Skip to content
 
Volkswagen’s Golf R Heads Back to the Nürburgring

Volkswagen’s Golf R Heads Back to the Nürburgring

VW teases a Golf R 24H racecar, hinting at a sharper, AWD future shaped by the Nürburgring’s toughest test.

Mk1 Volkswagen Golf GTI

Volkswagen pretty much put the hot hatch on the map back in 1975 with the original Golf GTI. The U.S. missed out on that first-gen Mk1, but VW made up for it by bringing the GTI stateside starting with the Mk2, finally giving enthusiasts what they’d been waiting for. Then, in 2002, things took an interesting turn with the Mk4. Volkswagen decided to simplify its performance identity down to a single letter: R.

 

Mk4 Volkswagen Golf R32

That’s when the Golf R32 showed up, packing a naturally aspirated 3.2L VR6 under the hood and pairing it with the Haldex all-wheel-drive system. From there, it set the tone for what would become five generations of Golf R models, each pushing VW’s performance story forward. Celebrating the 25th anniversary of its performance segment, Volkswagen R will be participating in the 2027 24h of Nürburgring. Volkswagen’s vision and strategy for competing in one of the most grueling endurance races is clear as day: take the current Golf R, toughen it up, and build something that can survive 24 hours flat-out on the Nürburgring. That alone speaks volumes. The Nordschleife has a way of exposing weaknesses quickly, and developing a race car around it suggests VW is thinking beyond fast lap times and more about longevity and durability, with eyes set on really working to put itself on the podium.After a few years campaigning the front-wheel-drive GTI Clubsport, moving to an all-wheel-drive Golf R platform is a logical next step that everyone was wishing for. More grip, faster acceleration, and more room to explore what the R badge really stands for when it hits the tarmac and pushes its limits. With Max Kruse Racing and German racing driver Benjamin Leuchter helping fine-tune things, this will become Volkswagen’s true competitor. It’s a continuation of something, just turned up a notch, and all about seeing how far the Golf R can actually go when you give it room to stretch its legs.

Source: Volkswagen

Jordan Aquistapace