Lamborghini, Ferrari and Porsche all build cars capable of exceeding 200mph. The cars on this list can do significantly more than that…
Ever since Karl Benz fired up his Patent-Motorwagen for the first time in 1886, the title of theĀ fastest car in the world has been hotly contested.
The Benz could achieve a heady 10mph on a good day, with a lightweight driver and a favourable wind. Today, nearly 140 years of development has pushed the very fastest cars past a monumental 300mph.
The Benzās brave driver could cover just 4.4 metres per second; in 2019, with Andy Wallace behind the wheel, the Bugatti Chiron covered 136 metres per second.
Itās a fearsome prospect, and there are only a handful of places on earth where cars of this calibre can reach their V-max,Ā yet thereās no shortage of car manufacturers vying for top honours.
With that in mind, here are the fastest production road cars by the numbers. And because chasing top speed is such a wild and outlandish pursuit, we’ve gone forĀ more than the usual 10.
1. Bugatti Chiron Super Sport 300+ – 304.7mph
The undisputed top speed champion is once again a Bugatti. Again limited to 30 customer cars, like the Veyron Super Sport, this purpose-built speed machine was taken to 304.773mph by British sportscar veteran Andy Wallace at the VW Groupās Ehra-Lessien test track. Appropriately nicknamed Thor (because it brings the thunder), the Chironās quad-turbocharged W16 engine produced 1578bhp in record-setting guise. It was given a new gearbox with longer ratios, and front and rear bumpers that were optimised for high speed runs.
Read our Bugatti Chiron Super Sport review here
2. SSC TuataraĀ – 295mph
Mired in controversy from the outset, theĀ SSC Tuataraās initial claim of an āofficialā 331mph top speed run was quickly debunked following claims of misleading video āevidenceā and some belated admissions that there may have been āaccuracyā issues with the data logging kit. However, with its twin-turbocharged 5.9-litre V8 developing 1750bhp when running on E85 bio-ethanol fluid, the SSC is clearly no slouch, as owner Larry Caplin proved when he logged a verified 295mph at the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida, USA,Ā in early 2022.
Read more about the SSC Tuatara here
3. Zenvo Aurora Tur – 280mph (claimed)
This quad-turbocharged V12 hypercar also packs three electric motors, giving it a combined output of 1850bhp. That’s enough for it toĀ arrive at 62mph from a standstill in a claimed 2.3sec ā 0.1sec quicker than a Bugatti Chiron Super SportĀ ā and it will go on to hit 280mph, according to Zenvo. Perhaps more impressive is the acceleration of the shorter-geared AgilĀ model, which dispatches a 0-186mph sprint in roughly 10sec.
Read more about theĀ Zenvo AuroraĀ here
4. Koenigsegg Agera RS – 277.8mph
When it used a customer-owned Agera RS to earn the outright world record top speed in 2017, Koenigsegg also took the record for the highest speed ever recorded on a public road. Mercedes had held that particular crown since 1938 when a highly modified W125 Grand Prix car managed 268mph on a closed stretch of Autobahn. As an indication of 80 years of progress, the Agera RS was entirely standard, with the companyās optional 1MW engine package producing a colossal 1360bhp.
TheĀ Koenigsegg Agera RS broke itsĀ own 0-400-0kph record
5. Hennessey VenomĀ F5 – 271.6mph
Unlike its Lotus Elise-based predecessor, theĀ HennesseyĀ Venom F5Ā is a bespoke build from the ground up – a first for the Anglo American firm. Featuring a carbon-fibre tub and aĀ twin-turbocharged 6.6-litre V8 that packs a monstrous 1817bhp and gearbox-shredding 1193lb ft, the F5 sprints from 0-250mph in just 15.5 seconds, which the brand claims is half the time of aĀ Bugatti Chiron. Hennessey also promises a top speed of 341mph, although 271.6mph is as fast as the car has gone so far.
Watch as the Hennessey Venom F5 unleashes its full 1817bhp
6. Hennessey Venom GT – 270.4mph
It was the Venom GT, which used aĀ Lotus ExigeĀ as its foundation, that would go on to steal the record from Bugatti – though not without controversy. In February 2014, on the 3.2-mile space shuttle landing runway at Floridaās Kennedy Space Centre, it recorded a one-way speed of 270.49mph. However, NASA wouldnāt let Hennessey attempt an opposite direction run, and so it didnāt qualify for an official Guinness World Record.
The Hennessey Venom GT raced to 265.6mph back in 2016
7. Bugatti Veyron Super Sport – 267.8mph
Unhappy aboutĀ losingĀ the record ā and at the hands of American upstart SSCĀ ā Bugatti gave the veyron a substantial overhaul in a bid to reclaim the top-speed title. The Veyron Super Sport was limited to just 30 cars,Ā each oneĀ boosted to 1184bhp and featuring anĀ aerodynamicĀ overhauled to cope with the forces generatedĀ beyond 250mph. In July 2010, Bugatti test driver Pierre Henri Raphanel lapped the Ehra-Lessien oval at 267.856mph.
Have some spare cash knocking about? Read ourĀ Bugatti Veyron used car buying guide…
=9. Aspark Owl – 258mph
It seems as if a new hyper-EV is launched every week, but few can lay claim to bragging rights like Japan’s Aspark Owl can. Like the Nevera (below), theĀ Owl claims a clutch of records: at 258mph, it’s the fastest electric car money can buy, and it also recorded 192mph average speed over an eighth of a mile, and 198.12mph in the quarter mile. Aspark says the Owl is fitted with a āuniqueā battery pack and claims a 280-mile range āĀ althoughĀ its 64kWh lithium-ion battery pack is smaller than those fitted by Rimac and Lotus.
The Aspark Owl set its quarter-mile record in the UK in 2023
=9. Rimac Nevera – 258mph
If ever there was a car that put to bed the myth that electric cars are slow, itās the Rimac Nevera. The Croatian hypercar has clocked 258mph, making it the joint-fastest electric car in the world. Itās also the worldās fastest accelerating production car over the quarter mile (8.582sec), can accelerate from 0-62mph in 1.95sec and 0-100mph in 4.3sec. If thereās a caveat, itās that customer cars are limited to ājustā 219mph, but Rimac can override this to achieve V-max at official Rimac events.
Read our Rimac Nevera review here
10. SSC Ultimate Aero TT – 256.1mph
SSC, then known as Shelby Supercars, produced the Ultimate Aero for seven years – not a long lifespan, but long enough to overtake Bugatti in the top speed stakes. In September 2007, the 1183bhp, twin-turbocharged V8 hypercar used a temporarily-closed two-lane stretch of public road near the Washington companyās headquarters to set an average top speed of just over 256mph.Ā
Read ourĀ SSC Ultimate Aero TT first drive reviewĀ from back in 2007
11. Bugatti Veyron 16.4 – 253.8mph
At the time it was the most expensive and most powerful road car ever built, but VW Group bosses wanted theĀ BugattiĀ Veyron to be officially the fastest car in the world as well. An 8.0-litre quad-turbocharged W16 engine produced 987bhp from the factory, with a seven-speed automatic gearbox sending power all four wheels. The car had to be put into its Top Speed Mode for the run, activated with a special key that retracts the rear spoiler, shuts the front air diffuser and lowers the ground clearance to just 6.5cm. The result? A record-breaking 253.8mph at VWās Ehra-Lessien test facility.
Read our roadtest review of the Bugatti Veyron (2005-2015)
12. McLaren Speedtail – 250mph
Thereās an argument that McLaren should have put an end to all top speed bragging rights when its iconic F1 clocked 240.1mph. The Gordon Murray-designed machine held the record for 18 years, while it took McLaren 22 years before it could better its original record-breaker with the Speedtail. Like its ancestor, it featured a novel three-seater layout with a central driving position, but its combination of 747bhp twin-turbo 4.0-litre V8 and 309bhp of electrification delivers a total output of 1055bhp and a top speed of 250mph.
Read ourĀ McLaren Speedtail review
13.Ā W Motors Fenyr Supersport – 248mph
W Motors might be more famous for its Ā£2.25mĀ Lykan, but itās the Fenyr that makes our list, thanks to a 900bhp/885 lb ft twin-turbo 4.0-litre flat six developed by hallowed Porsche tunerĀ Ruf. TheĀ W Motors Fenyr SupersportĀ is based around a carbonfibre body and tubular aluminium chassis. With a likely impressive power-to-weight ratio, the Arabian car maker claims a top speed of 248mph, and a 0-62mph of less than 2.7sec.
The W Motors Fenyr Supersport made an appearance at the 2018 Goodwood Festival of Speed
15. Koenigsegg CCR – 241.1mph
The car that knocked the F1 off the top spot did so at Italyās Nardo Ring test track in February 2005. Koenigseggās second-ever production model used a 4.7-litre twin-supercharged V8 to produce north of 800bhp, urgingĀ it on to beat McLaren by a single mile per hour. The record wouldnāt stand for long, however; just two months later, Bugatti would take the crown in spectacular fashion.
Read ourĀ Koenigsegg CC8S (2002-2004)Ā review
What are the fastest cars of the future?Ā
With Bugatti having promised to bow out of setting production car speed records, there are several potential successors to its crown.Ā For instance, the makers of both SSC Tuatara and Hennessey Venom F5 claim that there’s more speed to come from their machines.
However, if any manufacturer is going to topple Bugatti from the fastest-of-all-time list, then it is Koenigsegg. Its string of wild supercars has rarely failed to live up to its promise, so its Jesko Absolut should be something a bit special.
Koenigsegg Jesko Absolut – over 330mph (claimed)
You didnāt think Koenigsegg was going to let Bugatti keep the record for long, did you? The Swedish film has yet to confirm an official top speed for its 1600bhp+ hypercar, which it says will be the fastest car it will ever produce. Simulations suggest the combination of twin-turbocharged, 5.0-litre V8 engine, a low 0.278 drag coefficient and unique multi-clutch 9-speed transmission will allow for a top speed of 330mph.Ā