RE: Volkswagen Golf R32 (Mk4) | PH Auction Block

RE: Volkswagen Golf R32 (Mk4) | PH Auction Block

Wednesday 25th June

Volkswagen Golf R32 (Mk4) | PH Auction Block

We've all seen plenty of R32s over the past 20 years; probably not many as nice as this one


Nope, we still aren’t done with fast VW Golfs just yet. There aren’t many performance car nameplates that make it to 50, and the GTI’s half-century looks all the more impressive in 2025 given the state of the hot hatch market. It’s going to be a pretty threadbare group test for the Edition 50 when it arrives. And when thinking about five decades of sporty Golfs, inevitably the non-GTIs come up as well. The G60s, Rallyes, and recent Rs of this world, to name a few. From VR6 to that incredible W12-650 concept, you can’t say that the quick Golf hasn’t been given a good go by VW. Long may it continue. 

A little more than 20 years ago, evolving the 2.8-litre VR6 into the 3.2-litre R32 made a lot of sense. The former had shown there was an appetite for a large engine in a smallish car with a premium badge, and the R32 was perfectly timed for the hot hatch’s great renaissance, arriving ahead of cars like the BMW 130i, while also looking a lot more interesting than a standard 2.8, as well as being usefully faster than the GTI.  

Perhaps nobody, however, could predict just what a cult classic the Mk4 Golf R32 has become. There was a Mk5 version with a little extra power, though with the GTI usefully improved by then it didn’t have quite the same appeal as before; definitely didn’t look as cool, either. After that the VR6 was dropped, and no Golf since has quite been able to match the Mk4’s unmistakable style. The combo of the engine and the design has made the first R32 extremely desirable. There are Mk5 R32s with the same engine for £5k, and Mk4 GTIs that look a bit like the 3.2-litre car for less; but there’s currently not a Mk4 R32 on PH for less than £15k. In case you weren’t aware just how collectable they’ve become. 

This one ought to please the R32 enthusiasts. It’s a Deep Blue Pearl five-door, one that’s been owned by just three keepers since 2003. Two service books have been filled up in that time, along with plenty of recent maintenance by the current custodian. It’s still showing fewer than 100,000 miles. 

The Golf has also survived 22 years without any modification beyond a smartphone-compatible stereo and an induction kit. So there’s no daft exhaust, silly suspension or oversized BBS on stretched rubber; just the same suave aesthetic that’s always marked these R32s out. There’s never going to be a time where a well-preserved one doesn’t look absolutely fantastic. 

Indeed it’s probably the condition of this one that really marks it out. The wheels and paint look fantastic in the images, surely a testament to how well it’s been kept. It can’t be far off show quality, if that’s something of interest. The interior wears its miles well also. It’s easy to imagine this R32 as both a semi-regular daily driver, a reminder of the time when ordinary cars could have interesting engines, or improved further and kept for best. It’s guaranteed to draw a crowd at any classic meet, because R32s are loved even more than you think. Bidding starts at the weekend…


See the original listing

Author
Discussion

Paul_77

Original Poster:

1,373 posts

107 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Perhaps run on a shoestring budget for many years, with a lot of MOT advisories and fails for tyres. Never a good sign.

Cjr32blue

41 posts

83 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
No modifications apart from a new stereo? Except a milltek exhaust and ram air induction kit. Has the writer actually looked at the pictures? As an R32 owner, I'd say you'd have to stand in front of any example to value it correctly, there is a huge range in values from £3k snotters to £40k low miles excellent condition examples and everything in between. They are also a niche choice as frankly aren't that fast in a straight line which means many can't understand the appeal, which is actually noise, grip, traction and a grunty na engine.

Dombilano

1,306 posts

69 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Every time I see one, i just think Brian Harvey.

Yahonza

2,661 posts

44 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Prefer these with 3 doors but this is very nice example of an R32 and I wouldn't be that worried about its MOT history.
I suppose there might be some big bills on the way but it appears well looked after - at least on the surface.

moneypits

3,860 posts

189 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Lovely cars, perhaps not this one but you never know, it certainly looks good in all the photos. I'd strongly recommend an inspection on a ramp but haven't these aged wonderfully well? The alternator went on my v6 and due to the location it's an expensive repair so I'd imagine that needs to be in the service folder or used in negotiations. The rest should be pretty robust if it's been looked after but yes, independent inspection is a must. Worse ones out there and his ad on C&C asks for a not unreasonable 15k.

Edited by moneypits on Wednesday 25th June 19:13

The Pistonsdead

5,196 posts

221 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Dombilano said:
Every time I see one, i just think Brian Harvey.
silly

Resolutionary

1,396 posts

185 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I will always think these are cool. In 3 door flavour moreso.

From a time when VAG didn't mind throwing out W8 Passats and V10 diesels just 'because'.

One of these to daily and a W12 A8L would be a pretty oddball 2 car solution.
Just.. not this one with its 5 flappy bits (personal opinion, sorry).

Kudos on the quality and number of pics in the ad, though.

Water Fairy

6,116 posts

169 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Possibly one of the most over valued cars currently. Other than sounding nice there is nothing special about these. A close friend had one recently to tick a box but sold quickly after.

Definitely a case of never meet your heroes.

MK4 chassis is a pudding for starters.

Meh.


NGK210

3,881 posts

159 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
After looking at R32 Mk4s in the mid-2000s, I didn’t get it then; don’t get it now.
OK, its VR6 makes a nice noise and the cabin’s not bad, although at first glance its fat chairs look like eBay ‘finds’ (ie, nicked from another make of car).
Then there was the alarmingly nose-heavy handling, crashy ride, thirst vs. relative lack of poke and the Herman Munster-homage styling.
And an owners’ forum full of pathetically status-conscious and insecure proto-incel tosspots.
All of which is why anyone with half a brain opted for its prettier, much faster, sweeter steering / handling, more supple, better braked and less thirsty cousin – the Leon Cupra R.

username_checksout

221 posts

14 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Water Fairy said:
Meh.
That was exactly what I was left thinking after a drive in a friend's one. I struggled to see what the appeal was.

Portofino

4,716 posts

205 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
A bloke at work had one of these & just complained that it wasn’t that fast & was heavy on the petrol.

Sound nice though.


InformationSuperHighway

6,865 posts

198 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Very biased here.. but I think these are absolute bargains when in a slightly different form:



No where near the cult following (And therefore cult following prices). but essentially the same.


ArmaghMan

2,621 posts

194 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Just don't get these.

Mate had one. Nowhere near as fast as my standard Imprezza turbo, either in a straight line or through the corners.
No race/rally pedigree.

Nice sound but just not special.

Mr Tidy

26,682 posts

141 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I like the idea of big engines in smallish hatchbacks so quite like these as well as the A3 3.2 litre Quattro alternative.

But as I prefer RWD I'd happily pay much less for a 130i!

NGK210

3,881 posts

159 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
InformationSuperHighway said:
Very biased here.. but I think these are absolute bargains when in a slightly different form:



No where near the cult following (And therefore cult following prices). but essentially the same.
Iain Tyrrell recently acquired a Mk1 TT, and it looks like its TLC / recommissioning will be featured on his YouTube show.
Consequently, I wonder if values will start to creep upwards?

InformationSuperHighway

6,865 posts

198 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
NGK210 said:
InformationSuperHighway said:
Very biased here.. but I think these are absolute bargains when in a slightly different form:



No where near the cult following (And therefore cult following prices). but essentially the same.
Iain Tyrrell recently acquired a Mk1 TT, and it looks like its TLC / recommissioning will be featured on his YouTube show.
Consequently, I wonder if values will start to creep upwards?
Hope so hehe

howardhughes

1,228 posts

218 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Gorgeous car and design. Why people moan about speed is beyond me. It's 20 years old and has one of the best sounding engines of many a hot hatch, even by today's standards.

Appreciate it for what it is.

GeniusOfLove

3,506 posts

26 months

Yesterday (00:19)
quotequote all
Same as that Alfa 156 GTA this was a disappointing car when new but in light of what a load of bks modern cars are the things that made it a bit st when new aren't relevant and the things that make it interesting matter more than ever in 2025.

If you're just obsessed with figures go get an EV, and there is a certain sort of joy wrestling an inert pig like one of these around in a cloud of wicked six cylinder noise that can't be captured on paper.

I do think they're overpriced though, ironically the six pot A3 and TT are usually way cheaper, no VW scene bellend tax I guess?



Edited by GeniusOfLove on Thursday 26th June 00:23

CarlosSainz100

619 posts

134 months

Yesterday (00:48)
quotequote all
Gf had one. Heavy, slow, awful mpg. Felt like a tank to drive. Absolutely brilliant interior, bank vault build quality and fantastic looks but it's definitely not a driver's car.

awooga

422 posts

148 months

Yesterday (07:27)
quotequote all
I did consider one of these once, but went with an Alfa 147GTA instead with a Q2 diff. It had a much nicer interior, sounded better and was definitely quicker in a straight line than the Golf. I moved into the outside lane to overtake on the M6 and an R32 tried to tailgate me - the Alfa easily pulled away.

Suspect an R32 would still be on the road - the Alfa is SORN'd according to DVLA. The ECU starting playing up just before I sold it!