Audi A3 Sedan review: The best car in Category A?

Audi's A3 Sedan: Category A's best car? (Credit: CarBuyer 221)
Audi's A3 Sedan: Category A's best car? (Credit: CarBuyer 221)

SINGAPORE - Can’t afford a big luxury car at the moment? How about a small one, then?

If Category B COEs are now priced beyond your reach, then have a look at Audi’s A3 Sedan, which could well be the best car on sale in Category A right now.

That’s a pretty lofty claim but there’s a good reason for taking it seriously: pretty much whatever you expect from a big Audi, the little A3 seems to deliver.

Constant digging and resurfacing on Upper Thomson Road near CarBuyer HQ have turned the place into a bumpy mess, but the A3 Sedan rides patched-up tarmac with the calmness of a big car. It’s actually more refined than the larger A4 in that respect.

The interior, too, is better than that of some of the larger Audis in many ways. The controls are much more straightforward, for one thing, and the various switches and buttons are all laid out immaculately.

Less is more... when it comes to buttons and switches, anyway (Credit: CarBuyer 221)
Less is more... when it comes to buttons and switches, anyway (Credit: CarBuyer 221)

Somehow there are fewer of them, even though the A3 Sedan isn’t exactly bereft of high-tech features like voice command, Bluetooth phone pairing, climate control and so on.

Okay, the cabin materials in the Hungary-built A3 aren’t a match for the posher stuff used in other Audi models, but they’re still plush enough to let you know that you’re sitting in a premium car.

Overall, it’s a quiet, soothing car to be in. Until you accelerate hard, that is. At that point the engine pipes up and lets you know it’s working hard.

And work hard it does if you’re in a hurry. Indeed, it’s in the engine room where the A3 Sedan is left behind by its larger siblings somewhat, because there you’ll find a 1.4-litre turbo with just 122bhp to its name.

Hindrance or help? The A3's 122bhp engine lets it sneak into Category A, but doesn't provide fireworks (Credit: CarBuyer 221)
Hindrance or help? The A3's 122bhp engine lets it sneak into Category A, but doesn't provide fireworks (Credit: CarBuyer 221)

Two ways to look at that: you could be grateful that it prevents the taxman from making you cough up the money for a Category B COE (since all cars with more than 130bhp are now in that part of the market). Or you could cuss at the powers-that-be, who have basically thrown all the fun-to-drive cars out of Category A.

And to be sure, the A3 Sedan may be many things, but it isn’t much fun to drive. True, the handling’s terrific and the little Audi holds the road supremely well around corners, but there just isn’t enough power to get the pulse racing.

If only the engine were as responsive as the steering. It does muster plenty of low and mid-range pulling power, but you can feel it run out of puff once the revs build up, and then it’s up the the gearbox to keep things huffing along by quickly snatching another ratio.

The seven-speed S tronic gearbox helps keeps things moving along smartly (Credit: CarBuyer 221)
The seven-speed S tronic gearbox helps keeps things moving along smartly (Credit: CarBuyer 221)

Just as well it shifts smartly, though it can no longer be considered smooth by today’s standards.

Yet, there’s an upside to having a tiny engine, and that’s a correspondingly tiny appetite for fuel.

On paper you’re supposed to average 5L/100km, but out in the crowded real world you probably won’t. Yet, we got 7.1L/100km without really trying, which translates to an easy 700km between fill-ups given the A3’s 50-litre tank.

In fact, during our four-day span with the A3 Sedan, watching the miles climb while the fuel gauge refused to budge was the main highlight of driving it. Since you can’t go fast on Singapore roads, you might as well derive pleasure from thinking about how little fuel you’re burning.

It looks pert, but the A3 Sedan's boot holds a useful 425 litres of stuff (Credit: CarBuyer 221)
It looks pert, but the A3 Sedan's boot holds a useful 425 litres of stuff (Credit: CarBuyer 221)

If you can keep your cargo needs to 880 litres or smaller, the A3 Sedan works well, too. Folding the rear seats gives you that much space, and even if you keep them up you have 425 litres to play with in the boot.

Yet, you’ll want to try the rear seating out for yourself in the showroom. It’s not exactly cramped (the A3 Sedan is flattered in that respect by the Mercedes CLA-Class), but the back of the cabin is where you’ll be properly reminded that the Audi is, at its core, a small car.

Roomy enough for kids, yes. For conceiving a kid, no. (Credit: CarBuyer 221)
Roomy enough for kids, yes. For conceiving a kid, no. (Credit: CarBuyer 221)

Conclusions? The A3 Sedan feels like a proper prestige car in that it’s refined, handles brilliantly and it glides over bumpy roads like its springs are made of wispy clouds. The cabin’s quality has you feeling like you made a premium choice, too.

But the engine is both a help (it keeps the Audi in Category A) and a hindrance (it’s no powerhouse), and the tight rear seating should make you really think about how much you value a prestige badge over a car that’s spacious enough for family use.

If a bigger car fits your needs better, there are plenty around for similar money or less. Buy the A3 Sedan if what you want is a nice car.

Fascinating, random fact: The A3 sedan shares no body panels with the A3 Sportback (Credit: CarBuyer 221)
Fascinating, random fact: The A3 sedan shares no body panels with the A3 Sportback (Credit: CarBuyer 221)

NEED TO KNOW Audi A3 Sedan 1.4 TFSI S tronic Ambiente Plus

Engine 1,395cc, 16V, in-line 4
Power 122bhp at 5,000 to 6,000rpm
Torque 200Nm at 1,400 to 4,000rpm
Gearbox 7-speed dual-clutch automatic
Top Speed 211km/h
0-100km/h 9.3 seconds
Fuel efficiency 5.0L/100km (combined)
CO2 116g/km
Price $177,700 with COE
Availability Now

Also consider: Mercedes-Benz CLA 180, Volkswagen Passat 1.4 TSI

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