Skip advert
Advertisement

Lamborghini Aventador

We drive breathtaking new supercar on some of Europe’s finest roads

Overall Auto Express rating

5.0

How we review cars
Find your next car here
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

In years gone by, driving a V12 Lamborghini across a continent would have been bruising, but the Aventador changes that. It still has all the ingredients you’d expect – jaw-dropping looks, scissor doors and an immensely powerful engine – yet is surprisingly refined. The gearbox could be slicker, and the engine only truly finds its voice when really pushed, but this is a genuine Lambo that sets new standards for the firm.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The Bavarian capital of Munich is about 350 miles from Sant’Agata, Italy – the home of Lamborghini – and you need to cross three countries, plus one of the world’s most famous mountain passes, to get there. Take the back route through Garmisch-Partenkirchen, and you also encounter one of Germany’s longest stretches of de-restricted autobahn.

What better route, then, to give the Italian firm’s Aventador its most thorough workout since it was launched earlier this year? We took the keys to a jet black model and strapped ourselves in for the road trip of a lifetime.

Our home for the next two days is behind the wheel, and first impressions are good. The seats are narrow yet comfortable, the all-new 690bhp 6.5-litre V12 engine fires easily and driving the supercar out of the factory gates is a doddle. There’s also a larger luggage space in the nose than the car’s predecessor, the Murcielago, ever had.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

Defender 90

2025 Land Rover

Defender 90

16,039 milesAutomaticDiesel3.0L

Cash £52,500
View Defender 90
Mokka

2019 Vauxhall

Mokka

17,087 milesManualPetrol1.4L

Cash £12,290
View Mokka
i4

2025 BMW

i4

33,662 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £25,342
View i4
i4

2024 BMW

i4

24,039 milesAutomaticElectric

Cash £36,515
View i4

And the surprises keep on coming. It’s a beautiful cruiser – more in keeping with a grand tourer than the brutal supercar it replaces. At 80-90mph, it glides over the road and, in the mildest of its three chassis settings, it gives quiet enough progress for occupants to talk without having to raise their voices.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The V12 hums calmly in the background, and the single-clutch gearbox slips through the ratios seamlessly – although it’s more satisfying to take control yourself via the paddles rather than rely on the ponderous automatic mode.

Our first stop is the beautiful Italian spa town of Merano. As we discover, however, Merano on a Monday afternoon is busier than a shopping centre on Christmas Eve, so we make our escape in search of roads that better suit the Aventador’s pace. The sunny Po Valley is a distant memory as the mountains of the Brenner Pass close in with menacing clouds. The road here starts to climb into the Alps, winding up from Bolzano in beautiful, constant-radius sweeps that run alongside vineyards, ski fields, thick pine forests and huge castles.

It’s now that the Aventador comes alive. Its front end keeps your fingertips full of information, while the rear settles on to the outside of its tyres and begs you to squeeze the throttle earlier out of every corner. As for the ride, what happened to bone-crushing Lambos of the past? The faster it goes, the softer it seems.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

As we near Austria, the heavens open, but this barely bothers the Aventador’s huge cross-section tyres. The only intrusive sounds come from water hitting the wheelarches and the wipers on the glass. Is this V12 simply too quiet for a supercar?

Advertisement - Article continues below

There’s only one way to find out. The town of Garmisch – famous for its enormous ski jump – is where one of the best autobahns in Germany begins, with no speed limit for 46 miles until the outskirts of Munich. It’s not straight or flat, either; more like a multi-lane rollercoaster.

The fast lane is dominated by businessmen in big Audis and Mercedes, and there’s more Porsche 911 GT3 RSs per mile here than anywhere else in the world. Yet even Stuttgart’s finest can’t get close to the Lambo.

Spot a gap in the traffic, and the Aventador hits 155mph with ease. Even on part throttle, it hunkers down and squirts into the distance. At full throttle, anywhere above 6,000rpm, the acceleration scrambles your brain and the engine opens its lungs with a bellow of induction and an orchestra of exhaust notes.

The fastest we managed was 199mph, but the fuss-free way in which it achieved that suggests the 217mph top speed is well within reach. Slowing down is an experience to be savoured, too. The huge carbon-ceramic discs prefer an initial brush to push some weight on to the nose before you really stamp on them.

Our Lambo wasn’t perfect, though. Its black paint required constant cleaning, while the front number plate bracket bent and came off when we drove through an automatic car wash. The other nasty surprise was at the pumps on one part of the route – the Aventador guzzled 65 litres of fuel in just 186 miles for a wallet-shredding average of 13mpg.

But you get what you pay for. No supercar this side of a Bugatti Veyron copes with such high speeds so easily, yet even the Veyron doesn’t have the Aventador’s agility.

The beauty of its technical advances – such as the McLaren MP4-12C-style carbon tub and push-rod suspension – is that Lamborghini doesn’t let you see them. And the scary thing for rivals is that the car is this talented, yet still has room to develop.

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Volkswagen Polo

Volkswagen Polo

RRP £15,255Avg. savings £1,864 off RRP*Used from £8,495
Volkswagen Tiguan

Volkswagen Tiguan

RRP £35,385Avg. savings £2,818 off RRP*Used from £15,480
Skoda Kodiaq

Skoda Kodiaq

RRP £38,140Avg. savings £3,019 off RRP*Used from £10,195
Volkswagen Golf

Volkswagen Golf

RRP £24,625Avg. savings £2,426 off RRP*Used from £11,800
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Forget Netflix, Volkswagen locks horsepower behind paid subscription
Volkswagen ID.3 - front cornering

Forget Netflix, Volkswagen locks horsepower behind paid subscription

Owners can now subscribe to boost the power of their car… for a fee
News
14 Aug 2025
Shock new mid-size Range Rover to get EV power and stunning design
Range Rover Velar EV - front (watermarked)

Shock new mid-size Range Rover to get EV power and stunning design

Mid-size SUV will end the four-year wait for a new JLR model and our exclusive images preview how it could look
News
14 Aug 2025
Best car tyres to buy now 2025: top tyres tested and reviewed
Auto Express Summer Tyre Test 2025 - header image showing a Volkswagen Golf undergoing wet weather cornering

Best car tyres to buy now 2025: top tyres tested and reviewed

Nine brands go head to head in our annual test, but which one should you put on your car?
Product group tests
13 Aug 2025