Infiniti Q50 (2013 – 2020) Review

Infiniti Q50 (2013 – 2020) At A Glance

2/5
Honest John Overall Rating
The Infiniti Q50 is a leftfield upmarket saloon that offers very little to stand out from the crowd. It’s a reasonable car, but nowhere near as well rounded as more familiar German rivals.

+Good economy from Mercedes-sourced diesel. Hybrid offers strong performance. Well equipped.

-Vague handling. Diesel engine is noisy. Slow-shifting seven-speed automatic.

Insurance Groups are between 39–46
On average it achieves 72% of the official MPG figure

Nissan wanted to take on the might of the Germans in the small executive saloon sector – no easy task – and used its upscale Infiniti brand to do it. The Infiniti Q50 looked okay and had a Mercedes diesel engine, but up against the Audi A4 and the ever popular BMW 3 Series, it struggled to make any headway. Read on for our full Infiniti Q50 review.

Infiniti struggled to make an impact in the UK. The luxury brand was Nissan’s attempt to do what Toyota had done with Lexus. But show the average person on the street a picture of an Infiniti and they’re unlikely to recognise it. 

Not that Infiniti was aiming to be a mainstream brand – it was happy to carve out a niche. But even then it needed to sell cars, and the Infiniti Q50, a BMW 3 Series-size saloon, was the first step in that plan.

Given that Infiniti wanted to make an impact, it’s something of a surprise that the model is fairly generic in its design.

There’s more than a touch of Lexus at the front, while the back is reminiscent of the Mazda 6.

The brand claimed it wanted to be different from other premium marques when it came to styling, but the Infiniti Q50 is inoffensively ordinary.

As well as a Mercedes-supplied 2.2-litre turbodiesel engine, a hybrid model was available. There was also a 2.0-litre turbocharged four-cylinder engine, and 3.0-litre and 3.5-litre V6 petrols, plus the option of four-wheel drive.

You certainly could not accuse Infiniti of not offering a broad choice of engines, but curiously there was no estate in the line-up.

The Infiniti Q50 was a reasonable effort, and certainly an improvement on the Infiniti G Saloon it replaced, but there was little to make it stand out and nothing really to recommend it over its supremely talented competitors.

As a used car, it offers a lot for the money if you dare to be different.

Fancy a second opinion? Read heycar’s Infiniti Q50 review here.

What does a Infiniti Q50 (2013 – 2020) cost?