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The Volkswagen GTI doesn’t require much of an introduction. The O.G. hot hatch has been an automotive icon for almost 50 years. It’s the benchmark for reasonably-priced sporty cars. Competitors must provide an answer to a simple question: why would you buy this instead of a GTI? Fairly often — even now, eight years into the Mk7-generation’s model run — it’s a tough question to wrangle with. The GTI is almost preternaturally perfect.
It’s not particularly powerful, what with its 228 horsepower. Its 6.5-second 0-60 mph acceleration time won’t drop anyone’s jaw. But concentrating on specs misses the point: the GTI excels at driving refinement and enjoyment. It handles corners with precision and responsiveness that can compete with just about anything that’s road-legal. You need to spend significantly more than the GTI’s starting price of $28,595 to find comparable driving dynamics..and even then, the practical, 30-mpg-plus GTI may be the car you’d want to drive every day.
It’s the car I want to drive every day, at least. The GTI is my dream car. Not the unobtainable dream where I’m dropping mad cash on every Porsche 911 that pops up on Bring a Trailer, but the attainable one. I could hypothetically afford a GTI now, particularly with the 0 percent financing deal VW has on offer.
So, to see if I could keep the dream alive, I wanted to find out whether a GTI could work as a dad car. I have one small child and a second on the way; downsizing from a wagon to a hatch would be a tough sell. VW loaned me an Autobahn-trim GTI with a six-speed manual for a week to find out if I could make it work.