Skip advert
Advertisement

New Caterham Seven SuperSprint 2018 review

The Seven SuperSprint was built as part of Caterham's 60th birthday celebrations, but does it do the brand justice?

Find your Caterham Super 7
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

The Caterham Seven SuperSprint is as close to 1960s racing as you can get in a new car purchase. For some the elegant and charming styling inside and out will be enough to justify the high price tag, but even for those with little in the way of nostalgia for that era can enjoy the lively chassis and entertaining driving experience.

Advertisement - Article continues below

To mark its 60th birthday last year, Caterham launched a car called the Seven Sprint - a version of the brand’s iconic sports car with some extra trim features to give it a real sixties look. Now there’s this version designed with a racing theme: the SuperSprint.

It’s still a road-legal car, though, and while our model came with just one seat, you can also get a normal two-seater. You do get a special Brooklands style aero screen, quilted and stitched seats trimmed in tan Scottish leather and a wooden steering wheel.

Best track day cars

Then there’s the livery: there are six options available, each with a different racetrack as its theme. Our car is Dijon blue with a white noseband, but you can also get Aintree green, Hockenheim silver, Iola red, Watkins Glen white and Zandvoort green.

The racing livery looks great and the classic Seven design means the SuperSprint really does look like a classic car. We had more than one person ask us how old the car was when we are driving it and they were shocked to hear it was in fact brand new.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

A1 Sportback

2024 Audi

A1 Sportback

52,201 milesManualPetrol1.0L

Cash £17,995
View A1 Sportback
Range Rover Evoque

2023 Land Rover

Range Rover Evoque

15,818 milesAutomaticPetrol1.5L

Cash £23,820
View Range Rover Evoque
Taigo

2024 Volkswagen

Taigo

19,373 milesAutomaticPetrol1.0L

Cash £17,410
View Taigo
Qashqai

2022 Nissan

Qashqai

17,340 milesAutomaticPetrol1.5L

Cash £17,760
View Qashqai

The SuperSprint uses a tuned-up version of the Sprint’s 660cc three-cylinder engine – but it’s been tuned up, and has 95bhp in this car. It’s quite a long way from a sixties engine: it’s from a Suzuki and is turbocharged, so low-down performance is surprising. Caterham has managed to make it sound surprisingly old-school, though, with an entertaining exhaust note.

Advertisement - Article continues below

At low speed it’s properly quick thanks to that turbocharger and super-short gearing for the five-speed manual gearbox. It’s so short that you have to change gear constantly to avoid hitting the limiter. It’s great fun, though, as the shift is short and precise.

Caterham Seven Sprint review

The Caterham is so light that performance is brisk even with less than 100bhp, but those used to more modern Sevens might find the powertrain a little lacking. The engine isn’t as responsive as the naturally-aspirated units found in the company’s other models - or in the original Lotus Seven that the SuperSprint draws so heavily on.

A heel-and-toe downshift, always tempting thanks to the tiny pedal box, requires a little more patience with the throttle than you would expect in a Seven. It’s the only real reminder that this is a new car, though, as the unassisted steering is bristling with feel, and the exposed front wheels let you place it perfectly on the road.

With no roof and only the tiny aero screen, it’s not a car that’s at its best on a winter motorway - you’ll have to defrost your face after even a short trip. But once you’re on a great road all of that melts away, and you can really enjoy the SuperSprint for what it is: one of the most characterful new cars you can buy.

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £38,050Avg. savings £3,360 off RRP*Used from £27,802
Kia Sportage

Kia Sportage

RRP £28,085Avg. savings £3,239 off RRP*Used from £12,990
MG MG4

MG MG4

RRP £27,005Avg. savings £6,250 off RRP*Used from £10,490
Omoda 5

Omoda 5

RRP £24,040Avg. savings £1,535 off RRP*Used from £17,990
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New Land Rover Defender Sport: baby SUV hedges bets with EV and hybrid power
New baby Land Rover Defender render - watermarked

New Land Rover Defender Sport: baby SUV hedges bets with EV and hybrid power

The new Land Rover Defender Sport will sit below the existing Defender in both size and price, and our exclusive image previews how it could look
News
17 Jun 2026
New Honda Super-N 2026 review: little EV is fun and full of character
Honda Super-N and Richard Ingram

New Honda Super-N 2026 review: little EV is fun and full of character

Honda's quirky Super-N is compromised on paper, but in reality it's a fun and efficient small EV
Road tests
19 Jun 2026
New BMW i3 on sale now: electric 3 Series finally ready to take on Tesla Model 3
BMW i3 50 xDrive - front 3/4

New BMW i3 on sale now: electric 3 Series finally ready to take on Tesla Model 3

Are you watching Tesla, Polestar, Audi and Mercedes? The new BMW i3 is here setting new standards with its huge 563-mile range
News
18 Jun 2026