The Italians stick one of their most serious suffixes on their most sensible model. Time to find out what it’s like

Lamborghini Urus Performante

Evo rating

Price

from £209,000

  • Dynamically superb on track
  • Unexpectedly hard work on the road

It’d be remiss when reviewing the Lamborghini Urus Performante not to mention how out of kilter it is with the world around it. How can a £209,000, 657bhp SUV slot neatly into a general populace worrying about climate and cost-of-living crises? The simple fact is it can’t, and to prospective owners that may be the very point. A stocky 4×4 with a track day focus is not a car designed to blend into the environments it traverses, while Urus sales – typically strong – have been off the charts in 2023. Lamborghini buyers clearly aren’t vexed about their energy bills.

It would be unfair to single Lamborghini out in this regard, of course. While it claims it invented the ‘Super SUV’ class by launching the Urus back in late 2017, there are swathes of rivals – plenty among its wider VW Group relatives – that would feel similarly gauche in polite company. The Performante arrives to bulk the Urus up to better tackle its increasingly muscular rivals, and it does so with a considerable mechanical overhaul.

Given the way the Urus has flown off the shelves – becoming the best-selling Lambo ever in a laughably short space of time – the Performante could feasibly have received just a light ECU tickle, a frenzied paint job and a host of carbon aero bits and still sold by the bucketload. It gains all of those things, but there’s a whole lot more going on, too. Perhaps it’s a tacit admission that its base car bore just a little too much of the character of the RSQ8 with which it shared a number of components.

Let’s get the awkward bit out of the way: the Performante is neither the fastest nor the most powerful SUV on sale. The Aston Martin DBX707 and Ferrari Purosangue trump it on both counts, though the Performante does at least match their 3.3sec sprint to 62mph. It’s unlikely too many buyers will feel short-changed with the rest of its spec sheet, mind; the 4-litre twin-turbo V8 from the original Urus now produces 657bhp, though torque is unchanged – at 627lb ft – on account of the eight-speed automatic transmission not being overly keen on taking much more. Well, at least in the world of VW Group tolerances. The top speed is an entirely adequate 190mph.

Lamborghini Urus Performante

I say ‘original’ Urus because the Performante shares this tune of engine with the now entry-level Urus S, effectively a mid-life rejig for the model as a whole. But while the S continues to ride on air suspension, its wilder sibling is fixed 20mm lower on lighter steel springs to keep its centre of gravity as low as possible. Not making the thing an SUV in the first place would lower it yet further, of course, but that’s a road we’re now too far down to consider a dramatic U-turn.

The Torsen centre differential is changed, a new piece of hardware that’s capable of sending more power to the rear axle more of the time, while torque vectoring on the rear differential shifts in aggression as you toggle through the refreshed driving mode selection, which sees the three loose-surface options of the Urus and Urus S replaced by one: ‘Rally’. Perhaps ‘Drift Mode’ would have just been a little too uncouth, but the general vibe is the same. Lamborghini laid on Vallelunga’s short dirt stage to prove it.

Downforce is up 38 per cent with the assistance of a new rear wing while weight drops 47kg – to a still portly 2150kg – with the help of some carbon panels, an Akrapovic titanium exhaust and optional forged wheels with bespoke compound Pirelli P Zero Trofeo R tyres. Yep, we now occupy a universe where semi-slicks are OEM parts on an SUV. There are also 16mm wider tracks over standard and a retune of all the Urus’s various systems – such as the rear-wheel steering – to try and bring them all together into one, homogenous package, something we found the outgoing car never quite delivered.

During our first drive at Vallelunga, medium- to high-speed corners show off an astoundingly keen front end, in fact, and an incisiveness you’d not have credited a car of this mass with a few years ago. In a world of DBX707s and Cayenne Turbo GTs, the Urus isn’t alone in this regard, but for it to feel so at home on a racetrack is still faintly jaw-dropping. The rear follows very faithfully round no matter how early – and harshly – you’re back on the throttle, at least in the gnarliest Corsa mode. It’s a touch more playful in Sport or (naturally) Rally.

The steering doesn’t brim with feel but is quick and precise without unsettling the car, presumably aided by that drop in ride height and anti-roll tech. The gearchanges – downshifts in particular – are also sharper than before, as is throttle response. To say the car bounds voraciously through its ratios on the circuit’s longer straights is an understatement, though the ‘enhanced sound’ of its new exhaust system appears to better entertain those outside of the car than in it. Perhaps that’s the aim.

It’s in the tighter, more technical corners of Vallelunga’s latter half that the Urus’s limits loom into view, particularly after prolonged laps as grip starts to fade and the brake pedal softens. The Performante remains impressive but simply can’t run from its kerb weight in second-gear corners, which require a deep brake if you’re to accurately point yourself at the apex without scrubbing wide. Despite the Torsen diff being keen to throw power rearward, it’s the front end that needs most careful management. But once you’ve turned you can get on the power pretty keenly, the whole thing hunkering down and projecting you toward the next turn with almost comical pace.

Lamborghini Urus Performante – steering wheel

This is all on its semi-slick Trofeo Rs on a warm Italian racetrack. Quite how many buyers will specify them – especially given it means riding on piffling 22s rather than optional Y-spoked 23s – or even take their car on a track day is another matter. It’s an impressive machine on circuit, but is it a fun one once the sheer novelty of what it’s achieved has faded with the brakes? It’s a question I’m still pondering. Performantes will undoubtedly live the vast majority of their lives on road rather than track, and it’s there that we’ll deliver a more definitive verdict when we can. But know that it recorded 5.8mpg on circuit…

On the open road in the UK, it's a different story. While our time with the Performante was in near-zero degree weather (and on summer tyres), our Fast Fleet Skoda Superb Sportline felt far grippier and more confidence-inspiring (and far better over the bumps too). We have a nagging feeling it probably covered ground quicker than the 657bhp Performante, and that an Aston Martin DBX 707 offers more rounded on-road handling.

All that aside, the Urus Performante does feel much more precise, less wallowy than the Urus S. More Lamborghini, really. Which extends to the bodywork, with lighter panels, extra cooling and drag-reducing surfacing, which is a bit spec-sensitive. Giallo Inti with visible carbonfibre is a bit much for me, as is the car generally on the road. But there’s no denying, it is exciting, is an event to drive. Super-SUVs are nonsensical cars by nature, but for a buyer who wants the most super of super-SUVs, the Performante weirdly makes the most sense of them all.

The Urus Performante starts at £209,000 before options, which represents a £21,000 rise over the identically powered Urus S that now kicks off the range – and a similar premium over the Aston Martin DBX 707 that’s perhaps the most engaging performance SUV yet. Getting the Performante and 707 together on the road will be an interesting exercise, if a somewhat costly one…

The Ferrari Purosangue is designed to operate in a different universe entirely, at least in terms of cost. The Urus isn’t short of cheaper rivals with almost comparable performance; there’s the Audi RSQ8, Bentley Bentayga S and Porsche Cayenne Turbo GT from within its own VW family, while those wishing to make a truly punchy statement might have their heads turned by the Mercedes-AMG G63 and BMW XM outside of the group.

Engine V8, 3996cc, twin-turbocharged
Power 657bhp @ 6000rpm
Torque 627lb ft @ 2300-4500rpm
Weight 2150kg
Power-to-weight 310bhp/ton
0-62mph 3.3sec
Top speed 190mph
Basic price £209,000

Keyword: Lamborghini Urus Performante 2023 review

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