2022 Volkswagen Golf GTI First Drive – Don’t Fix What Ain’t Broken

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2022 Vokswagen GTI. Tim Healey/TTAC

If you’re a Volkswagen Golf GTI fan, you were probably worried that Volkswagen would screw it up as they refreshed it for 2022.

Here’s the good news – the company (mostly) didn’t do that. Especially when it comes to the most important part of GTI ownership – on-road driving performance.

Here’s the bad news – the same interior that I panned in the Golf R first drive is on hand here as well, since the cars share their Golf bones. They also, of course, share the MQB platform.

Changes for 2022 include more power for the 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder engine, suspension changes, and refreshed styling. It’s longer and lower than the previous car.

(Full disclosure: Volkswagen flew me to Asheville, North Carolina, and fed and housed me for two nights so I could drive the Golf R, GTI, and Jetta GLI, plus any other current VW I wanted to. They offered socks in the same pattern as GTI seats and I left them behind.)

The engine now makes 241 horsepower and 273 lb-ft of torque with either the six-speed manual transmission or the seven-speed DSG automatic.

2022 Volkswagen Golf GTI. Tim Healey/TTAC.

On the road, the front-drive GTI behaves a lot like its more powerful all-wheel-drive sibling, but the differences are obvious. Like with the R, I was careful about approaching the limit, but when I did push it, the car seemed to reach the limit sooner, and it also generally experienced understeer. I drove a top-trim GTI with the available DCC adaptive damping suspension – GTIs have a strut-type front setup and the rear is multilink, and both receive tweaks meant to improve handling.

The car felt looser, or at least less buttoned-down, than the Golf R, but that’s not necessarily bad. It lent a playful air to the GTI. The GTI’s steering is similarly not quite as hefty, and it’s a smidge less accurate. Body roll is present but not too shabby.

There’s less power to play with here, and it shows, though the GTI is no slouch. It’s more than quick enough for most back-road blasts along with freeway merging. The clutch and shifter work well enough to give the #savethemanuals crowd good feelings, and the brakes are almost as stiff as the R’s, while still avoiding being grabby.

I had no chance to drive the DSG automatic.

 

 

I didn’t get any freeway-cruise time in the GTI, but the car felt reasonably docile around town. The GTI is a bit on the louder side in terms of engine/tire noise, but it’s not too obnoxious for daily-driving duties. Using the Comfort or Normal drive modes definitely quiets things down a bit. Sport gives the driver heavier steering and a more responsive throttle.

Like the R, the GTI gets the new digital cockpit, and like with the R, it’s infuriating to use at times. This is where VW forgot the mantra “if ain’t broke, don’t fix it” and screwed up a good thing. My kingdom for knobs and actual buttons.

Maybe I’d be a bit more copacetic if the infotainment system wasn’t also so gol-durn slow to switch menus. At least the menus in the gauge cluster work better, look cleaner, and are more useful. If VW had stopped the digital revolution at the gauge cluster and kept the knobs, that would’ve been a fine compromise. Instead, we get an interior in which even changing the cabin temp requires you to take your eyes off the road for too long.

At least the steering-wheel haptic touch controls are easier to use than the ones on the center stack.

 

 

2022 Volkswagen Golf GTI. Tim Healey/TTAC

Since the GTI and R are dimensionally pretty much the same, the GTI is like the R in that it offers good front head- and legroom, limited in-cabin storage, and rear-seat room that is acceptable for taller passengers as long as the seats don’t go back too far. The chairs in this car weren’t as snug as the R’s, but they were plenty comfy.

Golf GTI comes in three trims: S, SE, and Autobahn. S models start at $29,545 ($30,345 for the DSG), with SEs starting at $34,595 ($35,095 for the DSG). The Autobahn will cost you $37,995 for the stick, and $38,795 for the automatic. Destination is $995.

 

Standard features on S include automatic climate control, keyless starting, automatic headlights, heated seats, heated steering wheel, wireless charging, and rain-sensing wipers. SE adds navigation, satellite radio, keyless entry, Harmon Kardon audio, and in-car Wi-Fi, and an available leather package adds leather, a power driver seat, seat memory, and cooled front seats. Autobahn trims get tri-zone climate control, cooled front seats, leather seats, heated outboard rear seats, and a head-up display. Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are standard, along with Bluetooth. A panoramic sunroof is standard on the top two trims.

 

The amount of USB ports is trim-dependent, but they’re all USB-Cs.

Fuel economy is almost identical with either transmission – 24/34/28 with the stick and 25/34/28 with the auto.

VW

When I pulled over for photos, a young dude in an F-150 pulled over to tell me a bear had been spotted nearby. Confused, I thought he was warning me, then it dawned on me that he saw the camera in my hand and was trying to help me get pics of it.

I didn’t see Yogi – perhaps he/she was scared off by the GTI’s red paint job. I’m also surprised the local didn’t ask me about the car. Usually, GTIs draw young car buffs like moths to a flame.

If he had inquired, I’d have told him that the next GTI is as fun to drive, if not more so, than the last one. That Volkswagen got the most important part – performance – right. That the car is really good, except for its frustrating interior controls. Oh, and the sticker for the Autobahn trim makes me wince a bit.

Volkswagen engineers mostly didn’t fix what isn’t broken, with one notable exception. That’s a win.

What’s New for 2022

The Volkswagen Golf GTI is thoroughly updated, with freshened exterior styling, a reworked cabin, more power, and improved handling. It’s also longer and lower than its predecessor.

Who Should Buy It

GTI loyalists, the hot-hatch fan who wants a well-rounded car.

[Images 2021 Tim Healey/TTAC, Volkswagen]

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