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The eight best sportscars to buy in 2024

01st March 2024
Dan Trent

With heavyweight EVs slowly taking a stranglehold of the car market, the kind of lightweight, simple sportscars we love around these parts are looking like an endangered species. Who knows what the future holds but, for now, you can still buy a car that's been designed to put a smile on your face above anything else and here you'll find some of the best covering a range of needs and budgets, they all have one thing in common – they're fun. Here's our pick of the best sportscars available to buy in 2024. 

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1. Analogue Automotive Supersport

To build its Lotus Elise-based Supersport, Analogue Automotive goes over a doner with a fine-tooth comb, starting with a bare chassis that's been treated for corrosion. From there, you pick from your choice of a 160PS or 210PS tuned Rover K-Series engine. Analogue Automotive then adds its own wishbones and hubs, which means the Supersport is lighter than a standard Elise. All cars also come with Nitron dampers, a Quaife LSD and a short-shift gear change. Finally, you can customise your car in its unique paint job using the company's online configurator. The result isn't cheap – a Supersport costs north of £100,000 – but builds on all the aspects that make the Elise so great in the first place.

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2. BMW M2 

In a perfect world where no one needs back seats or boots, the BMW M2 wouldn't get a look next to a Porsche Cayman, but then, we don't live in a perfect world. The BMW's added practicality means it can deal with family life while its performance is as breathtaking as its looks are polarising. More analogue than the M4, it shares many of its parts, including its engine and platform, with its larger sibling. The M2's rear-wheel drive only and can be had with a manual gearbox, but it's not the lairy pocket rocket you might expect, displaying a mechanical grip the old model couldn't replicate. The posh interior and excellent infotainment seal the deal for this being one of our list's most usable performance cars.

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3. Lotus Emira

Goodbye Elise, so long Exige, aurevoir Evora. All three of the stallwarts of the Lotus range have now departed for the home for ageing sportscars. In their place comes one single car, trying to span the range from sportscar to supercar. There's just a little pressure. Thankfully its debut at the Festival of Speed presented by Mastercard in 2021 was a storm, and it looks absolutely fantastic. We've not driven the Emira yet, but first impressions seem to be universally positive, so it may well be time to get a deposit down – espeically considering they sold over four figures worth in the week after it was revealed. 

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4. Porsche 718 Cayman

The standard Cayman is pretty much a benchmark on which all other sportscars could be judged. The GT4 RS just elevates everything to another level. Now with the proper 4.0-litre flat-six derived from the 911 GT3 Cup car, tweaked suspension, more aero and less weight, the GT4 RS can match the performance of the 911 GT3 to 60mph. But it isn't a stripped back track star, this is a more forgiving and enjoyable machine for the road, all soundtracked by that astonishing engine fed by a brand new intake rasp. It's impossible to ignore, if you have £108,000... you might even prefer it to the GT3.

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5. Alpine A110

Alpine’s real trick has been to offer a viable alternative to the all-conquering Cayman while defiantly refusing to engage Porsche on its own terms. So, it doesn’t obsess over power output or performance stats and nor does it equate stiffer suspension or fatter tyres with improved performance, even if the new A110S takes subtle steps in that direction. Instead the A110 combines a Lotus-like obsession with weight saving and the benefits in handling and ride comfort that brings without the pervading whiff of kit car build quality Elises and Exiges have never quite shaken. Sure, there’s not much luggage space but it’s commendably quiet and refined for such a hardcore car, it’s amazingly supple and it doesn’t use much fuel. But it also looks sexy as anything and shows its best on twisty backroads at socially responsible speeds.

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6. Mazda MX-5 1.5

On paper there’s very little to impress anyone with an MX-5, especially the basic 1.5-litre version. Sure, it’s light. But with the base model the power to weight ratio hasn’t improved significantly in the 30 years and four generations it’s been on sale. The suspension is pretty soft out of the box too and macho types still (mistakenly) write it off as too girly, whatever that means. But in driving terms the latest MX-5 is as close to the Caterham as you can get in a car you’d conceivably drive every day. Mazda didn’t chase the numbers with this car. It sweated the details, like a thin steering wheel rim to encourage neat steering inputs and a close-ratio gearbox so sweet you can shift with your fingertips. You can get more powerful ones but that basic 1.5 is a revvy, naturally aspirated delight too. All you really need.

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7. Jaguar F-Type

Like the Evora, the F-Type is constantly battling reviewers’ benchmarking efforts against rival Porsche products but goes its own way, sitting on the right side of the line dividing sportscars and more cruisy GTs. Ostensibly a new model, the recent updates are more a nip and tuck to the timeless proportions and it’s got more tech than before. But the core appeal of rear-biased handling, lovely steering and greater agility than the size or kerb weight would suggest remains strong. The four-cylinder lacks a little gravitas but is arguably the sweetest in handling terms while the supercharged V8 R combines a more muscular vibe with real poise. The fact it’s more grown-up than a Cayman while more fun than a 911 is arguably the only Porsche comparison you really need consider.

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8. Toyota GR86

Okay, can't have is strong given that cars are for sale and you can indeed buy them. You can't order one new, though, because they're all sold out. Very shortly after its reveal it was confirmed the GR86 would only be coming to the UK for two short years, meaning allocations quickly dried up. As such, this is a sportscar in high demand and if you want one, you'll need to pay over the odds. Happily, it's purported to be worth it. 

The new 2.4-litre engine has a far-superior power band to the GT86, the looks have been refined, as has the cabin. This is a handsome, gutsy-enough, delectably-balanced car designed to deliver thrills at any speed. We bloody love it and so should you.

  • Lotus

  • Evora

  • Toyota

  • Supra

  • Mazda

  • MX-5

  • Porsche

  • Cayman

  • Jaguar

  • F-Type

  • Alpine

  • A110

  • Caterham

  • Seven

  • Analogue Automotive

  • Supersport

  • BMW

  • M2

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