Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Wednesday 03 February 2021 12:20 pm

Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive review: the best EV just got better

By: Richard Aucock

Add as a preferred source on Google
Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive

The Porsche Taycan electric car is on a roll. Just a year after launch, the four-door sports car has become the firm’s second best-seller in the UK (after the Macan SUV), and that’s with a range of decidedly high-end models.

With the Taycan rear-wheel drive, the firm aims to bring on board even more buyers with its most affordable variant yet – its £70,000 list price a full £13,000 less than the incumbent all-wheel-drive range.

Better still, as it doesn’t have all its wheels driven, it’s more efficient, delivering a range of up to 301 miles with the top-spec 93.4 kWh battery (79.2kWh is standard). For a car producing up to 476hp, and capable of 0-62mph in 5.4 seconds, that’s very good going.

Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive

It’s going to worry Jaguar, that’s for sure; the Taycan is within striking distance of the I-Pace SUV, which costs from just over £65,000. The coupe-like Audi E-Tron Sportback is just under £70,000 and a Mercedes-Benz EQC is from £66,000 – but they’re all SUVs.

Only the Porsche is an authentic four-door with coupe-like styling and the promise of handling to match. Like, you know, a Tesla Model S, which has a 412-mile range, hits 60mph in 3.1 seconds… but costs from £84,000.

To Porsche GB HQ then, to find out if what sounds like the sweet-spot of the Taycan range really is.

Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive

Technically, it’s just called ‘Taycan’, sitting alongside the Taycan 4S, Turbo and Turbo S. Being rear-wheel drive marks it out as the only one not to drive the front wheels, too. You probably won’t even realise if you don’t look at the badge on the bootlid; visually, Porsche confirms that, other than 19-inch aero wheels and black anodised brake calipers, it’s identical to the 4S.

It measures nearly five metres long and nearly two metres wide, yet is 82mm lower than a Ford Fiesta, giving it a strikingly low-slung, road-hugging appearance. In a world of six-foot-tall SUVs, this is refreshing, and the drama is accentuated by the Taycan’s bold creases and plunging coupe roofline. It makes a Porsche Panamera look heavy and almost 2D in comparison.

The bucket-style seats are set fairly low, too, which isn’t easy to achieve given how the occupants are sitting on the batteries. The dashboard is also low, and the wide windscreen gives a great view forward – including the curvaceous front wings, a bit like a Porsche 911.

Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive

The interior is dominated by high-resolution screens. The portrait-format climate control panel in the centre has haptic feedback, but is fiddly, while the widescreen display above it is more intuitive. My test car had the optional passenger screen, too.

My favourite is the curved, frameless instrument display, modelled on a Porsche 911’s famous dials but given an EV makeover. Instead of a rev counter in the middle, there’s a power/recuperation dial.

In the rear, it looks cosy at first – so you’ll be surprised at how easy it is to step in and out. There’s decent room there, and it’s certainly adult-friendly (even if headroom will be tight for the tall). The seat itself, shaped for two, is very comfy.

Behind, a small bootlid hides a shallow but long 408-litre luggage area, and there’s an 84-litre boot in the front as well… just like a Porsche 911.

Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive

The Porsche Taycan has similar motor on the rear axle to the Taycan 4S. It also uses a two-speed transmission, instead of the single-speed gearbox of many EVs. The front wheels are completely free to do their own thing, uncorrupted by the need to deliver EV-exceptional levels of surging drive to the road.

Fantastic refinement is what strikes you first about this sporting-looking electric car. The motor, mounted way back behind you, is near-silent (unless you turn the sound generator on – more later), and both road and wind noise are incredibly hushed. With a soothing, compliant ride from my test car, which was fitted with optional air suspension (regular steel suspension comes as standard only on this variant), it felt divine.

The wheels pick out minimal road surface irritation, giving a waft-along feel on the motorway, and on rough A-roads the ride remains supple. Even dialling things up to Sport and Sport Plus doesn’t bring in much extra crashiness – and turning it back to Normal restores all the feelgood plushness.   

Read more

Is this £430k hyper-customised Porsche 911 the GOAT?

If you use Launch Control (easily done: just press the brake and accelerator together until you get confirmation on the dashboard, then release the brake and you’re away), peak power is 476hp with the high-spec, £4k-extra Performance Plus battery. Even in normal use, though, 380hp is still sent to the rear wheels – in a sophisticated and controlled way.

Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive

It’s a fast, potent car, but doesn’t feel like you’re about to be sent into space in the way a Tesla does. What’s more, the rear wheels have good traction and bite. It is much more reliant on the traction control than the all-wheel-drive versions, but the alert, unobtrusive electronics work in as discreet a way as possible.

It’s actually surprisingly satisfying and engaging, booting it and feeling the wheels slipping just on the edge of grip, serving up as much drive as is physically possible. This also really underlines the rear-driven feel – you sense the back end biting – to set it apart from almost any other EV.

My test car had rear-wheel steering, and I developed the knack of going tight into a bend, using the wheel to steer the back end, then going hard on the power. Instant torque to the rear wheels gave a pleasing ‘power-steer’ feel – within the control of ESC, of course. On a circuit, with ESC off, it’s going to be incredibly good fun.

For a 2.1-tonne car, the Taycan feels surprisingly light on its feet. The front end turns in eagerly, and the steering itself is brilliantly confident and linear – all that’s missing is the ‘chatter’ you get from a 911. And, shorn of some front-end mass, you at times sense a hint of ‘nose bobble’ over the front wheels. Just a tease, but just enough to bring in some more 911 sports car vibes.  

Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive

I even quite liked the artificial noise. It can be turned on via a setting in the infotainment screen. These things are usually grim, but this one is rather pleasant on the ear – a mix of high-tech EV and the haromonious hum and exhaust throb of a flat-six 911. Like a real engine, its tone and intensity changes according to what your foot’s doing on the accelerator. And when you turn it off, it’s like the engine has shut down: silence returns.

The Porsche Taycan rear-wheel drive is a particularly refreshing electric car. It proves EVs can still be organic and futuristic in a positive way, rather than seeming over-swift, over-sharp and strange. The pricier versions do the true rocketship stuff, albeit still with the fine breeding of this one. The Taycan rear-wheel drive is the engaging and approachable one.

This is Porsche at its best, giving us a beautifully considered driver’s car that’s also high-end in everyday use and a spectacle for others to look at. That it has the best range of any Taycan, and the lowest list price, seals it for me.

Richard Aucock writes for Motoring Research

PRICE: £70,690

0-62MPH: 5.4 seconds

TOP SPEED: 143mph

BATTERY SIZE: 93.4 kWh

ELECTRIC RANGE: 301 miles

CO2 EMISSIONS: 0g/km

Read more

Porsche 911 GT3 S/C review: Is new 194 mph convertible the car of the millennium?

Sleek Porsche 911 GT3 showcased in dynamic urban setting, highlighting its performance features and modern design

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Categories

  • Life&Style

Related Topics

  • Cars

Trending Articles

  • Billionaire Easyjet founder in line for £800m payday from takeover

  • Burnham told to launch £100bn tax reform package

  • Construction sector cuts jobs again as house building slumps

  • Pension pressure to help swell UK debt to three times size of economy

  • Harry Styles at Wembley Stadium review: running through the grief

More from City PM

  • Is this £430k hyper-customised Porsche 911 the GOAT?

    Life&Style
  • Porsche 911 GT3 S/C review: Is new 194 mph convertible the car of the millennium?

    Life&Style
    Sleek Porsche 911 GT3 showcased in dynamic urban setting, highlighting its performance features and modern design
  • Volkswagen Transporter Sportline 2026: The van that wants to be a VW Golf GTI

    Life&Style
    Volkswagen Transporter van parked on a city street, showcasing its sleek design and practical features for business use
  • VW Golf R 2026 long-term review: Final verdict on a classic hot hatch

    Life&Style
    Volkswagen Golf parked on a city street showcasing sleek design and modern features in an urban environment
  • Where to see the world’s most beautiful limited-run Porsche 911

    Life&Style
    Porsche 911 parked at a city street, showcasing its sleek design and iconic curves under bright daylight.
  • London Concours to celebrate rare Porsches and more next week

    Life&Style
    Classic cars displayed at the prestigious London Concours 2026 event, showcasing automotive elegance and innovation
  • New Mk1 Ford Escort RS makes world debut at London Concours

    Life&Style
    Boreham Ford Escort RS car showcasing classic design and performance features at an automotive event.
  • The Nichols N1A proves there’s still a market for cars that make no sense at all

    Motoring
    N1A on track

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy