Porsche Boxster 718 Review (2016-present)

Pros

  • Exceptionally enjoyable to drive

  • Practical enough to use every day

  • Roof-down thrills without compromising the driving experience

Cons

  • Four-cylinder engines sound bland

  • Tyres and brakes will be expensive to replace

  • Lacks the rear seats of a 911

5/5Overall score
Practicality
Driving
Tech and equipment
Running costs
2016-2021 Porsche Boxster 718 Generational Review summaryImage

The CarGurus verdict

You’ll have to decide for yourself if the (ironically rather flat) flat-four engine is a deal-breaker. You wouldn’t be alone in finding its tuneless blare unbecoming of such an otherwise brilliant Porsche sports car. If you just can’t live with its noisy clatter, perhaps you can stretch a little further and buy a GTS 4.0 or Spyder; their naturally-aspirated flat-six engines are every bit as soulful as you’d expect of the Stuttgart marque.

Engines aside, the 718 Boxster is a near-peerless roadster. It is exquisite to drive with perhaps the best sports car chassis on sale today, while the drop-top roof makes it more enjoyable more of the time than its fixed-roof stablemate, the 718 Cayman. What’s more remarkable still about Porsche’s drop-top two-seater is that it’s comfortable and (relatively) practical in daily use. Little wonder the Porsche Boxster has stood on top of the sports car class for so long.

Search for a Porsche 718 Boxster on CarGurus

Often it seems as though Porsche can do no wrong. Its flagship sports car, the 911, remains peerless in the eyes of both experts and enthusiasts, and also from the point of view of the global sales charts. Meanwhile, the company’s GT-badged hardcore offerings are consistently among the very best cars of their type. The Taycan electric saloon is a technical masterpiece. Even Porsche’s five-door cars – the Cayenne and Macan SUVs, plus the Panamera – are all but peerless in their own ways.

But nothing and nobody can be flawless. Porsche demonstrated this point very effectively in 2016 when it updated the Boxster, its long-serving mid-engined two-seater roadster. Along with a new look, new interior tech and revised badging (which saw Porsche’s mid-engined sports cars labelled 718 Cayman and 718 Boxster), in came a new range of turbocharged four-cylinder engines. The 2.0 and 2.5-litre units replaced the joyful naturally aspirated six-cylinder engines that had powered the company’s two-seat sports cars until then. Performance car enthusiasts were aghast.

Nonetheless, Porsche appeared to take notice of the criticism levelled at it: when the not-quite-range-topping GTS variants were announced in 2019, the controversial four-cylinder motor was nowhere to be seen, and in its place a new, naturally aspirated six-cylinder.

  • Whereas lots of sports car manufacturers now only offer paddle shift transmissions, Porsche does still let 718 Boxster buyers make that choice for themselves. The standard-fit transmission across the range is a superb six-speed manual gearbox. Buyers who prefer two pedals can upgrade to a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic gearbox, which Porsche calls PDK. There’s no right or wrong answer here. Purists will always prefer three pedals and a stick, while for day-to-day and track use, the paddle shift PDK gearbox has its advantages.
  • While the fixed-roof 718 Cayman has competitor cars coming at it from all corners, the drop top 718 Boxster exists in a slightly more rarified category. Nonetheless, it does still face stern opposition from the Jaguar F-Type Convertible, BMW Z4 and Audi TT RS Roadster, plus last-of-the-line versions of the Mercedes-Benz SLK. Though each of those competitors has its merits, the Porsche strikes a balance between driver interaction and everyday practicality that none of its rivals can quite match.
  • Porsche is reportedly planning to launch an all-electric version of the Boxster (and also the Cayman) in 2022. The company has demonstrated its EV know-how already, but the four-door Taycan is a very different sort of a car with a completely different set of requirements to a two-seat roadster. An electric Boxster will undoubtedly be fast in a straight line, but could it be as rewarding to drive as a petrol-powered version? Time will tell.

  • On a budget: no Porsche sports car comes cheap, but the most affordable model in the line-up is the 296bhp 718 Boxster. With that sort of power it is plenty fast enough for most people, while you’re unlikely to be left feeling shortchanged in terms of standard kit count.
  • The all-rounder: with an additional 49bhp, the 718 Boxster S is theoretically more desirable than the 718 Boxster, although you will pay around £7,000 more for it. Of all the variants in the model range it strikes the best balance between performance, affordability, running costs and day-to-day usability.
  • The sweet-spot in the range: That'll be the GTS 4.0. It has the same wonderful naturally aspirated engine as the Spyder (albeit with a little less power) and a more easy-going but every bit as brilliant chassis, but it’s more affordable to buy, costing about £7,500 less than the range-topper.
  • Accept no substitutes: if only the fastest and most expensive model will do, you’ll want the 718 Boxster Spyder. It has a slightly fiddly roof mechanism, but it’s comfortably the most striking 718 Boxster variant to look at and it has the same masterful chassis as the 718 Cayman GT4. Plus that stunning flat-six engine…
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 roadster