Used 2023 Subaru WRX Sedan Consumer Reviews
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Absolutely not what automotive press claims!
First of all Rush2112's review is spot on. Here is what you read online: ugly, slower than last version, no STi, not as fast as an Elantra N or CTR, yada, yada, yada. Here is what you get: A powerful driver's car for $30k with AWD. My '19 Q5 was killed by a deer, and I was looking for an AWD sports sedan for the NW PA winters. With my kids almost all driving now, I wanted to get back to a car for me rather than a CUV/SUV for a part-time family hauler. My WRX is a Premium, with the Harmon Kardon stereo and moonroof with a 6 Spd. manual. First of all I think it is a gorgeous car and looks better than the last generation. Mine is the Silica Black. The amount of cladding is no different than my wife's Ascent, which the automotive press had no issues with. Here in NW PA most roads out of town are tar&chipped, and this keeps the painted work free of dings and scratches. The WRX looks like everything else Subaru, which is a good thing because Subaru still believes in making its vehicles look unique. They have always been frumpy and quirkly looking, they are not street show cars. Everything else looks like a bubble. No one will mistake a WRX for anything else. Second, this is not a drag racing car. The automotive press, especially in the US is obsessed with drag racing. Sorry, if that is what you like, you will live an unhappy life, and never be satisfied with any car, as someone will just have those extra $$$ that you don't and leave you in the dust. I autocrossed through the 90s, and spent tons of time on track days and time-to-distance events. Find a car that makes you smile driving, and that you can learn the art of driving, and you'll be more satisfied for your money. The 0-60 numbers from C&D and others are from people who don't own the car who can do clutch drops and abuse the F out of the car. Don't fall for the numbers game. The transmission. The torque is amazing, and the clutch is light, direct and incredibly predictable. A new driver of manuals will pick this up easily. I had the STi shifter installed on delivery and it makes a huge difference in tightness. Pushing into each gear has definite tactile feedback. The gears are short, and remind me of the 99.5 Audi A4 I had, where you won't reach 60 in 2nd. Even in 6th gear you are at 2k rpm at 55-60. Yes the mpg is not stellar, but this car is always AWD, and is tuned for the close ratios. The engine. Roars on startup. If you want a quiet car, this is not the one for you. The cold exhaust does drone for 1-2 minutes after start up at idle. After that it is sheer rumble when you are on the gas, and quiet when you are not. There is a hint of turbo noises, but nothing obnoxious. At my age I still love a rumbling exhaust, but not a fan of turbo noises (those are for the younger set). The engine has almost no lag. The 2.4L could pull the car on its own with no turbo and probably still put down a 7 sec 0-60. That and the twin scroll turbo make any lag minimal. My last car ('19 Q5) had far more lag. Car pulls from 2k all the way to redline linearly. Revs drop immediately on letting off gas to shift. Everything under the hood is accessible (except spark plugs, obviously). My wife's Ascent limited has a cheap prop rod for the hood, the WRX has a pair of real pressurized struts. Tuning. I tuned my last three turbo cars, but to tell you the truth, I am going to leave this one stock other than an AWE exhaust, some Red Stuff pads and some dress up items. The Audis and Volvos I just had lacked any sense of speed, they were too quiet, too smooth too refined to enjoy any bit of the driving experience. 100 MPH and you thought you were doing 50. This car engages you in the driving experience, and I think it has all the power it needs. I also want to keep the warranty and still drive it hard. That is more genius from Subaru, as this engine has more headroom for tuning, but also gives stock power at lower boost than the previous model. We have 70k in our Ascent and no issues (CVT is another issue). The Ascent has more boost at lower rpm to increase towing torque and moving a bigger vechicle. The WRX works at lower boost peak, but shifts that to higher rpm to get more hp. Ascent takes 87 octane, the WRX takes 91. Interior. Simple and livable. I can't fault my Q5 or the Audi virtual cockpit, that was flawless. But really once all those gizmos are set up the way you want, you simply need rpm, speed, coolant and oil temperature and won't bother with anything else. The WRX instrument display is straightforward and direct. Two big analog gauges for tach and speedo, and a changeable middle display for instant mpg, average mpg/range, tire pressure, media and then the turbo boost gauge that has a peak function. The 11.5" middle display combines the three from my wife's Ascent into one. A top 1/6 of the screen that scrolls L/R for media and a display for coolant temp, oil temp and average speed is cool. The main screen has the coolest feature in that it will do portrait mode of Apple car play. Bottom 1/6 of screen is HVAC controls, and YES, SUBARU FIXED THE HEATED SEAT CONTROLS!!! One push and you toggle through the heated seat levels, just like a physical button. Physical buttons are there for auto temp and volume, and push to pause music. Yes, the looks of the system are a little Windows Vista era, and I would beg Subaru to allow users to personalize background color and fonts (Volvo does that better than anyone). The system has been labelled as laggy by some reviews, but it is faster than in our '19 Ascent by a long shot. Seats have great side bolsters for cornering that really hold you in. I'm tall and thin, and can see how a larger person may think they are too tight. Lumbar support actually gives me backaches, so I'm happy without it. Seats raise/lower, setback angle and front back, that's it. Moonroof is simple, but I wish controls were backlit, no biggie. I did have the LED interior lights as an option. No rear seat ducts for HVAC, don't see where that saved Subaru any money, but the car is small enough that it should not be an issue come winter. I can comfortably sit in the rear seat behind my driver seat (I'm 6'0"). Visibitliy is awesome. Comfort. This is a sports sedan with a suspension made for a dirt track, you are not going to get a comfy detached ride. Buy another car for that. You will feel the road. Is it obnoxious or painful? No way. But the ride should be expected in this type of car. Big impacts ARE smoothed better than a comfy car, little undulations are really what you will feel in return. Handling? A dream. All reviews of electric steering have been poor from Audi, BMW, etc. don't expect miracles from Subaru in a $30 car. I find no issues with knowing where the car is pointed vs. wheel position, and I used to amateur race. Car corners flat, and with the summer rubber will scare most drivers long before it lets go. Subaru opted for understeer at the limit, which is probably wise. I haven't pushed mine to that limit yet, but we'll see. Trunk and storage are fine. Only quibble is the center armrest is a joke. I think they cut back since most people get manuals and you don't want your elbow constantly bumping a big console. For the lack of rear ductwork, Subaru could have put some cupholders in back (other than the ones in the rear armrest). Subaru has a hit!!!
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It had everything I wanted
I went into Subaru on a whim looking for a car I might like. I wasn't sure exactly what I was looking for, but it had to have good visibility, a sporty look and passibly practical. I've always had an interest in sportscars, but didn't know much at all about the WRX. I have driven base model BMWs, Porsche 944, 923, Mustang Cobra, various other roadsters and just plain jane grocery getters. I've put a few miles on the German Autobahn, so I figure I know what fast is. When they pulled their only base model out of the lot for my test drive, I saw through the rain spots and a little bird poo. I saw that wonderful Blue, and it was mine before I got in. I didn't need a second test drive. Yeah, no Ricardo seats yadayada, but the seats are quite comfortable. I felt what was under my foot while doing a little lap in the neighborhood and I knew I was going to like it. It has plenty, and although I am sad the STI isn't an option, there may be an aftermarket build of in the future one day when this old man needs a hobby. There is a lot of talk about dark colors look better with the cladding. I like it on my blue machine, and I thought it looked pretty sharp in the orange one too. I kindof dig the hexagon gimmick with the cladding, and it goes with its styling. The interior design triggers a sense of something out of a spaceship... thinking in terms of something crossed between H.R Geiger and Darth Veder's Tie Fighter. I like dark, so that's fine, and my daughter digs it too. Clutch is easy yet tight. I have a sense of the linkage and gearing happening, while feeling very smooth. I know where I am in the gears. Even after years of driving an automatic, it came back to me very quickly in this car. Electronic steering is responsive, and if you understand how it works, it's rack and pinion with a boost. I've driven a car with a broken steering motor, and when you are above 20 mph, the electronics are not doing much anyway. The steering is there, now, with no slop. The motor has an aesthetic presence with you at all times. It has a rumble, and the turbine winding up adds some music. It isn't an overwhelming presence on a stock machine, and that's cool if you have a worried kid to cart around. It is possible to have a conversation most of the time. It's only a bit loud when warming up like there is some reverberation. I may have missed the boat on the earlier mod enthusiasm for earlier model WRX, but I don't mind. It is good the way it is, and it feels solidly engineered. Daring things don't seem so daring in this machine. I have to pinch myself to drive responsibly every time I get on the road, because it is almost too easy to get into mischief. I think the 2023 is maintaining the legend, and I am now much more appreciative of its history. I know, I know, this car is not going to win a track race on an oval. But that's not why you drive a WRX. I feel no qualms adding a luggage rack to it or giving it some embellishments at some point. Maybe I'll write another review then. This car is about fun to its core. It has no feeling like it is something souped up and tacked onto a low-end economy car as per some critics. It is what it is made to do.
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- Premium SedanMSRP: $24,84917 mi away
- Premium SedanMSRP: $29,99813 mi away
- Base SedanMSRP: $27,777In-stock online
What a riot
2023 premium manual. Last year without eyesight Definitely wouldn't want the nannies.Absolutely no complaints or problems with this vehicle. It's a driving experience like no other car I've driven. It's like raw mechanical freedom. In a world of CVTs I feel fortunate to be able to drive this. I average about 24 miles per gallon driving mostly around town. I let it warm up before jumping on it and change the oil every 2500 miles to keep the turbo happy .Really fun car!!
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New Daily Driver
After 2 gens of Golfs, it was time to replace Mk7 GTI after 8 years. I bought the GTI for its dual clutch transmission and premium interior. But dieselgate (6M TDI owner) and poor local dealership service really turned me off from owning another VW. Had planned on picking a Prius at the end of the year, if dealers no longer charge a markup. But out of the blue Subie sent me an email and offered 0%. Only catch is its a 2023 model. Would've love to have Eyesight feature, but at $3K price increase and likely smaller discount, I can use my own "eyesight" thank you. I spent extra for the Limited (6M) only because of lane change alert. Fun little "hatch". Would never have gotten the Golfs if Subie still made hatchbacks. No complains after 3K miles, except for the mpg. But I can live with it because I only need to report to office once a week. Would've stuck to Prius otherwise. Alternate was the BRZ. Would've been tough choice if 2024 could also be had at 0%.
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Awesome Car
Love the Subaru WRX, got the limited with short shifter. It’s a fun car, I love taking it to road trips especially the mountains.
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