Bentley Continental Review (2018-present)

Pros

  • A huge advance over its predecessor

  • Amazing blend of agility and continent-crossing comfort

  • Opulent interior is truly luxurious

Cons

  • Such class and quality come at a price

  • Extremely high running costs

  • A Ferrari 812 Superfast is more exciting to drive

4/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
2018-2020 Bentley Continental Generational Review summaryImage

The CarGurus verdict

If you’re looking for the most rounded grand tourer on sale today, you’ve found it. A couple of the Continental GT’s rivals are sharper on the handling side of things, notably the Aston Martin DB11 and Ferrari 812 Superfast, while the Rolls-Royce Wraith is more luxurious still. The Bentley, however, is the undisputed master at balancing those two attributes.

The Continental GT has historically sold in surprisingly strong numbers, despite its high list price, and that has meant resale values haven’t been as robust as they might have been. What’s more, the running costs on a car like this will inevitably be hefty, all of which means you should go into Continental GT ownership with your eyes wide open.

As long as you’re prepared for the attendant cost of keeping it on the road, though, you’ll discover in the Continental GT one of the most brilliantly executed cars on sale today.

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What is the Bentley Continental?

The current Bentley Continental GT is a significantly better car than the model it replaced, and perhaps the best way to summarise the difference is that previous version shared its underpinnings with a Volkswagen, while the new car is more closely related to a Porsche. You probably don’t need to know much more than that.

The original Continental GT was launched way back in 2003 and, although it was an enormous sales success laid the foundations upon which Bentley’s current prosperity was built, it was also hobbled by having to use the same platform as the Volkswagen Phaeton luxury saloon. The latest model has a good deal in common with Porsche’s Panamera, which means it’s fundamentally better equipped to marry the dynamism of a sports car with the cosseting luxury of a limousine.

  • The 626bhp W12 model is the range-topper and, in theory, the most desirable variant, but keen drivers might actually find the lighter Bentley Continental GT V8 better to drive. With 542bhp, it feels every bit as quick as you’d hope a Continental would – in fact, to drive the V8 is to wonder why anybody would need more power – and with far less weight over the nose (as much as 80kg), the steering responses are far sharper.
  • Whereas the previous model featured a traditional automatic gearbox, the new Continental GT uses a more sophisticated eight-speed dual-clutch unit, which it shares with the Porsche Panamera. This means it can change gear much more rapidly than the old auto, particularly when you flick it into manual mode and change gear yourself using the paddles on the steering wheel. In early cars, the dual-clutch transmission could be jerky when pulling away, but that’s been significantly improved for later examples.
  • Several years ago, there was a four-door version of the Continental GT badged ‘Flying Spur’. Today the Flying Spur is a standalone model, but it’s still very closely related to the two-door; they use fundamentally the same platform and the same engines, while their cabins, or at least the front sections of them, are almost indistinguishable. The Flying Spur is more luxury saloon than grand tourer, but it, too, is surprisingly good when hustled along a B-road.

  • If you like a sporty car: the most sports car-like variant of the Continental GT is the V8 two-door model. It’s the lightest available and feels appreciably sharper to drive than other versions. In time, Bentley is likely to introduce even sportier versions still, as it did with the previous Continental GT.
  • The civilised option: for cruising along promenades and being spotted in the swankier parts of town, the Continental GT Convertible with the silken W12 engine is the one to have. It’s also the heaviest, so don’t expect anything like the same agility on a twisty road.
  • If you’re a petrolhead to your core: great though the Continental GT V8 is to drive spiritedly, the most enthusiastic drivers should consider one of the Bentley’s rivals. The Aston Martin DB11, for instance, is not only much lighter but more focussed, putting it in a different league when it comes to sportiness.
  • If luxury matters most: it’s hard to imagine a more luxurious four-wheeled vehicle than the Continental GT W12, but that’s exactly what the Rolls-Royce Wraith is. The company’s own two-door coupe, the Wraith isn’t at all interested in handling. Instead, it seeks to cosset its occupants the way only a Rolls-Royce can.
Dan Prosser
Published 8 Sept 2021 by Dan Prosser
Dan Prosser has been a full-time car journalist since 2008, and has written for various motoring magazines and websites including Evo, Top Gear, PistonHeads, and CarGurus. He is a co-founder of the motoring website and podcast, The Intercooler.

Main rivals

Body styles

  • Two-door coupe
  • Two-door convertible