► Golf GTI marks its 50th birthday
► Most powerful GTI ever
► Revealed at Nurburgring 24 hour race
Volkswagen has priced the Golf GTI Edition 50 and announced it will go on sale to UK buyers on 15 January 2026. Production is strictly limited to this year, as it marks the 50th anniversary of VW’s legendary hot hatch. It’ll cost you £47,995, and ‘demand is expected to be extremely high.’
The latest in a long line of celebratory GTI special editions that have come every five years, the Edition 50 was announced at the 2025 Nurburgring 24 hour race in order to be ready in plenty of time for early 2026 – 50 years after the original Golf GTI debuted as a skunkworks project in 1976. Half a century later, more than 2.5 million have been produced across eight generations. Here’s everything you need to know about the Edition 50.
The Edition 50 is based on the Golf GTI Clubsport, using the 2.0-litre EA888 engine, but now gets power levels closer to that of the Golf R. Compared to the Clubsport’s 297bhp and 295lb ft of torque, the Edition 50 puts out 321bhp and 310lb ft.
Weighing a GTI Clubsport-comparable 1,390kg, 0-62mph takes 5.3 sec while top speed is 168mph with. As with every new Golf GTI, there’s no manual gearbox, a seven-speed DSG is used instead.
It’s not a coincidence that VW decided to reveal the Edition 50 at the Nurburgring 24-hour race, as it’s the quickest production Golf to have ever gone around the Green Hell.
Lapping the Nordschleife in a time of 07:46:13 minutes with racing driver Benjamin Leuchter at the wheel, it’s three seconds faster around than the Clubsport S.
After his drive, Leuchter said: ‘It reminds me a lot of the Golf GTI Clubsport S from 2016. However, the Golf GTI Edition 50 has been systematically enhanced once again. Because it’s so intuitive and precise, I have a lot of confidence in the car and can really push it to the limit.”
The Edition 50 isn’t just about more power, though, with VW tuning its standard-fit DCC adaptive dampers, dropping the ride-height 15mm, adjusting the front differential lock and revising the steering.
There’s a special Nurburgring driving mode targeted at track driving, plus a new S+ mode for the gearbox that optimises downshifting into corners on track. The new M+ mode prevents the car automatically upshifting at higher revs, too.
An optional Performance Package is also available, with even lower suspension and higher spring rates. You also get Bridgestone Potenza Race semi-slicks, which are said to be a ‘brand-new’ development, and are 1.1kg lighter than regular rubber. An Akrapovic exhaust system is also included, saving a further 11kg, while the 19-inch wheels on this version are forged alloy for a further reduction in unsprung mass.
You do indeed, and VW has well and truly run with the red GTI theme. There are red seatbelts, upgraded sports seats in the classic check pattern and a redesigned sports steering wheel with a GTI 50 logo. Even red pedals!
Two new colours are also available exclusively on the GTI 50 – Dark Moss green and Tornado Red, the latter synonymous with GTIs across the years. There are various logos dotted across the car, too, including on the spoiler and insides of the exterior mirrors. They also come with a black roof and door mirrors, with a black-finished exhaust system
There’s no word on exact production numbers, with VW saying only that build will be limited to 2026 only. This means it’s unlikely to be as rare as the Mk7 GTI Clubsport S, of which just 400 were produced.
The £47,995 starting price is not a huge amount more than the £44,220 a regular GTI Clubsport currently costs. We’re waiting to hear back from VW about the cost of the Performance Package.
VW has produced a special edition version of its Golf GTI every five years since the ‘20 years of Golf GTI’ Mk3 edition back in 1996. In previous years VW coincided with the reveal of these editions with the unofficial GTI festival in Worthersee, though the event was cancelled in 2023.
The Golf GTI Clubsport S is one of the most noteworthy, being a stripped-out, two-seater version and perhaps the most track-focused road-going Golf ever. Prices for these can still easily fetch upwards of £40,000.
New cars editor, car reviewer, news hound, avid car detailer
With contributions from
CJ Hubbard Head of the Bauer Digital Automotive Hub
By Ted Welford and CJ Hubbard