New-age electric hot hatch has "everything that belongs to a real GTI", says VW's technical chief
The new Volkswagen ID Polo GTI will live up to its fabled badge by being “a sports car you can use every dayâ€, according to the firm’s technical chief.
The hot hatch is based on the recently revealed ID Polo EV and marks the first time that Volkswagen has applied its most famous performance badge – introduced 50 years ago on the Scirocco and Golf – to an electric car.
The ID Polo GTI gets 223bhp from a single front-mounted electric motor (which revs to 15,000rpm), can hit 62mph in 6.8sec and has a top speed of 109mph.
While that’s relatively modest compared with many modern electric cars, Volkswagen claims that’s because its focus wasn’t all-out performance but designing “a hot hatch in the best senseâ€. Therefore most attention was paid to how the car drives, handles and feeds back.
The ID Polo GTI features a bespoke chassis set-up, sitting on new, stiffer dampers and springs (which are adaptable). It incorporates the locking differential and anti-roll bar from the Golf GTI into the standard ID Polo’s MacPherson-strut front end and gains a special twist beam at the rear.
Indeed, Volkswagen’s head of driving dynamics, Florian Umbach, has told Autocar that he and his team are especially proud of that rear axle, with its mountings and bushings cleverly designed to allow some longitudinal ‘ride’ compliance but keeping lateral axle location much more closely controlled.
“It’s the best twist beam I think we’ve ever made,†he told Autocar during a prototype test drive last month.

With driver engagement in mind, the ID Polo GTI also gains a dedicated driving mode. Activated via a large GTI button at the base of the steering wheel, this ramps up all the drive and chassis settings to their most extreme, while an artificial combustion engine noise is pumped into the cabin. Activating GTI mode also allows for launch control to be used.
The ID Polo GTI sits on the same MEB+ platform as the standard ID Polo and uses the largest available battery, of 52kWh capacity and nickel-manganese-cobalt chemistry.
Its more performance-focused nature, however, cuts maximum range from 283 to 263 miles.
Like the standard car, it accepts a maximum DC charging speed of 105kW, enabling a 10-80% refill in 24 minutes.
The ID Polo joins a small but growing cohort of compact electric hatches, alongside the Alpine A290, Cupra Raval VZ, Peugeot e-208 GTi and Vauxhall Corsa GSE, although the Cupra is its mechanical twin so essentially the same car.
The ID Polo GTI was previewed in 2023 by the ID GTI concept, and technical chief Kai Grünitz said that “we brought almost every detail into serious productionâ€.
The new car likewise has an aggressive form, with small diffusers front and rear, lightly bloated wheel arches, a miniature bootlid-mounted spoiler and angular side skirts.
The concept car’s honeycomb front grille and ‘golf ball’ 19in alloy wheels, which are meant to resemble Volkswagen’s old ‘pepperpot’ steelies, also remain.

Indeed, Grünitz said the ID Polo GTI features “everything that belongs to a real GTIâ€.
Compared with the standard ID Polo, the GTI has slightly longer front and rear overhangs while also sitting a bit lower – but interior head room and boot space (441 litres) are unaffected.
Volkswagen claims the “result is an extremely crisp GTI design with proportions reminiscent of a 1976 Golf GTI, albeit one that has been transported into the futureâ€.
For reference, at 4104mm, the ID Polo GTI is 299mm longer than its ancestor.
The interior is nearly identical to the regular ID Polo’s, but with plusher materials and lots of GTI badging joining the 10.25in digital information display (which can be set to mimic the layout of a 1980s Golf), 13in landscape infotainment screen and smattering of physical buttons and knobs covering the dashboard and steering wheel.
The sports seats are new too, featuring a “fresh interpretation†of the classic GTI tartan check.

Grünitz said that since GTI’s introduction in 1976, “these three letters have stood for something very special, for driving fun and agility on the one hand and for everyday usability and understatement on the other†and, noting that this concept is “still relevant todayâ€, he insisted that those values would remain unchanged despite the powertrain switch.
Grünitz continued: “Sportiness and everyday usability belong to every GTI. My team and I wanted to create a true Volkswagen again, cars that create excitement, cars that we can be proud of, cars that make our families, our friends, our customers and the media smile.â€
The ID Polo GTI will cost from around £33,500, compared with a sub-£22,000 starting price for the standard ID Polo.
Full pricing will be announced closer to the start of sales in October and the first UK deliveries are expected early next year.
It will later be joined by other GTI-badged EVs. Autocar previously reported that a successor to the 322bhp ID 3 GTX Performance hot hatch is expected to be revealed later this year, and plans are also being discussed for a more powerful variant of the ID Polo GTI, potentially packing 282bhp and taking the Clubsport badge.