Dependable sources of real driver entertainment that can be procured on a real-world budget aren’t quite as easy to find as once they were, but the best affordable sports cars prove that they do still exist.
They may not be as numerous as before and many don’t seem as affordable in these inflationary times, but they exist, and they’re cars that demand to be seized and cherished.
These are Autocar’s top 10 affordable sports cars. Despite their price, some of them are the best sports cars you can buy, and among them are mid-engined two-seaters, front-engined roadsters, big-engined muscle cars and lightweight specials.
The one thing they share is an affordable asking price – £50,000 or below in most cases, and quite a long way below in some - and the capacity to light up your motoring as often as the mood takes.
Some of these cars could easily serve as daily transport; for others, that would be the case only for the genuinely enthusiastic.
But every one of them delivers large for a relatively small outlay, and every one merits your attention if you love little more than an empty road and the time to simply enjoy it.
Every significant constituent part of the Alpine A110 driving experience, from the rasping turbocharged torque of its engine to the immersive poise and panache of its handling, is all about fun.
It brings to life journeys and roads that rivals wouldn't and possesses dynamics for which your affection can only grow as you explore them more closely.
Anatomise the car and you will find an all-aluminium body, a mid-mounted engine and double wishbones for the suspension at each end. All are generally the preserve of supercars and lay the foundations for the four-cylinder Alpine to feel much more than the sum of its parts.
The standard A110 arrived in 2017 to a rapturous welcome from critics and owners alike. The later Alpine A110 S brought a power rise from 248bhp to 288bhp (and it has subsequently climbed to 296bhp), firmer suspension and bigger brakes.
Various special editions, including the plush Légende GT, have come and gone. And now there's the range-topping, extra-specialised Alpine A110 R. But none has supplanted the entry-level A110 in our affections, which has such an enticing and delicate kind of poise, grip and body control.
Rarely does a car come along so devoted to driver involvement, and so singularly effective at it, even among affordable sports cars.
The last time was probably the Toyota GT86 of 2012 – a car to which we also gave a five-star recommendation for its supreme fitness to the purpose of sucking the marrow out of every mile. The A110 is quicker, more agile, more effusive and ultimately even more fun. It deserves no less of an ovation.
Read our Alpine A110 review
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Slight problem with this list - most of these cars are either unaffordable, unavailable, or unreliable/unusable. For me only the Mazda MX5 qualifies.
I disagree that the 4th gen MX-5 is more spacious - it really isn't. The 3rd gen has a roomier cabin, space to put your feet, and even a glovebox!
MX-5s are all lovely to drive so if you can live with a tiny cabin grab one while you can; or save money with a good secondhand 3rd gen.