The Best Subaru WRXs and STIs I’ve Ever Driven
In 20 years of Rexy memories, these stand out.The first time I ever drove a Subaru WRX was back in October of 2001, on the day I bought a black bugeye wagon. I started out trying to buy an Audi S4 Avant, but no one at the Audi dealer would even look at me. A month or so earlier,Automobilenamed the scrappy little Japanese, turbo-boxer-engined, AWD rally jawn its Automobile of the Year, and Jamie Kitman had been waxing poetic comparing the WRX to a Porsche 911 4S, of all things. And so I drove my Jeep Grand Cherokee a few car lots over to the Subaru dealer and traded it in. Joke's on me, as I currently own an Audi wagon. But, hey, as I tell Subaru constantly, my other car is a Ford Fiesta ST because Subaru stopped making the WRX wagon.
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That particular WRX got rear ended on Thanksgiving evening by a drunk teenager in downtown L.A. Once it came back from the shop, my "Rexer," as I called it, never felt the same—some suspension parts were new, some weren't—so back to the same Subaru dealer it went, where I swapped it for a 2006 WRX wagon in Subaru Rally Blue. Since then I've driven almost every version and variation of both the WRX and STI that Subaru's offered for sale in the United States. (Including the lousy 2008 model that was rebadged a year later as the Impreza 2.5GT.) So I consider myself well-versed. Now, are there approximately 70 billion special-edition WRX STIs for the Japanese and U.K. markets I've never touched? Yes. But it was still difficult to narrow my favorites down to just seven.
7) 2006 Subaru Impreza WRX Wagon
My old car. Subaru managed to fit two face-lifts into a four-year range, and the third iteration of the second-generation WRX was the best one (we never got the first-gen WRX or STI—like the legendary 22B—in the States). New for 2006 was a bump in displacement from 2.0 liters to 2.5, going from the EJ20 to the EJ25 family of engines. Power barely rose (from 227 horsepower to 230) on paper, but the detuned STI motor (with AVCS—Subaru's active valve-management system) made more power than advertised. Bigger and better brakes helped improve things, too.
Shame about the B9 Tribeca front-end styling, except that it's aging better than expected and looking about 30 times better than the model that came next doesn't hurt. Powerful, great handling, and blessed with some of the best steering I've ever experienced—plus wagon!—it's hard to believe these could be had for under $25K not so long ago. Also: wagon!
6) 2015 Subaru WRX STI Launch Edition
Limited to 1,000 units, this was a MotorTrendlong-term car. Looking practically perfect with its shiny blue paint and gold wheels (at first—the wheels were swapped out at least twice), I loved this thing. A touch tamer than the STI it replaced, its grip was up, its performance was up, and it just looked so much cooler. Especially on those golden wheels. Great car with tons of performance potential that we eventually untapped. Just one of those cars that pops into my head from time to time and makes me smile.







