Driven! The 2025 Audi RS3 Gets Even Hotter
We’ve always been big fans of Audi’s RS3 performance sedan, and now we’re even more so.A quick mental review of the past couple of years can be an amusing and bemusing mindfrack. When we undertook our first drive experience of the then-freshly updated Audi RS3 in the late spring of 2022, the surreal scariness of the COVID-19 pandemic hadn’t subsided, the automotive marketplace and supply chain remained a mess in various respects, and niche performance cars like the RS3 faced a murky future in the face of a mass electrification push nearly every car manufacturer spouted at every opportunity. No one would have been surprised if Audi produced a couple/few thousand examples of the hugely fun, high-performance subcompact luxury sedan and subsequently said Guten Nacht to the entire enterprise, leaving us to look back wistfully on what used to be. Frankly, that’s what many MotorTrend staffers, other media outlets, and various industry “experts” anticipated would happen, and we said as much in our First Test story about the 2022 model. Oops.
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Instead, two and a half years later, the car proved successful—even though the manufacturer won’t reveal official sales numbers—and confirmed the point that a slice of the consumer pie still desires traditional performance cars. Hence the 2025 Audi RS3 lives on with another meaningful update to deliver even more of what driving enthusiasts love.
New to the Eye, Outside
The 2025 Audi RS3 isn’t a ground-up do-over and remains underpinned by the MQB platform the nameplate has ridden on since 2015. While not being a massive overhaul, the new edition subtly—on the surface, anyway—goes a bit further than refreshes to things like graphics and color blocking for this midcycle update, but there are of course several visual modifications inside and out, and for the better.
You almost always take in a car first from its exterior, and the 2025 Audi RS3 locks your vision onto its sportier front-end treatment. Specifically, the protruding fascia and the grille it envelopes. It’s wider and flatter than the previous model’s, and the grille itself features a new “rhombus pattern,” as Audi logically calls it.
Other aggressive front-end treatments include air intakes on either side, framed by large vertical fins, and three segmented openings directly above the front splitter. Audi’s traditional rings logo protrudes ahead of the grille and the front fascia’s leading edge, adding a subtle dash of forward-pouncing aggression. (We didn’t rip that marketing-sounding statement from the press kit; that’s just what it looks like to our eyes.)
There are also newly designed matrix LED headlights and selectable daytime running-light programs for you to choose from, the latter adjustable from the onboard MMI control interface. As before but still a nice touch, you’ll also notice air-extractor outlets located at the trailing edge of each front quarter panel, behind the front wheels.
The rear end is updated, as well, including a bigger diffuser and oversized exhaust outlets, though the latter are a visual/styling trick we might call cynical, depending on our mood. That’s because they aren’t functional pieces of hardware; look inside those huge openings, and you’ll see the exhaust’s true functioning split tips are much smaller and far more average in diameter. But we don’t deny they look mean.
Separately, new vertically oriented side reflectors absolutely look better than the old horizontal layout, and they match the style and positioning of the front end’s vertical fins for a well-conceived, cohesive body design overall. The taillights retain the same physical design but feature a new arrow-look illumination pattern. And without turning this story into an ordering guide, just know various exterior trim pieces are selectable in body color, gloss or matte black, or carbon fiber.




