I’ve always been a Volkswagen GTI person. (I appreciate simplicity, refinement and a touch of plaid detailing in my sporty cars.) As such, the loaded, high-powered and more expensive Golf R always felt like overkill to me. Last winter, I drove a Euro-spec version of the all-new 2022 Golf R in a slushy parking lot in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The car impressed me, but left me with the same impression. (Why the hell does anyone need a Nürburgring drive mode?)
Here in 2022, Volkswagen finally loaned me an American-spec version with a manual transmission to drive around in February. I drove the highway and delightfully curvy back roads to Hell, Michigan; I shuttled my kids to their grandparents’ house after a snow storm in it. And after all that…you can call me a Golf R convert.
There are few, if any, sports cars that can do everything a Golf R can do. And these days, with new car prices skyrocketing to crazy heights…if you can find a new Golf R for at or near MSRP, it’s not that bad of a deal.
Why is the Volkswagen Golf R Special?

The base model Golf may be the best all-around affordable car ever built. The GTI is that Golf, but more fine-tuned and packing a bit more pop — and the Golf R is an apex predator GTI. There just aren’t that many cars that can let you tear it up on a track day, drive home safely in a blizzard, help your friend move — and avoid attention from Johnny Law while doing so.