Skip advert
Advertisement

Bentley Continental GT review - performance and luxury from grand tourer

A great grand tourer but definitely no sports car

Evo rating
Price
from £140,300
  • Bespoke interior, plenty of performance, refinement and comfort
  • Heavy, cheaper V8 is better than W12, tech now outdated

evo Verdict

While the Bentley Continental GT might be a little bit long in the tooth, it still carves out its own succesful, if slightly unusual, niche. Delivering an exciting blend of performance and luxury, the GT is definitely more of a grand tourer than a sports car.

Definitely more grand tourer than sports car, a spirited drive in a ‘Conti’ is more about managing its 2320kg kerb weight than anything else. While vast carbon ceramic brakes and a set of properly potent engines do a lot to keep things thrilling (and safe), this is a car that never feels anything less than cumbersome, particularly in W12 form.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Where the Continental GT is more successful is in acting like a compact version of a bigger luxury saloon. Air suspension, a hand made interior and an emphasis on comfort rather than dynamics, mean the ‘Conti’ lives up nicely to its GT name.

A bit like the Aston Martin DB9, no amount of updates can mask the fact that the Continental GT’s underpinnings are starting to show their age. Still, its distinctly hand-built feel combined with a genuinely exciting powertrain in the form of the V8 S, see the Bentley remain a very tempting package.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

What the Continental GT is now also up against is the new tech-filled Aston Martin DB11. Leveraging Mercedes' own interior tech, the new Aston is leaps and bounds ahead of the Bentley in terms of the gadgetry on offer. It also looks fairly specatacular, although we're still yet to drive it. For those interested, you can see the DB11 in detail in our video preview here.

evo Tip

The W12 Speed might be the most powerful model in the Continental range but it is far from the pick of the bunch. The lighter V8 S boasts better fuel economy, improved handling and is cheaper to boot.

evo Comment

'A Bentley engineer once objected to me calling the Continental GT heavy, instead claiming it to be ‘solid’. Whichever adjective you use it’s pretty clear that the GT is a chunky car and that severely limits its sporting appeal. ‘Continental GT’ could hardly be a more apt moniker - for crossing continents and everyday use the Bentley ticks all the right boxes and it’s therefore little wonder the GT has been such a success. Although the W12 is the range-topper our preference is actually for the V8 models. They still offer effortless performance, but with a touch more of the response and delicacy that we look for in a high performance car. Dan Prosser, Road Test editor, evo'

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

2026 BMW 3-series spied, with exhaust pipes
2026 BMW 3-series front
News

2026 BMW 3-series spied, with exhaust pipes

The next 3-series will ring in BMW’s ‘Neue Klasse’ and be electric, hybrid and ICE powered
18 Nov 2024
TVR Griffith (1990 - 2002): a pure and unadulterated sports car
TVR Griffith front
Features

TVR Griffith (1990 - 2002): a pure and unadulterated sports car

The Griffith established TVR as a genuine contender and transformed the company’s fortunes – and it’s still as exhilarating to drive now as it was in …
17 Nov 2024
Cupra Formentor Abt review – a 365bhp crossover for Mercedes-AMG A45 S money
Cupra Formentor Abt – front
Reviews

Cupra Formentor Abt review – a 365bhp crossover for Mercedes-AMG A45 S money

It’s farewell to the original Cupra Formentor with an Abt-tuned run-out package. It’s a quietly excellent car; just a shame about the price...
14 Nov 2024