Skip advert
Advertisement

McLaren MP4-12C

We get an exclusive UK drive in McLaren's MP4-12C supercar, taking it up the hill at the historic Goodwood Festival of Speed

Find your McLaren 12C
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

Our brief yet explosive encounter with the MP4-12C was enough to prove the 458 Italia’s crown is under threat. But while their performance figures and price are similar, the gulf between them is greater than you’d think. Yes, the McLaren is incredibly fast, but it’s set apart by its superb ride. For the company’s first independent road car in nearly 20 years, it’s astonishing.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Driving any model at Goodwood is an experience to be savoured. But negotiating the famous West Sussex hillclimb in the world’s newest, most advanced supercar is the opportunity of a lifetime.

Blasting up a 1.1-mile driveway at the Festival of Speed preview day is unlikely to tell us too much about McLaren’s first true road model since 1994’s F1. Yet it will help answer one question: is this better than Ferrari’s 458 Italia?
 

[[{"type":"media","view_mode":"content_narrow","fid":"69314","attributes":{"alt":"","class":"media-image"}}]]
 

Our run begins in a lengthy queue at the start line. Normally we’d be waiting impatiently, but here it’s the perfect opportunity to get acquainted with the MP4-12C. While the 458’s cockpit is superbly finished, its steering wheel is cluttered with indicators, suspension settings, a starter button and five-stage Manettino traction control dial. For ease of use it can’t match the McLaren, where the wheel is just a wheel!

What’s more, the ventilation controls are set in the door to free up the centre console for a large touchscreen and a pair of three-stage dials to adjust the handling and powertrain. From the outside, the MP4-12C certainly doesn’t trump the 458’s aggressive elegance. But even surrounded by other attention-grabbing supercars, its restrained styling still packs a punch.

We’re next to go! Helmet on the engine is idling smoothly and the handling and powertrain dials are turned to the most extreme ‘Track’ setting. The flag falls and we drop the throttle. Two upshifts and a few blurry seconds later, a number of things have become clear.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

Golf GTD

2019 Volkswagen

Golf GTD

100,000 milesAutomaticDiesel2.0L

Cash £12,495
View Golf GTD
C5 Aircross

2023 Citroen

C5 Aircross

28,663 milesManualPetrol1.2L

Cash £14,897
View C5 Aircross
3 Series

2022 BMW

3 Series

30,268 milesAutomaticPetrol2.0L

Cash £18,000
View 3 Series
Kuga

2023 Ford

Kuga

35,613 milesAutomaticPetrol2.5L

Cash £17,100
View Kuga

This car has a fantastic deep-chested roar, but can’t compete with a 458’s shriek. The gearbox, however, is a masterpiece: smooth in auto mode and ferociously quick on manual shifts. The paddles are two-stage as well: pull half way to prepare the next cog, all the way to engage it.

Under full braking – which is phenomenally strong due to ceramic discs and a pop-up air brake – if you hold the left paddle, it automatically selects the perfect gear to match the engine speed.

For now, we focus on keeping this £168,500 car on the road. At the first right-hander we find the light steering is brimming with feel, if not quite as quick as the 458’s. Then it’s back on the accelerator to rocket up a long straight.

It’s about now that we realise just how quick this McLaren is – faster than anything this side of a Bugatti Veyron. The figures back it up, too – but right now, our squashed organs and sweaty palms tell us all we need to know.

Something doesn’t quite add up here, though. Through corners, the McLaren stays just as flat as a 458, but on the straight bits it rides beautifully. It’s all down to a new hydraulic suspension set-up which does without anti-roll bars, so allowing each wheel to move completely independently.

In bends it senses the car trying to roll, firms up the corner in question and keeps everything fast and level. As we cross the line, it’s hard to believe our meeting is already over, but the unparalleled mix of pace, comfort and drama has got under our skin. Is the MP4-12C better than a 458?

On paper, yes – but in reality, it’s too close to call. We’ll have to wait until we drive both cars head-to-head for the definitive verdict.

Rival: Ferrari 458 Italia
Jaw-dropping styling, Enzo-beating pace and razor-sharp handling... the 458 has it all. Our reigning Performance Car of the Year is the best V8-engined Ferrari ever.

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Volkswagen Golf

Volkswagen Golf

RRP £25,235Avg. savings £2,502 off RRP*Used from £11,800
Renault Clio

Renault Clio

RRP £16,160Avg. savings £2,417 off RRP*Used from £7,195
Audi A3

Audi A3

RRP £26,295Avg. savings £4,213 off RRP*Used from £10,995
Dacia Spring

Dacia Spring

RRP £14,995Avg. savings £4,636 off RRP*
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

New XPeng X9 seven-seater ‘starship’ will beam down to the UK this summer
XPeng X9 - front static

New XPeng X9 seven-seater ‘starship’ will beam down to the UK this summer

Chinese brand’s “starship of tomorrow” has rear-wheel steering, adaptive air-suspension and some of the fastest charging speeds of any EV around
News
30 Jan 2026
Long-term test: Audi A5 Avant TDI quattro S Line
Audi A5 Avant - front 3/4

Long-term test: Audi A5 Avant TDI quattro S Line

First report: after enjoying an A3, our VP takes a step up Audi’s range
Long-term tests
29 Jan 2026
New 2026 Mercedes S-Class facelift: luxury limo redefines car tech
Mercedes S-Class facelift - front

New 2026 Mercedes S-Class facelift: luxury limo redefines car tech

The definitive luxury limousine has been overhauled with significant changes inside, outside and under the metal
News
29 Jan 2026