decade earlier.

The "new" McLaren Automotive had a shaky start in 2011 with the unloved MP4-12C, which became the 12C and then morphed into the 650S, getting better with each reinvention. 

The P1 was the car that really grabbed the world's attention and was then-new designer Rob Melville's first project for the British sports car maker. 

Last year, McLaren sold its 10,000th car and production numbers are closing in on Lamborghini's. Sales have almost doubled in Australia and Rob Melville is still there, and is now the Design Director. The company, clearly, has done very, very well.

Now it's come time for McLaren's second generation, starting with the 720S. Replacing the 650S, it's the new Super Series McLaren (fitting in above the Sport Series 540 and 570S and below the Ultimate P1 and still-mysterious BP23), and is a car McLaren claims has no direct competitors  from its rivals at Ferrari or Lamborghini. 

It has a twin-turbo V8, a carbon fibre tub, rear-wheel drive and bristles with cleverness. 

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2024 Mercedes-Benz AMG GT Summary

The fastest-accelerating and most powerful series production AMG to date isn't some slinky supercar, it's a truly enormous four-door, four-seat barge that weighs just a smidge under 2.4 tonnes.

Surprised? Welcome to the wonderful world of electrification, one where manufacturers can produce physics-bending performance by combining an internal combustion engine (ICE) with an electric motor, just so long as they're willing to put up with some extra weight.

And so it is with the Mercedes-AMG GT63S E Performance Coupe, which is a plug-in hybrid, though perhaps not quite as you know them.

Efficiency is not the name of the game here. Performance, and lots of it, is the goal. And, thanks to the combination of a twin-turbo V8 engine and a powerful electric motor, this big beast delivers plenty of it.

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Deep dive comparison

2017 McLaren 720S 2024 Mercedes-Benz AMG GT

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