The return of the Peugeot 308 GTi hot hatch could be on the cards following comments from the French brand’s CEO, Alain Favey.

“I would love to have a range of GTis, of course, so we’re looking at options, possibilities with the technology that we have,” Mr Favey told Autocar.

“For sure, we want a GTi to be really something special, something really top in terms of what it promises. The 308 would obviously make a lot of sense.”

The 308 GTi was last sold in Australia in 2020 and used a 1.6-litre turbocharged four-cylinder petrol engine, mated exclusively with a manual gearbox.

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AI-generated image: What a new Peugeot 308 GTi could look like
AI-generated image: What a new Peugeot 308 GTi could look like

A rival to the category benchmark, the Volkswagen Golf GTI, the fast Peugeot was one of a number of hot hatches axed in recent years, including the Ford Focus ST and Renault Megane RS, lamented by passionate enthusiasts globally.

There remains a small contingent of hot hatches, however, including the Hyundai i30 N and Toyota GR Corolla, as well as the perennial Honda Civic Type R.

Peugeot revealed the smaller e-208 GTi electric hot hatch at Le Mans in 2025 – now on sale in Europe but not confirmed for Australia – sharing its platform and battery-electric powertrain with the 2026 Opel Corsa GSE, with both brands part of Stellantis. It’ll soon have competition in the shape of the Volkswagen ID. Polo GTI.

Peugeot 308 GTi
Peugeot 308 GTi