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Nearly-new buying guide: Audi TT (Mk3)
Roadster or coupé, the latest version of Audi's iconic sports car is a stylish buy. We sniff out the deals
The current Audi TT was launched in 2014 so, if its forebears are anything to go by, it still has another three years to go before it’s replaced. Except that there are worrying noises that it may be the last of the line as Audi turns its attention to electric cars and SUVs.
That would be a tragedy because, in the 21 years that the TT has been on sale, it has carved out a special place in the used car market as an exciting but affordable motor built on solid foundations. Fiery versions of the Mk1 can’t be far off classic status now. It’s unlikely that the Mk2 and this Mk3 will be quite so revered but that only means they’ll be even better bargains as used cars in years to come.
In fact, already you can pick up a 2015-reg Mk3 TT with 75,000 miles from as little as £13,500. It’ll be a 182bhp 2.0 TDI Ultra Sport diesel, which means that, happily, such mileage is only average. Audi build quality being what it is, it should be free of squeaks and rattles, too. If petrol’s more your thing, there’s the underrated but impressive 1.8 TFSI. A 2016-reg one of these with 20,000 miles is around £18,000.
Either way, it’s not a lot for a stylish-looking coupé (there’s a roadster, too) that’s built on Audi’s aluminium-intensive MQB architecture and, as standard, comes with the car maker’s 12.3in virtual cockpit display.
The sweet spot in the line-up is the 227bhp 2.0 TFSI petrol. It’s spot on in front-wheel-drive form but the optional quattro four-wheel drive system brings extra security in the wet. Then there’s the deeply impressive 305bhp 2.0 TFSI TT S quattro, which shares many of its major mechanicals with the Volkswagen Golf R. Topping the lot is the 394bhp 2.5 TFSI TT RS quattro, which, in the hands of Autocar’s road test team, dispatched 0-60mph in just 3.6sec.
https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/used-cars/nearly-new-buying-guide-audi-tt-mk3






Roadster or coupé, the latest version of Audi's iconic sports car is a stylish buy. We sniff out the deals
The current Audi TT was launched in 2014 so, if its forebears are anything to go by, it still has another three years to go before it’s replaced. Except that there are worrying noises that it may be the last of the line as Audi turns its attention to electric cars and SUVs.
That would be a tragedy because, in the 21 years that the TT has been on sale, it has carved out a special place in the used car market as an exciting but affordable motor built on solid foundations. Fiery versions of the Mk1 can’t be far off classic status now. It’s unlikely that the Mk2 and this Mk3 will be quite so revered but that only means they’ll be even better bargains as used cars in years to come.
In fact, already you can pick up a 2015-reg Mk3 TT with 75,000 miles from as little as £13,500. It’ll be a 182bhp 2.0 TDI Ultra Sport diesel, which means that, happily, such mileage is only average. Audi build quality being what it is, it should be free of squeaks and rattles, too. If petrol’s more your thing, there’s the underrated but impressive 1.8 TFSI. A 2016-reg one of these with 20,000 miles is around £18,000.
Either way, it’s not a lot for a stylish-looking coupé (there’s a roadster, too) that’s built on Audi’s aluminium-intensive MQB architecture and, as standard, comes with the car maker’s 12.3in virtual cockpit display.
The sweet spot in the line-up is the 227bhp 2.0 TFSI petrol. It’s spot on in front-wheel-drive form but the optional quattro four-wheel drive system brings extra security in the wet. Then there’s the deeply impressive 305bhp 2.0 TFSI TT S quattro, which shares many of its major mechanicals with the Volkswagen Golf R. Topping the lot is the 394bhp 2.5 TFSI TT RS quattro, which, in the hands of Autocar’s road test team, dispatched 0-60mph in just 3.6sec.
https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/used-cars/nearly-new-buying-guide-audi-tt-mk3























