2019 Rolls-Royce Wraith Reviews
You'll find all our 2019 Rolls-Royce Wraith reviews right here. 2019 Rolls-Royce Wraith prices range from $360,690 for the Wraith to $705,430 for the Wraith Black Badge.
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Rolls-Royce dating back as far as 2014.
Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Rolls-Royce Wraith, you'll find it all here.
Rolls-Royce Reviews and News
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2015 BMW 7 Series redefines the meaning of luxury
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By Paul Gover · 11 Sep 2015
There is so much convenience in today’s basic cars, even something like a Kia Cerato, that the top-end brands are changing their approach to luxury.

Rolls-Royce Dawn convertible revealed
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By John Carey · 11 Sep 2015
Huge, heavy... and hot, that's Dawn. She's the latest addition to the line-up of Britain's legendary luxury brand.

2015 Shanghai motor show highlights maturing Chinese car industry
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By Joshua Dowling · 24 Apr 2015
It is the biggest motor show on the planet, in every sense of the word.The site map for the Shanghai motor show looks straightforward enough. With its simple clover-leaf design, at first it appears there are four halls to cover.Then you discover the floorspace of each hall is the size of the MCG – and split in two sections under one enormous roof. So, eight enormous halls then.But if you fold out the map – as I did, on day two – you then learn there are two levels to every hall.So instead of covering two of eight halls on day one, it turns out I only made it to two out of gigantic 16 halls. Needless to say, the joint is huge.China overtook the US car market in 2009 and hasn't missed a gear since.So many Chinese can now afford a car that it has caused instant gridlockMore than 24.8 million new vehicles were delivered in China last year (compared to 1.1 million in Australia and 16.5 million in the US) and sales are still powering, up by more than 13 per cent in 2015.The country with 1.35 billion people is rapidly developing a middle class, and they want to switch from two wheels to four.So many Chinese can now afford a car that it has caused instant gridlock; the government often alternates days which allow cars with odd or even licence plates on the road.In Shanghai, a city of more than 23 million people, equivalent to the entire population of Australia, the traffic is so bad that the best way to get to the motor show is by train.We found this out the hard way, having taken more than two hours to travel by bus from the downtown hotel to the motor show site on day one; the train ride the next day took 20 minutes. So much for celebrating the car.But even the Shanghai train system, although infinitely more efficient than Australia's network, is suffering from growing pains.The local transport website helpfully points out that an English translation version of the train map is not available as a PDF because the city is adding so many new lines that it doesn't fit on an A4 sheet of paper.China is a place with big ambitions. While the Chinese auto industry is booming, that is largely because each of the top-selling brands have their hands held by a foreign car company.If you want to build and sell cars in China, the government mandates you must partner with a local manufacturer – and split the profit down the middle.You name the brand, and they're either already in China, or about to set up shopIt's one of the reasons China's middle class economy is growing so fast, the government ensures the wealth is distributed far and wide.When a foreign auto company turns up to start building cars, they are told which provinces they will set up their factories in, and which company will partner them.That's why you see some unusual acronyms after household names such as General Motors, Volkswagen, Toyota, Ford, Hyundai, Kia, Mazda, Mercedes-Benz, and BMW.The list goes on. You name the brand, and they're either already in China, or about to set up shop.Meanwhile, demand for imported luxury cars is so strong that brands such as Ferrari, Lamborghini, Porsche and Rolls-Royce now list China as their biggest market.At a previous motor show, Rolls-Royce had to install a credit card machine because so many cashed-up Chinese buyers wanted to drive home in the display cars on the spot.Just as Chinese have had to adjust to understanding the difference between a motor show and a dealership (Rolls-Royce took their deposits but delivered the cars later), the global industry has had to change its approach to such an important market and has developed models exclusively for sale in China.At the other end of the scale, dozens of China-only car brands are trying to leave their mark on the local market and, eventually, the world.Many of these brands are the ones responsible for the copycat cars that have been the butt of jokes in recent years.There was the fake Mini, the sincere form a flattery to the Range Rover Evoque, the BMW X5 nose that appeared to be grafted onto what was apparently a tribute to the Toyota Prado.However, apart from a handful of cars (one that had a Ferrari nose and a Porsche Cayman rear end, and another that looked like a Volkswagen Touareg SUV, except it wasn't) this year's show stood out for its lack of counterfeit cars.Indeed, the domestic Chinese car makers are showing signs of maturing.Would I rush out and buy a Chinese car? Not yetThe similarities in foreign design are still there, but they are much more muted and on their way – hopefully – to their own look.The smart brands are hiring foreign design talent (there appears to have been a raid on Audi, BMW and VW designers recently) to help nurture the extremely creative Chinese designers coming up through the system.But would I rush out and buy a Chinese car? Not yet. Probably not for several years. Maybe even a decade.It should be pointed out that, just as with big foreign brands, not all Chinese cars are created equally. Some are most certainly better than others.The Chinese automotive industry absolutely knows how to manufacture every single part that goes into making a carThat said, even the big improvers of the Chinese domestic brands are still a long way from challenging the German, Japanese, North American and South Korean brands on quality, safety, refinement and efficiency.The Chinese automotive industry absolutely knows how to manufacture every single part that goes into making a car – and give it the appearance of quality.But the world's biggest car market is still yet to hone the skills to design and engineer vehicles from the ground up to truly international standards.In the meantime, foreign design and engineering talent will be able to enjoy the China boom.Indeed, even Australia is getting a slice of the action.The new China-only Ford Taurus unveiled this week was created from the ground up in Australia.Ford employs 1500 designers, engineers and mechanics (twice as many employed on the production line that will fall silent next year) at Broadmeadows to develop cars for Ford of China.The only difference is the factory is 8000km away, rather than next door.

Rolls-Royce SUV spied testing | spy shots
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By Paul Gover · 17 Apr 2015
The race to build the world's costliest and most outrageous SUV just shifted into high gear.
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Rolls-Royce Ghost 2015 review
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By Paul Gover · 20 Mar 2015
Paul Gover road tests and reviews the Rolls-Royce Ghost with specs, fuel consumption and verdict.

Rolls-Royce confirms 4WD plans
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By Joshua Dowling · 21 Feb 2015
Rolls-Royce has finally given in to the global boom in SUV sales and will build a 4WD likely to cost in excess of $1 million apiece when it goes on sale in two years.The proud British brand, owned by German car maker BMW since 2003, made the announcement in a letter to customers, but couldn't bring itself to utter "SUV", the global term given to recreational wagons.The first 4WD in Rolls-Royce's 111-year history is still being kept under wrapsInstead Rolls-Royce called the new model "a high-bodied car that delivers supreme luxury yet is effortless to drive...and can cross any terrain".There are no photos of the first 4WD in Rolls-Royce's 111-year history as it is still being kept under wraps.But the Rolls-Royce of SUVs will join the likes of Bentley and Lamborghini who also plan to introduce super-expensive off-roaders, and have unveiled concept cars in the past two years to signal their intentions and gauge customer interest.It's unclear just how far off the beaten track the well-heeled are likely to trek in their new Rolls-Royce 4WD – expected to be powered by a whopping 6.8-litre V12 – but the company insists "many of our discerning customers have urged us to develop this car".The appetite for SUVs is so strong even Mercedes-Benz is going to head upmarket and introduce a mega-dollar Maybach version of its next full-size SUV, the boss of the company Dieter Zetsche told News Corp Australia this week.Sales of SUVs globally have tripled in the past 10 years; in Australia SUVs are the second biggest automotive category after small cars and represent one in three of all new vehicles sold.By developing an SUV, Rolls-Royce is supporting jobs and investment in the regionIn 2003 Australians bought 150,000 SUVs, last year the figure eclipsed 352,000 sales, a new record and a staggering growth of 134 per cent over a period the total new-car market grew by 20 per cent.The announcement of a Rolls-Royce SUV was so significant that David Cameron this week became the first British Prime Minister to visit the company's Goodwood factory.But it seems Prime Minister Cameron didn't get the memo about not calling it an SUV, telling the assembled workers and media: "By developing an SUV, Rolls-Royce is supporting jobs and investment in the region – and we in government will do everything we can to support you".While the Australian car manufacturing industry will close in 2017 – once Ford, Holden and Toyota shutter their factories – in Britain automotive manufacturers have rebounded due to an increase in exports to Europe."What Rolls-Royce is doing here is something our country needs to do more of – manufacturing, designing, investing, era searching and developing, training apprentices, creating an infrastructure," said Prime Minister Cameron.

Winners and losers of 2014
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By Joshua Dowling · 09 Jan 2015
After a couple of record breaking years, the car industry stalled in 2014. Sales of locally built cars continued to slide as we move closer to the shuttering of the local industry.On the flip side, the SUV continues its relentless progress, accounting for one in three new vehicles sold.Well-heeled buyers treated themselves to a record number of luxury cars. Official figures from the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries show 1,113,224 new cars were reported as sold in 2014 - down 2 per cent on the previous year's record.Here's our list of last year's winners and losers.Starting at $19,990 plus on-road costs - the same price as in 1994 - the Corolla was Australia's top-seller for the second year in a row, followed closely by the Mazda3.The Toyota HiLux workhorse was next, one of three utes in the Top 10. Hyundai's i30 small car was fourth and the new Holden Commodore finished fifth despite a sales slide in the last six months.Some importers sharpened their pencils or added more features to heap pressure on the locals . The results were dramatic for some - sales of Honda's Jazz, Subaru's Impreza and Mitusbishi's ASX grew by roughly a third, with the Jeep Grand Cherokee up 28.2 per cent and the Nissan X-Trail up 17.4 per cent.Longstanding import nations Japan, Thailand and South Korea went off the boil yet sales from Europe and the United States grew strongly.SUV sales hit a new high, for the first time accounting for more than 30 per cent of the new-car market.Since 2007, annual SUV sales have grown by more than 150,000 vehicles. "The increase in SUV purchases is a reflection of the versatility these vehicles provide and the increasing range available in the market," says Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries boss Tony Weber.The Mazda CX-5 became only the second SUV in history to make the top 10. Ford's Territory cracked it once, in 2005.As mainstream brands went backwards, most luxury marques posted significant increases. Of the big three, Audi performed the strongest, up 20 per cent, while Mercedes-Benz rallied by 15.8 per cent and BMW was up 10.7 per cent. At the top end, Porsche was up by almost 50 per cent and Rolls Royce nearly 150 per cent."The prices of luxury cars have come down," Weber says, "and they have a wider array of vehicles in different segments, so they're starting to drift down into areas where they weren't historically."Australia is now in its 23rd year of economic growth...it makes a difference to people's standard of living and that's reflected in the car fleet."They're not sexy - and they've been largely left behind by a wave of seven-seat SUVs.A comeback of sorts was due almost entirely to one model, the Honda Odyssey. It's been slammed by some reviewers for its frumpy looks and less than inspiring road manners, but sales of the bigger, more practical model are up by more than 150 per cent.Toyota's Tarago enjoyed a small resurgence and the new Citroen Picasso boosted numbers.Production of locally made vehicles hit a 61-year low with just 100,468 Holdens, Fords and Toyotas sold. In 1953, the tally was 99,133 vehicles, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The bureau also provides the peak figure for the Australian car manufacturing industry, 473,045 vehicles in 1976.In 1960, more than 90 per cent of cars sold in Australia were made locally. In 2014, more than 90 per cent of cars were imported.Eight of the top 10 brands had sales slides, Hyundai and Subaru bucking the trend.The changing of the guard at the top of the charts continued, with Hyundai and Mazda closing the gap on No.2 Holden.Meanwhile, Ford posted its worst sales performance in almost 50 years and its 10th consecutive year of decline.Toyota was the market leader for a record 12th year in a row. It wasn't all good news - the Japanese giant's sales were down for the third consecutive year, 203,498 deliveries, down from a peak of 238,983 in 2008.Once tipped as the next big thing, pint-sized city runabouts hit the skids. Sales of micro cars - including the Mitsubishi Mirage, Holden Barina Spark and Nissan Micra - dropped by 30 per cent. Meanwhile diesel passenger car sales fell by 17 per cent and sales of hybrid cars to private buyers fell by 30 per cent.Australians bought 100,000 fewer passenger cars than in 2007. Eight years ago passenger cars accounted for more than 60 per cent of the market; over the past two years they have slipped below 50 per cent.Mid-sized and large sedans continue to feel the brunt of the switch to SUVs - last year for the first time baby softroaders outstripped mid-sized sedans. Falcon sales were down by more than 40 per cent. Camry sales dropped by 11 per cent.The end of the mining boom and drought in some states have stalled Australia's work utes after years of strong growth. NSW was the only market to grow in 2014, with WA, Qld and Tasmania bearing the brunt of the slowdown. Notable exceptions are Ford's Ranger and the Isuzu D-Max. More sad news for locals: Falcon ute sales dipped by 40 per cent and Holden utes by 6 per cent.Top 10 brands in 2014Toyota 203,501 -- down 5.2 per centHolden 106,092 -- down 5.3 per centMazda 100,704 -- down 2.4 per centHyundai 100,011 -- up 3.1 per centFord 79,703 -- down 8.6 per centMitsubishi 68,637 -- down 4.0 per centNissan 66,025 -- down 14.0 per centVolkswagen 54,801 -- down 0.2 per centSubaru 40,502 -- up 0.8 per centHonda 32,998 -- down 15.9 per centTop 10 cars in 2014Toyota Corolla 43,735 -- up 0.5 per centMazda3 43,313 -- up 2.9 per centToyota HiLux 38,126 -- down 4.5 per centHyundai i30 31,505 -- up 3.0 per centHolden Commodore 30,203 -- up 8.8 per centFord Ranger 26,619 -- up 22.3 per centMitsubishi Triton 24,256 -- down 1.0 per centToyota Camry -- 22,044 down 11.3 per centMazda CX-5 21,571 -- up 7.2 per centVolkswagen Golf 19,545 -- up 10.6 per cent

Rolls-Royce slashes Ghost price by $100,000
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By Joshua Dowling · 11 Nov 2014
Rolls-Royce has slashed the price of its most basic model to, er, a little more than half a million dollars. Want to drive a bargain? Rolls-Royce has slashed $100,000 off the price of its most affordable model, the Ghost sedan. There is just one catch: it will still cost $545,000 (drive-away, no more to pay) or roughly the average price of a house in Australia. The British brand unveiled the new model in Sydney on Tuesday, announcing that it deleted several luxury items to trim $100,000 off the price. RELATED: Will privately imported cars really be cheaper?MORE: Luxury buyers the big winners if import rules change The updated Rolls-Royce Ghost Series II no longer comes standard with lambs wool floor mats, a sunroof, remote central locking, electrically-adjusted rear seats or aircraft-style tables that fold down behind the front seats. Instead, these items are now individual options. “We want to make Rolls-Royce more accessible to younger buyers,” said Paul Harris, the Asia-Pacific regional director for Rolls-Royce cars. The price cut comes as figures show Rolls-Royce sales are on a roll in Australia -- up by a staggering 183 per cent -- from, er, 12 deliveries in the first 10 months of last year, to 34 deliveries nationally so far in 2014. Rolls-Royce insists the price cut is not a knee-jerk reaction to the Federal Government’s plan to allow buyers to import new cars privately. When asked if Rolls-Royce was concerned about the Federal Government’s proposal to allow buyers to privately import new cars to save thousands of dollars, Mr Harris said: “It wouldn’t make a difference, our prices are the same across the region, before taxes are included.” When asked if someone imported a new Rolls-Royce from the UK, where they are significantly cheaper, Mr Harris said: “Then the customer wouldn’t have a warranty. The warranty comes with the car delivered by a dealer in Australia.” It may be prudent to have a factory-backed warranty as almost every Rolls-Royce sold in Australia over the 10 years from 2002 to 2012 was recalled two years ago because the brakes could fail, or the car could catch fire. The car industry is fighting the Federal Government’s plan to allow private buyers to import their own cars. Initially, the government thought it would lead to cheaper prices for mass market models. But numerous studies have shown that prices for cars less than the $61,884 Luxury Car Tax threshold are similar to or cheaper than overseas models. However, a large gap emerges above $100,000, where almost all cars are cheaper in Europe and the USA than in Australia.

Rolls-Royce Wraith drifting on grass | video
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By Matthew Hatton · 02 Oct 2014
Anonymous internet hoons Tax The Rich mow the lawn with a Rolls-Royce Wraith.The last time we heard from Tax the Rich, they were setting a Jag XJ220 on fire. Now they've graced the internet once again with a video of a $645,000 Rolls Royce Wraith being taken...well...out of its comfort zone.If you’ve ever wondered how Rolls’ latest mega coupe would handle a hay bale slalom over the manicured lawns of an English country estate, wonder no more thanks to Tax The Rich.In spite of how well the Roller appears to handle this most unusual of assignments, it is quite unlikely we'll be seeing it line up in Coffs Harbour for Rally Australia next year. Which is unfortunate as that would be quite the spectacle.For the uninitiated, Tax the Rich are rather fond of taking supercars out of their smooth-bitumen native environs and thrashing them around their farm.Along with trying to set it on fire Tax the Rich have taken the XJ220 on a traipse through the countryside, played tug-of-war with a pair of Ferrari F50s, spent a wet afternoon going sideways in an Enzo as well as giving us a taste of what the Ferrari 288 GTO would have been like had Group B rallying not been killed off.

2014 World Car of the Year shortlist
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By Karla Pincott · 14 Feb 2014
The New York motor show in April will see the announcement of which vehicle has won the 2014 World COTY, and there looks to be a tough -- and very varied -- field of finalists.Last year's winner was the Volkswagen Golf, which also took awards in pretty well every country on the globe. But this year it could be anything from the little electric BMW i3 to the offroading Jeep Cherokee and even the Citroen C4 peoplemover, judging by the shortlist.A panel of 69 motoring experts from around the world -- including Carsguide's Paul Gover and National Motoring Editor Joshua Dowling -- will choose the winner from: Audi A3, BMW 4 Series, BMW i3, Cadillac CTS, Citroen C4 Picasso, Ford Fusion/Mondeo, Infiniti Q50, Jeep Cherokee, Lexus IS, Mazda3, Peugeot 308 and Skoda Octavia.The 10 finalists for the 2014 World Luxury Car are the Bentley Flying Spur, BMW X5, Cadillac ELR, Cadillac Escalade, Maserati Ghibli, Maserati Quattroporte, Mercedes-Benz S-Class, Porsche Macan, Range Rover Sport and Rolls-Royce Wraith.Due to a tie, there are 11 finalists for the 2014 World Performance Car: Alfa Romeo 4C, Audi RS 6 Avant, BMW M6 Gran Coupe, Chevrolet Corvette Stingray, Ferrari 458 Speciale, Ford Fiesta ST, Lamborghini Aventador LP700-4 Roadster, Mercedes-Benz A/CLA45 AMG, Porsche 911 GT3, Porsche 911 Turbo and Volkswagen Golf GTI.A separate panel of five 'green' experts will choose the 2014 World Green Car from Audi A3 Sportback e-tron (+ Audi e-gas), BMW i3, Honda Accord Hybrid, Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV and Volkswagen XL1.Similarly, a panel of five design experts will decide on the 2014 World Car Design of the Year, from among: BMW i3, Cadillac CTS, Citroen C4 Picasso, Mazda3, Lexus IS, Mercedes-Benz C-Class and Volkswagen XL1.This reporter is on Twitter: @KarlaPincott