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Top 10 best luxury cars 2023

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Luxury cars bring a cosseting ride, high levels of tech, sheer refinement and enviable prestige – and these are the 10 best

The best luxury cars were once synonymous with large limousine saloons. But that hasn’t been the case for quite a long time.

A lot of those traditional saloons – the Mercedes S-Class, BMW 7 Series and Audi A8 – still feature on this list, but they have been joined by a number of SUVs.

Many are now available with plug-in hybrid powertrains, as well as the usual large-capacity diesels and V8s. There are even some electric cars here. Regardless of bodystyle and method of propulsion, they need to offer outstanding comfort in the front and back seats, isolating ride and noise refinement, and a sumptuous interior. For many owners, these cars will also be status symbols above all.

Today’s car makers are technology companies as much as automobile manufacturers, so these flagship cars need to impress with the technology on offer too, without any of it feeling an after-thought or gimmick.

This list takes in cars that are incredibly comfortable, great to drive and great to be driven in – and the ones at the top of our rankings are capable of more besides. Our super-luxury cars top 10, meanwhile, is where you will find the even pricier Rolls-Royce, Bentley and Mercedes-Maybach models.

The best luxury cars on sale

1. BMW i7 and BMW 7 Series

Pros: Interior melds cutting-edge tech and traditional craftsmanship

Cons: Exterior design is best described as challenging

If you need proof of how serious BMW is about staking its claim on luxury car glory, then consider the fact the i7 (and its ICE-powered 7 Series sibling) will only be available in leg-stretching long-wheelbase guise. While the previous six generations of the brand’s flagship saloons have placed as much emphasis on driver delight and pampering passengers, this all-new model is all about five-star cosseting and cutting-edge tech.

It’s the all-electric i7 that arrives first, but regardless of motive power, you’re unlikely to lose the big BMW in a crowd. Not only is it a vast machine, but the slab-sided styling and gargantuan front grille also mean that the 7 Series is a ‘challenging’ aesthetic proposition.

Not so the interior, which melds all the latest technology with traditional craftsmanship and a rich array of natural materials, including the surprisingly indulgent cashmere wool trim you can choose for the seats. As you’d expect, there’s acres of space to lounge around in, while additions such as the 31.3in BMW Theatre Screen for rear-seat passengers takes in-car entertainment to the next level. There’s also the usual widescreen display ahead of the driver, but the retention of an iDrive rotary controller means you’re not subjugated to the total tyranny of a touchscreen interface.

Using a twin-motor set-up and a 102kWh battery, the i7 is good for 536bhp, a claimed range of 367 miles and 0-62mph in 4.7sec. Less impressive is a kerb weight just shy of 2800kg. However, while performance is strong and the 7 Series handles with the polish and precision you expect (there’s four-wheel steering for improved agility), it’s the new-found sense of comfort that really sets the i7 apart from its predecessors, the supple and controlled ride easily matching the best efforts of the Range Rover and Mercedes S-Class. Factor in hushed refinement and the latest 7 Series finally delivers the luxury goods its forebears never quite managed to nail.

Later this year the i7 will be joined by a pair of plug-in hybrids, but until then the i7 remains a deeply impressive addition to the upper-class saloon firmament.

BMW i7 review

BMW 7 Series review

2. Mercedes-Benz S-Class

Pros: Diesel, petrol and PHEV powertrains are all delightful

Cons: Used to challenge Rolls-Royce for cabin isolation. Doesn’t anymore.

BMW may have knocked it out of the park with the latest 7 Series, but the Mercedes-Benz S-Class is still the default option for good reason. It was last redesigned in 2020, embracing digitisation more than ever before.

In that respect, it has undoubtedly succeeded. The cabin feels reassuringly traditional yet avant garde, and the scope of the vast displays manages to avoid the jarring omnipresence seen with other manufacturers’ cars. Ambient lighting and connectivity are very well executed, and beneath it all, barring one or two ergonomic shortfalls, resides one of the most materially comfortable and cosseting places to sit while the miles ease by, for driver and passenger. In an age of ever more ludicrously grandiose grilles, the S-Class’s relatively subtle exterior design should also stand it in good stead in Europe.

If you want your big Merc with a big battery pack instead of an engine, you need to look towards the Mercedes EQS, which is an entirely fresh take on the electric luxury car and shares next to nothing with its more traditional counterpart, unlike the BMW 7 series and i7 twins. There’s very little wrong with the S-Class’s range of petrol, diesel and hybrid powertrains, though. The line-up tends to shift with availability, but you usually get a choice between the S350d or S400d diesel, or an S500 petrol, which also gets mild-hybrid assistance. The diesels are pleasingly real-world frugal and smooth, and the S400d has all the performance that a car of this brief would ever need, but the S500 offers an even quicker (and yet still suitable quiet and smooth) 400bhp-plus option should you want it. There’s also the plug-in petrol-electric S580e with a combined might of 503bhp, the ability to travel up to 64 miles in electric-only mode and a more manageable company car tax bill than the combustion-only models.

In some ways, though, it feels as though progress has stalled somewhat. The plug-in hybrid powertrain of our S580e sets new class standards for efficiency and versatility, but cabin isolation and ride quality seem no better than before. Where an S-Class used to challenge Rolls-Royce in terms of road manners, the British marque is now a clear step ahead. The new S-Class is a fantastically opulent way to travel, but no longer is it breathtakingly so.

Mercedes-Benz S-Class review

3. BMW iX

Pros: World-class refinement and luxury

Cons: 516bhp xDriveM60 is overkill

Number three on this list is a double whammy of convention defiance. Not only is the BMW iX not a saloon, but it also doesn’t have a combustion engine. It came just over a year before the BMW i7, but it is effectively that car, a few inches higher up in the air. It’s perhaps marginally less opulent, but having a hatchback, it’s also a bit more practical.

“A BMW like no other” is how our man Greg Kable described the iX, the firm’s new all-electric luxury SUV flagship model for its ‘i’ brand. Some critics have used other words to make their feelings plain about the way this car looks and the departure from classic BMW design type that it, and other recent BMW model debutants, represent. Feel free to make up your own mind: this is a car clearly intended to provoke a reaction.

There is an entry-level BMW iX xDrive40 version, which gets 296bhp and 249 miles of WLTP-certified electric range. But really, you want the xDrive50, with its plusher air suspension and 373 miles of range, which truly makes this a viable long-distance luxury car. If you need to charge en route, it takes up to 200kW. The BMW iX xDriveM60 offers even more power and performance than the xDrive50’s 516bhp, but we remain unconvinced that anyone needs their internal organs rearranged any more violently than the mid-range model is already capable of.

The BMW iX saw off the Mercedes-Benz EQS in a comparison test. The Mercedes is comfortable, but the isolation and sophistication of the iX’s ride is really very special indeed and makes it a particularly compelling luxury car. The BMW also counters the EQS’s wide-eyed futurism with a warmer, more idiosyncratic and less formal flavour, both inside and out.

The iX continued to impress when we put it through our full road test. The car’s combination of generous SUV-level cabin comfort and versatility, and of a genuinely relaxing and understated luxury ambience, with world-class rolling refinement and drivability, instant and effortless performance, and creditable real-world range is unmatched by any of the market’s other zero-emission SUVs. Even if it doesn’t smash down barriers in terms of outright electric range in the way that some will expect of a top-level EV, the BMW iX has compelling fitness for purpose and a real completeness of appeal as a near-£100,000 luxury car.

BMW iX review

4. Range Rover

Pros: Vast space, clever PHEVs

Cons: Less refined on larger wheels

The latest, fifth generation is a very long way from the mildly gentrified farm truck that was the original Range Rover. It is now a fully fledged luxury car, one that trades some of the other entries’ on-road dynamics for unbelievable off-road ability.

Under the skin, it’s all-new, featuring Land Rovers MLA-Flex architecture, which has an 80% aluminium construction for lightness and strength (torsional rigidity is up 50% over the old car). In combination with finely honed air suspension, 48V active anti-roll bars and the availability of four-wheel steering, this Range Rover handles with assured precision and surprising agility. It’s also whisper-quiet on the move and has a sumptuous ride that steamrollers awkward topography into submission. Some of the other cars on this list are even more refined, though. Especially on big wheels, a bit of thumping and the odd shimmy from the body can disturb the serenity slightly.

Its maker’s lately added straight-six diesel engines are carried over from the old model and, with mild-hybrid assistance, offer all the urge you will need and emit only a faint murmur even when extended. For fleet operators looking to keep their CEOs happy, the plug-in hybrid Range Rover P440e and Range Rover P510e models offer up to 70 miles of electric-only range, which makes for 8% company car tax. Plutocrats more interested in performance than the fate of the planet can opt for a 523bhp 4.4-litre petrol V8 (taken from BMW). The Range Rover P530 will allow them to crack 62mph from standstill in a claimed 4.4sec. An EV version is on the way as well.

Whichever model you choose, you will benefit from the same interior that effortlessly melds traditional club-class quality and comfort with all the latest tech. There’s also more than enough space to lounge around, although that hasn’t stopped Land Rover from offering an extended-wheelbase version too.

Ultimately, whatever you need and want from a luxury car, the brilliantly executed Range Rover has it covered. The price of entry these days has risen to just shy of £100,000, which is rather a lot, but it’s a mark of the car’s abilities that it easily justifies this figure – and more besides.

Range Rover review

5. Mercedes-Benz EQS

Pros: Huge electric range

Cons: Interior materials don’t measure up to the S-Class

Mercedes-Benz is taking a rather different approach to its flagship EV saloon from its BMW rival. Where the BMW 7 Series and BMW i7 share a platform, the S-Class and the EQS are entirely different cars.

The quiet running of an EV undoubtedly suits a luxury car, and the EQS is quite the engineering achievement. With a drag coefficient of 0.2 it uses the lack of air vents to good effect, and in combination with a massive 120kWh battery, that helps it to achieve a real-world range of close to 400 miles in Mercedes EQS 450+ guise.

It’s roomy and quiet and it rides reasonably well, too. However, some of the materials in the interior aren’t up to the standards you would expect of a car that starts from over £105,000. The EQSs we’ve driven in the UK have also come on very big wheels and they couldn’t quite match the best-riding cars here.

Mercedes-Benz EQS review

6. Audi A8 and Audi S8

Pros: S8’s predictive suspension is best-in-class 

Cons: Not as opulently appointed as other cars in this list

The Audi A8 is one of the older cars on this list. The current generation was always a bit behind its peers for refinement, and although the A8’s quality interior feels like it was built to outlast civilisation itself, it lacks the sense of occasion of the latest BMW 7 Series or Range Rover.

However, a facelift in 2022 has allowed Audi to throw a box of technology at its flagship limousine. While all A8s have adaptive air suspension, the sportier, V8-powered S8 features what Audi calls Predictive Active Suspension, which mixes forward-facing cameras with a height-adjustable air suspension set-up that incorporates fast-acting electromechanical actuators at each wheel.

Although manufacturers such as DS and Genesis tout similar-sounding systems, this one really works thanks to air springs and 48V active anti-roll bars. Bumps and sleeping policemen pass by uncannily smoothly. Noise and vibration isolation aren’t quite perfect, and the suspension can’t smother shorter, sharper inputs as effectively as bigger ones. However, this car represents Audi doing classic Vorsprung Durch Technik in a properly committed way.

There’s a choice of turbocharged engines – a 282bhp diesel or 335bhp petrol – with four-wheel drive as standard and a 48V electrical system that gives it mild-hybrid capability. Higher up the model range, you will find the tax-saving six-cylinder petrol Audi A8 60 TFSIe, whose refinement and effortless responsiveness really boost the appeal of the car’s driving experience.

Audi A8 review

Audi S8 review

7. Range Rover Sport

Pros: Like a full-fat Range Rover, only easier to park

Cons: Material quality not as good as some on this list

The last Range Rover wasn’t a small car, but the new one is truly gargantuan on European roads. Four-wheel steering and straight sides make it manageable, but you might just want the Range Rover experience in a slightly smaller package.

The Range Rover Sport shares much with its full-sized sibling, not least its outstanding mechanical refinement and luxury appeal. Where the Sport distinguishes itself is its capacity to control its considerable mass, to sharpen the precision of its responses and to distinguish itself as something of a driver’s car. While it is still an undemanding vehicle to drive, it is also tactile and at least a little communicative.

So if the Sport is a slightly more Europe-appropriate Range Rover, isn’t it also simply a better Range Rover? Not really, because some of the perceived quality of its interior materials doesn’t quite stack up. And when comparing with the best luxury cars, that does knock it down a few places.

Range Rover Sport review

8. BMW X7

Pros: Six-cylinder diesel is sumptuous 

Cons: Imposing looks won’t be for everyone

Don’t think of the X7 as an enlarged BMW X5, says the Munich-base firm, but rather a jacked-up BMW 7 Series that has been readied for limited off-roading work. That description doesn’t much account for the fact that the X7 is a seven-seat, two-box passenger car with an extended roofline, of course, but it does tell you about the priorities that BMW’s designers and engineers had when it came to refining and tuning the car, which has now been facelifted to bring in line with its lower-slung 7 Series saloon sibling

The original X7 was no shrinking violet, but it’s fair to say the latest car is even more, erm, imposing. Combining a similar twin horizontal headlight set-up and vast grille with the car’s existing barn-door frontal area means this is a car you won’t miss in your rear-view mirror. Inside, there’s a lower dashboard complete with the brand’s now familiar seamlessly curved instrument cluster and infotainment screen, while an improvement in material quality creates the air of luxury the old car just missed out on.

On the road, the X7 handles its size and bulk well, feeling surprisingly precise and athletic when cornering, while its ride is comfortable without running out of control. New for the facelift are a pair of mild-hybrid-assisted straight-six petrol and diesel engines. We’ve driven the former in smooth and eager 375bhp BMW X7 xDrive40i guise, but we suspect the torquey and efficient 347bhp xDrive40d will be the best foil to the high-riding X7. For those wanting the ultimate in conspicuous consumption, there’s always the M60i, complete with a new M-fettled 523bhp twin-turbocharged 4.4-litre V8 that helps it sprint from 0-62mph in just 4.7sec – numbers you would have needed an M5 for not too long ago.

BMW X7 review

9. Audi Q8

Pros: Smart, relaxing and well-appointed interior

Cons: Ride quality could be better

A great many enthusiasts have taken against the modern luxury car buyer’s preference for the SUV, but when you drive a car like the Audi Q8, it’s easy to appreciate why they’re so liked. This designer take on the Audi Q7 has more visual presence and kerbside appeal than its dowdier, boxier relation but the same brilliantly rich, solid-feeling and inviting interior.

It offers generous space for four adults conveyed at a height that makes you feel like you’re lifted above the melee of traffic below and there is enough versatility and capability to deal with whatever else your daily routine is likely to throw at you, with plenty left in reserve.

Comfort and refinement are first-class. The driving experience is light-feeling and filtered, with stable and secure handling being delivered like it might be on a less advanced four-wheel-drive estate car. And the engine range is wide. You can have six-cylinder petrol or diesel power and there’s a plug-in hybrid on the way. There are also the Audi SQ8 and RS Q8 performance models, which allow you to mix as much urgency into the Q8’s driving experience as anyone could want.

SUV or not, the Q8 is undeniably one of the best luxury vehicles that Audi makes at the moment.

Audi Q8 review

10. Mercedes EQS SUV

Pros: Tech-filled interior and massive battery with long range

Cons: Coarse leather and cheap plastic makes it feel a bit cheap 

The EQS (number five on this list) may well sit on a completely different platform to the S-Class (number two on this list). But the EQS SUV, as you’d imagine from the slightly inelegant name, shares the same underpinnings.

That’s not such a bad thing. The steering feel is surprisingly defined and refinement is an area it scores exceptionally in. There is virtually no road noise. Passengers will just have to put up with the tiniest faint of wind noise, and even then, that’s mostly at motorway speed. Passengers will be able to feel potholes, much in the same way that you can kind of feel the earth spinning on its axis if you really, really concentrate.

The huge shape lends itself to a vast amount of interior space. The high set second-row seating has leg room for days, and even with the third row up, there’s a good amount of bootspace.

Electric range, like in the EQS, is big thanks to gargantuan batteries. But for it to feature more prominently in this list it would need some interior changes. The plastic air vents and gloss black centre console would be suspect in a car costing half as much. 

Mercedes EQS SUV review

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