Audi’s RS sedans and wagons aren’t always the most exciting or flamboyant cars to drive, even if they’re not short of performance. But when the covers finally come off this RS5 either later this year or early in 2025 (either as a 2025MY or 2026MY in North America), we have a serious hunch it’s going to easily beat its BMW M3 Touring and Mercedes C63 wagon in a visual pose down. Just look at the width of the thing. It’s absolutely enormous, an almost grotesque parody of the sensible new A5 Avant that’s spent three hours every night for the last year working delts in the gym. And we wouldn’t have it any other way.
The front fenders are so wide that Audi’s
been able to make space for an air vent just behind the front wheel, and though
the rear arches look like placeholder extensions rather than the finished
complete rear quarter panels, the wheels are pushed so far out that the real
fenders are guaranteed to be equally wide. We’ve seen the RS5 testing before,
but the prototype in these latest shots has lost the camo wrap on both its
central grille mesh, revealing a double diamond pattern, as well as the massive
corner vents flanking it.
Also visible are a new set of triple-five-spoke
forged alloy wheels and Audi’s latest matrix LED headlights whose LED segments
can shine individually to provide different patterns and messages. If you’re
wondering why we’re calling this an RS5 rather than an RS4 it’s because Audi is
moving its ICE cars into odd-numbered badged and reserving even numbers for
EVs. So while there almost certainly will be an RS4 along eventually, it’ll be
battery-powered, while the combustion wagon gets an RS5 badge, something
previously used by the top-performing versions of the old A5 two-door coupe and
A5 Sportback four-door coupe lines.
That’s not all that’s new for the RS5.
It’s going hybrid, though that doesn’t mean it’s downsizing to a four-cylinder
powertrain like its Mercedes-AMG C63 rival has done. No, the RS5 is reportedly
sticking with 2.9-liter turbocharged V6 power but will add hybrid assistance to
significantly improve both power over today’s 444 hp and efficiency
with it. It’ll be interesting to see if Audi Sport configures its PHEV system
to deliver power at the expense of range (the AMG can only do 13 km on
a charge of its tiny 6.1 kWh battery), but we won’t know that until nearer the
launch. One thing we do know is that the RS5 is going to need a huge horsepower
injection to keep up with the AMG, which cranks out a massive 671 hp.