What's the difference?
Yes, this is the car that Ferrari said it would never build. In fact, Ferrari Chief Design Officer, Flavio Manzoni told this very publication (albeit way back in 2015) that "Enzo Ferrari would turn in his grave" should the company ever make something other than a two-door sports car.
But I'd advise you not to get too hung up on all of that. Times change, and the automotive world is a very different place compared to five or 10 years ago.
So, yes, this is the first Ferrari SUV (even if the brand steadfastly refuses to call it one). And it’s the first prancing horse with four doors and four seats.
But it’s also the only SUV on the planet (at least, that I’ve ever heard of) that’s powered by a properly screaming naturally aspirated V12 petrol engine.
So, is this Purosangue the world’s most super SUV, and thus worthy of its iconic badge? Or does it only detract from the brand’s impressive performance legacy?
Let’s go find out, shall we?
The Audi SQ8 has had a mid-life refresh but this upper large SUV still offers luxury with its powerful V8 engine that fans know and love, as well as the features you would expect in a top model.
It competes against the Mercedes-AMG GLE and Porsche Cayenne but we’re family testing the SQ8 to see how it handles domestic life.
Keep reading to see what we’ve discovered.
Write the Purosangue off as nothing more than another SUV-sized cash grab at your peril. It's not just the easiest-to-live-with Ferrari ever made, but also, and indisputably, an actual Ferrari, regardless of its body shape.
Note: CarsGuide attended this event as a guest of the manufacturer, with travel, accommodation and meals provided.
The Audi SQ8 isn’t your typical performance SUV. It’s more refined and less flashy. The tech can be more complicated than it needs to be and if you’re wanting that V8 soundscape, you won’t find it here.
However, the handling and on road experience are superb plus you can comfortably haul the family around and look good doing it.
The word ‘SUV’ is a bit like Voldemort around Maranello — as in, he who shall not be named. And if I’m totally honest, I thought the brand’s refusal to acknowledge what they’ve so obviously made here was just marketing guff to protect its performance heritage.
But seeing the Purosangue in the metal has shifted that view a little. Sure, it will compete with models like the Lamborghini Urus, but it doesn’t exactly look like an SUV, does it?
In fact, and this would likely be another dirty word in Ferrari land, it almost looks more like a hot hatch, what with its short rear overhang, swollen body styling and the positioning of each wheel in the furthest possible corners.
But more than that, the Purosangue looks elegant. Aggressive, sure, but still somehow a little understated. And for mine, that’s a huge tick in the positive column.
Unlike some of its competitors, the Purosangue looks like it was designed by adults, for adults, and not by cordial-addled children.
There’s no active aero at work here, with the airflow instead built into the design. Like the openings at either side of the front end, which channel air past the front tyres, or the positioning of the rear spoiler, which pushes air down over the rear windscreen so effectively there's apparently no need for a rear windscreen wiper.
Traditionally, interiors have not been Ferrari’s strongest suit, but the Purosangue is a comfortable and premium space to spend time, and the seats and the steering wheel especially, look fantastic.
The tech, though, isn’t perfect. Some of it (like the haptic Engine Start button) is an awesome addition, but while the twin screens for driver and passenger look good, the technology is a little clunky, and simply not as smooth as using a single, centrally mounted screen.
The SQ8 is a gorgeous coupe-style SUV that looks purposeful and poised with its balanced proportions and wide stance. It’s stands apart from its siblings thanks to the S-styled nose treatment and our test model's black accent package makes the honeycomb grille look even sportier.
The update sees new air intake vents at the front, matrix LED headlights and new chrome exhaust tailpipes.
The upgraded 23-inch alloys with red calipers behind them hint at what’s under the bonnet, as does the Sakhir (sack-heer) Gold paintwork which is aptly named after the one-off Grand Prix race circuit.
The interior looks luxuriously appointed with the black Valcona leather upholstery and the dash is headlined by three high-end technology screens. The SQ8 also gets sport seats featuring a quilted design and 'S' badging but there’s not much else separating it from its siblings.
Audi fans will love the the SQ8's more understated interior but newcomers might be surprised it's not as flashy as some of its rivals.
Not the kind of thing you’d normally care about in a Ferrari review, I know, but then this isn’t a normal Ferrari.
So, let’s focus on the back seat for a moment. The Purosangue is a strict four seater. Asked why not just install a bench backseat for more family-friendly practicality, the brand had a quality answer locked and loaded.
The reason, it says, is because a car in this price bracket needs to instil a sense of dignity in every seat, and by installing three across the back row, you don’t just ruin the middle seat, but the two window seats as well, because then everyone is uncomfortable.
It make sense, right? Even if I still harbour suspicions that, by installing just the four seats in the Purosangue, it moves it just a little further from that dreaded SUV tag.
Either way, there is more space in the rear of the Purosangue than you might expect by looking at it. Each rear seat rider can stretch out, with more than enough head and legroom.
And while there, they can access their seat functions and climate control settings through a nifty pop-up rotary dial (front seat riders get one, too).
The rear doors open automatically with a long pull on a lever at the base of the window. Ferrari says the rear-hinged doors serve two purposes, the first being that they allow easier access to the rear seats, and the second being that they look much cooler than regular, boring doors.
The engineers, though, concede making them a reality was a nightmare, with the brand replacing three fastening points with a single massive hinge that emerges from the rear of the body.
There’s more practicality on offer here, too, courtesy of a 473-litre boot space (and more if you flatten the back seats), with a flat load space, and hidden storage beneath it.
The Purosangue measures in at 4973mm in length, 1589mm in height, and 2028mm in width, and it rides on a new spaceframe chassis bespoke to this model.
The upper large SUV tag certainly makes sense when it comes to cabin space because there's a lot of it. Both rows enjoy ample head- and legroom and access is great thanks to wide door apertures and high ground clearance.
Comfort is high with well-padded seats and thanks to the Sensory Package all but the middle back seater get some luxury extras.
The centre rear position has compromised legroom courtesy of the transmission tunnel, so it's best for a kid. However, the front seats take the cake with their massage, heat and cooling functions and adjustable supports.
Amenities are great throughout the car and the extendable sun visors, rear electric sunshades, soft-close doors and four-zone climate control clinch the practicality deal.
Individual storage is a bit sparse up front with two cupholders, a drink bottle holder in each door and a shallow middle console that realistically only fits a phone.
The glove box is a great size. I can fit my handbag in it, but there are not a lot of areas to pop your smaller items in.
Individual storage is a bit better in the rear as you get two big map pockets, a drink bottle holder in each door, plus two cupholders in the fold-down armrest - so it feels like you have more places for your bits and pieces.
Technology looks amazing but overwhelming to use until you wrap your head around it all. The haptic feedback also gets tired fast. The built-in satellite navigation is super simple while the head-up display and digital instrument cluster feature pull through directions, which is handy.
Charging options are good with each row getting two USB-C ports and a 12-volt socket but the front also enjoys a wireless charging pad. The pad is slow to charge, though, and left my iPhone feeling super hot whenever it was used.
The boot is a good size at 605L and easy to access, too. The sloping roof means larger items have to sit flush with the seats but you shouldn’t have to worry for road trips.
The back seat has a 40/20/40 split which opens up storage options and this model has a powered tailgate.
How much the Purosangue actually costs is something a moot point. Officially, it starts at $728,000, before all your on-road costs.
But Ferrari says every Purosangue will go through its personalisation, 'Atelier' or 'Tailor Made' programs, meaning no two vehicles will be exactly alike, adding significant cost to the sticker price.
But perhaps the biggest issue is that you can’t actually buy one. Ferrari paused orders globally in November last year as it realised its factory capacity had been exhausted by demand.
Right now, all it can say is that, should you want one, you should speak to your dealer, while warning that average global wait times are in excess of 18 months.
Further complicating matters is the fact the brand has issued a production cap on the Purosangue, with the SUV not to exceed 20 percent of Ferrari’s total production volume.
The idea is two-fold. One, Ferrari’s production capacity is limited, and so freeing up space on a factory line isn’t easy. And two, unlike its Italian competition, Ferrari wants to remain Ferrari, not the Purosangue company.
So, this newcomer will produce incremental growth without dominating the entire line-up.
The brand is holding triple-figure orders and expressions of interest in Australia, and though it’s not sure how many cars we’ll actually get, they will begin arriving before the end of the year.
Ferrari in Australia is also yet to confirm exactly what local customers will get, but standard fare internationally includes 22-inch (front) and 23-inch (rear) alloys, leather-and-Alcantara seating (now made from 68 percent recycled materials) in both rows, twin screens (one in the instrument cluster for the driver, and another mounted in the dash directly in front of the passenger), standard Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, a 21-speaker Burmester stereo, automatic-opening rear doors and an automatic boot, seat and steering wheel heating, and an in-seat massage function.
You also get an engine that could power a small city, but let’s circle back to that, shall we?
There are three fuel-based variants for the Q8 and the model on test is the top-spec SQ8 TFSI quattro. Its mid-life refresh has seen a price hike of $10,015, bringing it's before on-road costs price to $178,815.
Our test vehicle has also been fitted with a few extras, like a 'Sensory Package' ($14,400) which includes a black headliner, upgraded 23-speaker Bang & Olufsen 3D surround sound system, massage function for the front seats, heat function for the rear outboard seats, electric sunshades for the rear row and an air-quality perfume function.
Also fitted are various black and matt carbon accents across/inside the body for a total of $5400, optioned 23-inch alloy wheels ($3000) and specialised 'Sakhir Gold Metallic' paintwork for $1600. Which brings the total MSRP price tag to $203,215.
Even with all of these extras, the SQ8 is still the most affordable performance SUV compared to its nearest rivals as the Porsche Cayenne GTS starts from $212,600 MSRP and the Mercedes-AMG GLE 63 outstrips them both at $272,300 MSRP.
As you'd expect the standard features list is robust for the SQ8 and includes premium features like a panoramic sunroof, electric front seats with heating/cooling and memory functions, full-leather upholstery, soft-close doors and a heated steering wheel.
There is a bunch of high-end technology throughout which includes a colour head-up display, 10.1-inch touchscreen multimedia system, 8.6-inch climate control panel, 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster, satellite navigation, wired/wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, digital radio, four USB-C ports, three 12-volt sockets and a wireless charging pad.
Practical features include keyless entry and start, rain-sensing windscreen wipers, dusk-sensing LED headlights, a powered tailgate, adaptive air-suspension and four-zone climate control.
Overall, not a bad list of features for this part of the market and you won't be left wanting.
Nothing but Ferrari’s best here, with a mid-front mounted V12 engine providing the power, and plenty of rapid forward momentum.
This naturally aspirated 6.5-litre monster produces a total 533kW at 7750rpm and 716Nm at 6250rpm – and climbs to a screaming 8250rpm.
It channels that power to all four wheels via an eight-speed dual-clutch automatic, and a compact and front-mounted power transfer unit that calls the front tyres into action.
It’s a clever solution that allows the Purosangue the grip of all-wheel drive when you’re in fourth gear or below, reverting to rear-wheel-drive at higher speeds.
The reasoning is that you get the lower-speed grip without requiring a heaver permanent AWD solution.
There are more clever things at play here, too. Like a new 'Active Suspension' system that replaces the need for anti-roll bars with motorised adaptive dampers.
Each corner has an electric actuator that can then individually stiffen or soften the suspension as required to keep the Purosangue flat when cornering, or supple on bad road surfaces.
You can also lift or lower the ride height slightly, including for launch control which flatness the Purosangue for maximum aero slipperiness.
Our test vehicle has a 4.0-litre, twin-turbo petrol V8 engine that produces 373kW and 770Nm. That means it sits in the middle of its rivals in terms of outputs with the Mercedes being top-dog with its 450kW/850Nm combo.
Still... the SQ8 is no dainty flower when it comes to power delivery and has an impressive 0-100km/h sprint time of just 4.1 seconds.
The SQ8 is a full-time all-wheel drive with an eight-speed auto transmission and the whole engine combo delivers a powerful but elegant on-road experience.
If there’s a fly in this Ferrari’s ointment, we’ve found it. Big V12 engines mean big fuel use, and the Purosangue will require a claimed 17.3L/100km on the combined cycle.
Be warned, though, the Ferrari’s accelerator calls to your right foot like a siren song luring sailors to the rocks, and should you get aggressive with it, I’d suspect your fuel figures to be even higher.
The C02 emissions are pegged at 393g/km.
You might expect a lower score than seven for this section, and I take your point. But for mine, you're buying a vehicle with a huge V12 engine, so you probably know what you're in for, right?
The official combined (urban/extra-urban) fuel cycle figure is 11.9L/100km, which is lower than its rivals.
My real world usage sits at 12.3L/100km after a mix of open-road and urban driving.
This result is decent for a performance SUV but expect it to be thirsty in an urban environment as the on-board gauge hit the mid-20s in the city.
Based on the large 85L fuel tank theoretical driving range is 714km and around 690 using our real-world result. Respectable for a performance SUV but not as good as some family SUVs.
There’s a reason most supercars aren’t daily drivers, and it’s not always just a financial one.
It’s because they’re the most specialist tools in the automotive toolbox, usually engineered to attack race tracks and alpine roads, but not the school run or bumper-to-bumper traffic.
But you put up with it — the too-firm ride, the questionable ergonomics — because when you do land upon the kind of road your car was built for, any other inconvenience vanishes like traces of smoke from a chimney.
Which is exactly what makes the Purosangue such an interesting proposition, because here is a Ferrari that will likely be driven more, and for longer spells, than any Ferrari to have come before it, but it still needs to excite the senses on the right road.
So has Ferrari pulled it off? In a word, yes.
Honestly, when you’re just tootling around it’s easy to forget you’re driving a supercar.
That V12 engine falls silent, the exhaust is almost non-existent (owing largely to the sound deadening of the cabin – to really hear this beast at full roar you want to crack a window, or find a tunnel), and the suspension (each driving mode has two suspension settings, medium and soft, allowing for some serious fine-tuning of the ride comfort) floats across most road surfaces.
It feels much like any other premium SUV, and not one with a nuclear power plant lurking just ahead of the dashboard.
Because there is a Hyde to this Jekyll, and it arrives when you dial up the sportiness, or get a little too heavy with the accelerator. Then that big V12 roars into life, along with the exhaust, and suddenly you’re very much behind the wheel of Ferrari once again.
Engage launch control and you can feel the Purosangue hunker down, dropping lower onto the wheels and readying for action. Flatten your right foot, and 100km/h arrives in a claimed 3.3 seconds, with 200km/h flashing by in 10.6 seconds.
But there is a quirk here, and that is that the Purosangue doesn’t always feel blisteringly fast. It's powerful, sure, and plenty quick, too, it's just that somehow it doesn't always feel quite as fast as the spec sheet suggests.
Maybe it’s the theatre, or all in my mind, but I reckon the best way to experience the all-out performance is by taking over the gearing yourself, and listening to the machine-gun-popping of the rev limiter before squeezing the paddle shifter, to truly feel like you're unlocking every ounce of performance on offer.
Is it the sharpest Ferrari ever built? Obviously not, and even a carbon-fibre roof can’t compensate for the over 2.0-tonne weight here.
But I promise, should you find yourself on a twisting road, the Purosangue can paint a supercar-sized smile on your face just the same.
The steering isn't quite as sharp as it might be in a true supercar (I suspect its been softened to make the Purosangue more comfortable on freeways and over longer distances), but it still inspires plenty of confidence, while the the rear-wheel-steering helps tuck you nearly into corners before that big engine drags you out the other side, that operatic exhaust bellowing along with you.
A real Ferrari? You bet.
The SQ8 delivers on power because it’s effortless to get up to speed and the pick up is super responsive when the start/stop function is turned off (otherwise there can be some lag).
The engine doesn’t sound like a big and grumbly V8, though. There are some growls but it’s mainly when you turn the engine on and not to be obnoxious about it but if you're in a V8, you want to hear it as it’s part of the fun of having a big bruiser engine like this!
What doesn’t help the V8 soundscape is the fact the cabin sounds like a noise-cancelling headphone inside. There is a small hum from road noise but it’s pretty darn quiet. Almost EV quiet at times but that means the driving experience leans more towards refined and elegant rather than sporty and fun.
The SQ8's handling is great - super direct steering, stable in corners and well-rounded passenger comfort when it comes to suspension.
You still get road feedback, which I like as a driver, but it’s not too stiff thanks to the adaptive suspension.
The SQ8 is a large car but you wouldn’t know it when it comes to parking. The 360-degree view camera is clear and the dynamic guidelines help you to position this big unit even the smallest of car parks.
The Ferrari Purosangue has not, and surely will not, be independently crash tested, but does arrive with a pretty stacked suit of safety kit, including AEB, adaptive cruise control, lane keeping assist, blind-spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert, traffic sign recognition and hill descent control.
The SQ8 has a maximum five-star ANCAP safety rating from testing done in 2019 and features eight airbags, including side chest airbags for both rows. It's common to only find the latter in the front – so that’s great for a family car.
The SQ8 scored well across its ANCAP individual protection segments, scoring 93 per cent for adult occupant, 88 per cent for child occupant, 71 per cent for vulnerable road user and 75 per cent for its safety assist.
The SQ8 has a long list of safety features including blind-spot monitoring, safe exit warning, driver attention monitor, fatigue reminder, matrix LED lights, SOS call, forward collision warning, rear collision warning, rear cross-traffic alert, lane keeping/departure aids, tyre pressure monitoring, adaptive cruise control (with stop & go and lane keeping), park assist and a 360-degree reversing camera plus front and rear parking sensors.
The rear row features two ISOFIX child seat mounts and three top tether anchors.
The SQ8 has AEB with car, pedestrian, and cyclist detection and is operational from 10 – 250km/h but it is usual to see this system operate from as low as 4.0km/h.
Every Ferrari arrives with a three-year, unlimited kilometre warranty, with the option of extending coverage for up to seven years at the point of purchase.
Also available is Ferrari's 'Power20' coverage, which covers the engine, gearbox, transmission and all other major mechanical and electronic components for 20 years from the point of purchase.
The recommended service interval is 12 months/20,000km, and there's also a seven-year capped-price servicing program, called '7-Year Genuine Maintenance', which allows you to prepay for all your servicing needs.
The SQ8 comes with a five-year/unlimited km warranty, which is a normal term for the class.
It also comes with capped servicing for five years or up to 75,000km and averages $920 per service, which is very good for the segment.
Servicing intervals are reasonable at every 12-months or 15,000km, whichever occurs first.