Like a stone on the bottom of a rushing river, the Land Rover Range Rover Sport has been growing smoother every year. When it first debuted back in 2005, it looked as aerodynamic as a brick — all sharp edges, hard lines and rectilinear forms. The second generation that arrived in 2013 was still boxy, but the edges had been sanded down. By 2022, when the third-gen version launched, it looked as slippery as a worn bar of Dial.
Of course, that’s not the only change Land Rover made. The 2023 model is all-new, just like the full-size Range Rover that preceded it into showrooms by just a few months. Under the hood lie new powertrains, under the dash lies a new computer system. In all but name, it seems a major effort — and a potentially worthy foe in the ever-competitive midsize luxury SUV category, right? I took it for a spin to find out.
What makes the Range Rover Sport different from the Range Rover?

Once, the Range Rover lineup was simple: there was the Range Rover. These days, there are a quartet of vehicles boasting that name within the Land Rover lineup: the Range Rover Evoque, the Range Rover Velar, the Range Rover Sport, and the range-topping Range Rover.
The Evoque is the baby Rangie — the smallest and cheapest, made for city dwellers and new entrants to the brand. The Range Rover proper is the all-out do-everything flagship, meant to combine the true go-anywhere capability of a Land Rover with the upmarket luxury car ride, status and comfort of a Mercedes, or even a Bentley. The Velar, meanwhile, is the sophisticated midsize crossover for the fashion-forward — capable of clawing through all sorts of weather but giving suburban parents a glamorous alternative to more anodyne fancy family SUVs.
The Range Rover Sport’s mission brief, in turn, is just what it sounds like: to serve up a sportier version of the Range Rover experience, one that’s more involving and — dare I say — fun to drive. There’s a reason the best-known version of the previous model was the supercharged 542-hp SVR; it, arguably, was the variant that best represented what the Range Rover Sport aims to be.