Introduction

The Macan is the Peoples’ Porsche. The model to convert the SUV cynics. And an SUV with the soul – and the engineering – or a sports car. Here’s the version updated in 2018, which sold until another update in 2021. You might expect it to be fast and family-friendly. More of a surprise is that it’s rewarding and, with the right spec, very nearly race-ready in its responses. Yet it’ll comfortably take you off road, deal with the school run and cruise down to Chamonix. It sets the ultimate benchmark for just how dynamic the handling of an SUV can be. And it’s very special indeed.

The History

Lots of unlikely models have been described as ‘sports cars’ over the years. It’s always been hard though, to imagine an SUV in that way. Or at least it was until the launch of this model, the Porsche Macan, in 2014. This car re-defined the way an SUV could drive and four years into its production cycle, the Zuffenhausen maker substantially upgraded it to create the contender we’re going to look at here.

Over 350,000 Macans had been sold by the time this improved model arrived in the Autumn of 2018, tasked with continuing a success story that saw the original version account for nearly half of its maker’s entire sales volume in our market. But that was quite an ask given that this facelifted range lacked the diesel engine that had previously accounted for over 40% of the Macan’s European sales mix. Nor was that void filled by a Plug-in hybrid variant, as it was in period in the larger Cayenne model’s line-up.

With the Macan, Porsche was always determined to stretch them and create the ultimate multi-tasker. Back in 1900, Ferdinand Porsche designed the Lohner-Porsche racing model with its four electric wheelhub motors. By 1947, the brand was going further, developing a supercharged 12 cylinder ‘Type 360’ Cisitalia Grand Prix racer that introduced the concept of full four-wheel drive.

For all that though, the Stuttgart maker had never made a car quite like this prior to this model line’s original arrival in 2014. Perhaps that’s why at the beginning of Macan development, it initially turned to Volkswagen Group partner Audi with the early idea of basing this car on that company’s similarly-sized Q5. It wasn’t long into the development process though, before Porsche decided it knew better. It alone could create the kind of mid-sized sporting SUV that models like the Q5, Range Rover’s Evoque and the BMW X4 could never be. So almost everything was re-invented. Almost everything was re-imagined. Almost everything was different. As, in this post-2018 form, this car still was from just about everything else in its segment. It sold in this form until a further minor update in 2021.

What You Get

You’d really need to see pre and post-2018-era Macan models together to appreciate the changes made to this updated model, but actually there were plenty, perhaps the most significant one being the adoption of sleeker full-LED headlights which incorporated the four-LED ‘ice cube’-style design motif that’s characteristically Porsche. The ribbed corner cut-outs remained, but they were re-designed with more overtly vertical outer frames.

The whole ‘soul of a sports car’ thing might be a difficult concept to swallow from the outside, but you feel it keenly at the wheel, thanks to the way the low-set seat and this high centre console create such a ‘cockpit’-style feel. In the rear, three adults can certainly fit for short-to-medium journeys. Push the rear bench completely forward and a 1,500-litre capacity is freed up.

What To Look For

Not much goes wrong. Some owners have had problems with non-engine electrics. Others have reported engine warning lights coming on and some servicing work has been needed for some owners with the engine control units. Look out for a clanking sound under acceleration – that’s a tell-tale sign of drive shaft support bearing failure. And keep an ear out for a chirp, squeal or a whistle off throttle – that’s a portent of an exhaust rattle. We’ve heard of faults with the passenger side mirror. And also a chassis system failure error message – comes up ‘PASM fault’. And of course insist on a fully stamped-up service history.

On The Road

Much changed with this revised post-2018-era Macan – handling tweaks, new engines, suspension changes – but much also remained the same. It still redefined the mid-sized SUV segment standard in its era when it came to the way a car of this kind could corner at speed. By 2018, Porsche had banished diesel, so the powerplants on offer were all petrol units, the range kicking off with an entry-level 2.0-litre variant. It offers 245hp – quite a lot less than the next version up in the line-up, the 354hp Macan S, which got a fresh 3.0-litre V6. But this base model’s 70kg weight reduction offset quite a lot of that power deficit and the 62mph sprint is comfortably covered off in just 6.7s.

In either version of this Porsche, the fizzing feedback you get through the 911-style steering wheel and the remarkable lack of lean through each bend together give you such confidence that you can attack each corner almost as hard as you want. Especially if the (optional from new) ‘Porsche Torque Vectoring plus’ system is fitted, which keeps the car planted through the tightest turn, firing you on from bend to bend. This was all further aided on this revised model by the adoption of lighter aluminium front suspension struts, revised anti-roll bar rates and a sharper-responding braking system. Which you’ll particularly need if you opt for the high performance 434hp twin turbo-engined 2.9-litre Turbo version.

Overall

This is, in summary, the car all its rivals wanted to be in the 2018-2021 period. The car most buyers in this segment from this time wanted to have. There are, it’s true, more efficient or more spacious choices in this sector from this era. Some premium mid-sized SUVs from this time are better equipped or will take you further off road. And almost all will cost slightly less. For all that though, this is an addictive package, a segment-defining car and a very desirable thing indeed.