Like with many performance cars, the reigning monarch of hot hatches tends to be defined by whichever holds the front-wheel drive lap record around the Nürburgring Nordschleife in Germany.
Three cars have vied for the title over the past decade, with various versions of the Volkswagen Golf GTI, Honda Civic Type R, and Renault Mégane RS trying to one-up each other.
Since March 2023, the FL5 Civic Type R sat atop the tree after claiming top honours from Renault’s lightweight Trophy-R. The fifth-gen Mégane being reinvented as an electric family car meant Renault was never going to return serve.
But now, almost a decade after it last held the record, Volkswagen has come back with a vengeance and claimed the new front-wheel drive record around the ‘Green Hell’ with its Mk8.5 GTI Edition 50.
Driven by professional racer and Volkswagen development driver Benjamin Leuchter, the GTI Edition 50 managed a time of 7:44.523 around the 20.832km circuit.

It’s a marked improvement on the car’s previous best time of 7:46.130 set in June 2025, which was already enough to certify it as the fastest Volkswagen production vehicle around the legendary track.
As an indicator of how tight the margins are with these kinds of lap records, the Type R it beat managed a time of 7:44.881 while the Trophy-R rounds out the podium with a 7:45.399 lap.
To also put that time into perspective, some cars it’s faster than include the Lamborghini Murciélago, Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG, and even an original Bugatti Veyron driven by Australia’s own Wheels magazine in 2005.
Showing what esteemed company the GTI Edition 50 finds itself in, it’s only a shade off the pace of cars such as the Porsche Carrera GT, Ferrari F430 Scuderia, and Lexus LFA. Not bad company to be in.

Created to honour 50 years of the Golf GTI, the GTI Edition 50 is clearly far more than the usual badges-and-stickers anniversary model. Churning out 239kW from its 2.0-litre turbocharged four-pot, it’s good for the 0-100km/h sprint in just 5.3 seconds en route to a 270km/h top speed.
Sitting 15mm lower than a normal Golf in its standard configuration, the Dark Moss Green Metallic lap record car was equipped with the optional Performance package, dropping the Edition 50’s suspension by a further 5mm along with adding a lightweight R-Performance exhaust and 19-inch forged alloy wheels shod in Bridgestone Potenza Race semi-slick tyres.
Currently, the new front-drive lap record holder is only available to order in select European countries, while 50 examples have been confirmed for our friends across the ditch in New Zealand. It’s yet to be announced whether any will make their way to Australia.
You can watch the Volkswagen GTI Edition 50 carve up the legendary Nürburgring for yourself below.