The hot hatch market has never been this heated, small four cylinder engines producing as much power as 90s supercars. In the 90s, having a hot hatch meant owning a 1.3 or a 1.5 liter turbocharged hatchback in 3 or 5 door configuration, producing as much as 100hp or 150hp if you get lucky. These were fun days when hot hatches were keenly based on rally or touring cars. Just to name a few; Peugeot 106 GTI with a 1.3L engine, 100hp only but this was a people’s car. The Seat Ibiza GTi was a racer boy Polo with a 2 liter engine, developing 115hp, later upgraded to the Golf 3 GTI engine with 150hp. The Golf GTI needs no introduction, in fact, the Mk3 GTI had a more powerful sibling going by the name VR6, six cylinders…not much power in that 2.8L motor (180hp), and we could go on an on to name a few more greats.

By 2018, it was common to have a 300hp plus hot hatch, the cars on this list all have 300hp+ and kindly let me introduce you to the Superhatch category. These are hothatches with over 400hp, and for now we only have 2, but that will change in due time. The play field should be much more even when the rest get new gen versions, next GTI should enter 300hp territory, next M140 should be 380 to 400hp, the current RS3 has been with us since 2015…next one should be mega hp too.

Now, this is the market Japs missed out on most…instead they focused on crossover SUVs with exception of Honda and soon to join Toyota (Yaris and Corolla). Subaru and Mitsubishi are happy with crossovers and PHEVs given they make them the best sales. Remember these two once dominated this category albeit with sport sedans (WRX STI and Lancer Evolutions), while Mitsubishi was downed by financial struggles forcing them to kill their performance branded Evo sedans, Subaru failed to capitalize on the hot hatch market (only doing it briefly), an area now perfected by Ford, Honda, BMW, Mercedes, Audi and more. They instead focused on a dying sedan trend, the performance of their cars was not helping either as they were out matched by both AWD and FWD hot hatches. Nonetheless, with the rise of hybrid performance cars, there is still hope.

NB: This list has both current and upcoming cars, and will change as newer models are announced. The Focus RS production ended in 2018, but still makes it to this list given it’s a viable choice in the used car market and in some regions new cars may still be available.

Homework: What is a Superhatch?

10. Renault Megane RS Trophy: 300hp

Megane RS 300 Trophy

Engine: 1.8L I4 turbo
Output: 300hp, 420nm
0-100km/h: 5.7s
Top Speed: 260 km/h

9. Mercedes-AMG A35: 306hp

2019 Mercedes-AMG A35

Engine: 2.0L I4 turbo
Output: 306hp, 400nm
0-100km/h: 4.7s
Top Speed: 250km/h

8. VW Golf R: 306hp

2018 Golf 7 R

Engine: 2.0L I4 turbo
Output: 306hp, 380nm
0-100km/h: 4.8s
Top Speed: 250 km/h

7. Seat Leon Cupra R: 310hp

Seat Leon Cupra R

Engine: 2.0L I4 turbo
Output: 310hp, 380nm
0-100km/h: 5.8s
Top Speed: 250 km/h

6. Honda Civic Type-R: 315hp

2018 Honda Civic Type-R

Engine: 2.0L I4 turbo
Output: 315hp, 400nm (Euro and Japan versions)
0-100km/h: 5.6s
Top Speed: 272 km/h

5. BMW M140i: 335hp

Engine: 3.0L I6 turbo
Output: 335hp, 500nm
0-100km/h: 4.4s
Top Speed: 250 km/h

4. Ford Focus RS: 350hp

Ford Focus RS

Engine: 2.3L Turbo 4 cylinder EcoBoost
Output: 350hp, 475nm
0-100km/h: 4.7s
Top Speed: 268 km/h

3. 2020 Mercedes-AMG A45: 382hp

Mercedes-AMG A45 Render

Engine: 2.0L I4 turbo
Output: 382hp
0-100km/h: TBA
Top Speed: TBA

2. Audi RS3: 400hp

2018 Audi RS3 Hatch

Engine: 2.5L straight 5 turbo
Output: 400hp, 480nm
0-100km/h: 4.1s
Top Speed: 280km/h

1. 2020 Mercedes-AMG A45 S: 416hp

Engine: 2.0L I4 turbo
Output: 416hp
0-100km/h: TBA
Top Speed: TBA

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