Skip advert
Advertisement

Caterham Seven Sprint 2017 review

Caterham's Seven Sprint is great fun and has charm by the bucketload, but you can't have one...

Overall Auto Express rating

4.0

How we review cars
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

As charming as the Seven Sprint is, you can’t have one, because all 60 examples have been sold. Almost £28,000 may be a lot to ask for the dinky Caterham, but the Sprint is dripping with character and charm that is elsewhere hard to come by. Fun to drive and great to look at, the Sprint is a fitting tribute to the 60-year-old roadster.

Advertisement - Article continues below

A lot has changed in the last 60 years, but with the exception of a new name, the Caterham Seven really hasn’t. It has remained an open-top, rear-wheel drive, two-seat roadster for more than half a century, and to mark its 60th birthday, Caterham has launched this: the Seven Sprint.

Originally planned for launch in the mid-1960s, the Sprint never made it past the drawing board. But Caterham has dusted off the plans and brought 60 limited edition versions to the market – at £27,995 a pop.

That’s a huge price to pay for a Caterham – especially one with a 660cc, 80bhp three-cylinder engine – but it hasn’t deterred buyers, as all 60 examples were snapped up within a week of the car being officially announced.

Best track day cars

That money buys you a Caterham that looks like no other; flared front wings, a polished exhaust and individual rear lights combine with period touches such as the cream wheels, polished hubcaps and a British Racing Green paint, to create something truly unique. 

Folding yourself over the sill, under the roof and into the driver’s seat would be easier as a contortionist, but once you’re there you won’t want to get out. The cabin in beautifully simplistic and bursting with vivid red leather, while the wooden steering wheel and short-throw, chrome gear knob are delightful retro additions.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

CX-3

2018 Mazda

CX-3

26,417 milesAutomaticPetrol2.0L

Cash £14,400
View CX-3
Sportage

2023 Kia

Sportage

12,878 milesAutomaticPetrol1.6L

Cash £28,100
View Sportage
Qashqai

2022 Nissan

Qashqai

6,803 milesAutomaticPetrol1.3L

Cash £20,897
View Qashqai
5008

2022 Peugeot

5008

27,544 milesManualDiesel1.5L

Cash £20,197
View 5008

Under the bonnet you’ll find the same turbocharged engine and five-speed manual gearbox as fitted to the existing Caterham 160. With just 80bhp and only 107Nm, the numbers aren’t exactly exciting, but weighing just 490kg makes it fairly lively – taking 6.9 seconds to sprint from 0-62mph.

The engine only really starts to pull above 3,000rpm, but it’s happy to hang on until 7,000rpm as long as you don’t mind the rather loud and boomy exhaust note. The gearing is incredibly short, so you find yourself rifling through gears at a frantic rate – but the tight and weighty throw make it no hardship.

Best sports cars

Weighing as little as it does means the Sprint rides with compliancy at lower speeds, but hit a pothole on a dual carriageway and it’ll feel and like you’ve hit a landmine. Motorways make superminis feel like giants next to the pint-sized proportions of the Sprint, too.

On tight and twister B-roads is where the Caterham comes alive. The steering is brimming with feedback and reacts instantly to every input. Skinny tyres serve up decent bite but even when the limits of grip are breached, everything remains controllable and user-friendly. 

It’s a joy to drive, and there’s little else on the road that can offer the same back to basics driving experience as a Caterham. You’ll be having so much fun, in fact, that you’ll forget about the long and painful process of getting out once reach your destination.

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Omoda 5

Omoda 5

RRP £23,990Avg. savings £1,949 off RRP*
Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £37,230Avg. savings £3,710 off RRP*Used from £15,470
Hyundai Tucson

Hyundai Tucson

RRP £29,820Avg. savings £4,975 off RRP*Used from £13,057
MG MG4

MG MG4

RRP £26,995Avg. savings £7,887 off RRP*Used from £12,599
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Dacia’s baby EV due in 12 months with a tiny £15k price tag
Dacia £15k EV design render

Dacia’s baby EV due in 12 months with a tiny £15k price tag

Dacia's new model will be developed in double-quick time, and it'll be built in Europe to avoid China tariffs
News
24 Jul 2025
MG4 and MGS5 EV prices slashed in reply to Government Electric Car Grant
MG4 - rear

MG4 and MGS5 EV prices slashed in reply to Government Electric Car Grant

In order to boost sales, MG is announcing its own a £1,500 grant for some of its EVs
News
21 Jul 2025
Renault will “stick to the plan” as it hits number 2 in Europe
Renault 5 - front static

Renault will “stick to the plan” as it hits number 2 in Europe

Renault has no plans to fight Volkswagen for sales supremacy, despite huge growth in EV sales due to new Renault 5
News
23 Jul 2025