Latest model
As with all Audi models, the Q2 range has quite a few variables from which to choose, with power outputs ranging from 116bhp to 150bhp, a choice of petrol or diesel engines, manual, seven speed auto or eight-speed CVT gearboxes and four trim levels.
There’s also a vast options list, and given the Q2’s somewhat vibrant colour palette, it invites itself towards personalisation much in the same way that others in the sector, such as the Nissan Juke and MINI Countryman, also do, albeit with a slightly more mature approach.
All Q2s are extremely competent dynamically, despite the SUV-style raised ride height. You can choose between two or four-wheel-drive, but unless you live in a remote area or regularly traverse wet grass, the front-drive model is perfectly capable of delivering reassuring and impressive grip.
Go for the range-topping S-Line model and you can improve the handling yet further, though only at the expense of ride quality. All models also get Audi’s ‘Progressive Steering’, which alters the steering ratio as you drive, making it much lighter around town and stiffer and sharper when driving more quickly.
Value for money
The Q2 is a desirable car—and Audi knows it. What that means to the buyer is that there aren’t many deals on the table, and those that do exist do so against a backdrop of fairly high prices to start with.
At £22,160, the entry-level SE model doesn’t look like terrific value, especially when you consider that the price quoted is for the lowest power model with no optional equipment. Start to improve the power output or add on options and suddenly you find yourself into much deeper levels of expenditure. The Q2, then, isn’t cheap, nor does it represent great value for money when you look at what you get for your money—a small car with limited kit, but one that is so fashionable and so desirable that the price is something you may consider to be academic.
Looks and image
Â
In terms of car desirability rankings, the Audi Q2 must be right up there at the top of the class—it boasts one of the most desirable badges attached to a car that’s competing in the fastest growing and most popular area of the car market right now.
As small crossovers usurp compact hatchbacks and superminis as our favourite type of vehicles, they’re becoming more desirable than ever, and the Audi brand has an already robust image to attach to such a vehicle.
It matters not one jot, then, that there are certain angles from where the Q2 looks a bit incongruous —it sits wide and squat, but a fair distance off the ground, which gives it an unusual, albeit not unpleasant stance.
Lower-spec models tend to look a bit under-wheeled inside their chunky arches, though, while those with bigger rims might look happier, but have a less composed ride quality.