Maserati GhibliHybrid GT 4dr Auto
£41,900
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19000
How many Maserati Ghibli cars are available for sale?
1
The Maserati Ghibli name stretches all the way back to 1967, when the Italian brand launched a pretty grand tourer to rival the likes of Ferrari and Aston Martin. The nameplate has been used on several models since but from 2013, Ghibli has referred to an executive sports saloon pitched directly at cars like the BMW 5-Series.
In purely objective terms the Ghibli didn’t quite hit the mark, but it’s a stylish and likeable car nevertheless, instantly making any journey a little more glamorous than it would be in one of the German equivalents. A spot of depreciation has hardly harmed its appeal, either.
The Audi A6, BMW 5-Series and Mercedes-Benz E-Class are the Ghibli’s more mainstream rivals, while the Jaguar XF and both the older Lexus GS and newer ES also compete in this class. If you appreciate companies doing something a little different, there’s always the Tesla Model S, too.
You might choose a Maserati Ghibli for the same reasons you’d opt for the Alfa Romeo Giulia over cars like the BMW 3-Series or Audi A4. Not because it’s Italian - though that will surely be a factor for some enthusiast buyers - but because you’re tired of the ‘usual’ offerings in the executive class, and want something a little more unusual and glamorous.
The Ghibli is a car you’ll buy with your heart as much as your head. It has to be, because purely rationally it doesn’t have the abilities of some of its (mainly German) rivals, their breadth of variants and engines, their practicality, a large dealer network, and many of the other things a pragmatic buyer might seek.
It looks like nothing else in its class though, not unlike a scaled-down version of the larger Quattroporte, and while the interior doesn’t have the high-tech flash of a Mercedes-Benz E-Class or Audi A6, neither of those cars make you feel like you’re in something exotic. You can’t get silk seat inserts in a 5-Series…
The Ghibli handles well but this is a heavy car and it doesn’t hide that weight quite as well as a 5-Series or Jaguar XF does, while its ride quality is best described as ‘sporty’ - not uncomfortable, but not completely cosseting either. There’s more engine noise than some rivals too, though maybe you expect that in a Maserati. And economy is only average even in the diesel and hybrid, but if that were a real priority, you’d probably be looking at an Audi, or a Tesla Model S.
Put simply, the Ghibli falls down in quite a few areas compared to more conventional alternatives, but if you’re on this page you may be willing to overlook all that and choose it anyway over the equivalent Audi, BMW or Mercedes, and even other left-field choices like the Jaguar XF, or Lexus GS and ES. You’ll certainly be making the roads a more stylish place.
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On the used market the world is your oyster when it comes to Maserati Ghibli trim levels. While we recommended the unbadged entry level model as a new purchase, we’d not steer you away from a Granlusso or Gransport at the right price, each getting its own unique items of equipment (such as rather lovely leather and silk seats in the Granlusso, or adaptive dampers in the Gransport).
Engine choice will be a more personal thing. There’s little wrong with the diesel, but unless you’re buying a Ghibli to hack up and down motorways then we’d assume you might be making a more emotive purchase, so the petrol versions - especially the V8 Trofeo, if it’s in budget - will feel more special. We’re not sure the same can be said of the Hybrid, but it does offer reasonable performance.
The Maserati Ghibli trim levels can be split between the entry level variant (though that term does disservice to both the badge and its level of equipment), plus luxury, sport, and high-performance versions. There have also been occasional special edition models and other variants but the range below covers the basics.
The Maserati Ghibli’s dimensions are:
The Maserati Ghibli’s boot size is:
Taxing a Maserati Ghibli will depend whether the car you’re looking at was registered before or after April 2017. Before this date, VED or ‘road tax’ was CO2 based for both new and used cars, making the low-CO2 diesels comfortably the cheapest to tax - at 184g/km, the current annual bill is £320. This goes up to £675 for the 243g/km petrol.
Post April 2017, VED is charged at a flat rate, and any Ghibli with an original list price of more than £40,000 will cost £570 per year, hybrid aside which goes down to £560.
Don’t expect cheap insurance if you buy a Maserati Ghibli. While there will clearly be some variation between an entry-level diesel and the supercar-spec Trofeo, all Ghiblis can be found in the maximum group 50. This is closer to what you’d expect from a Porsche Panamera than a BMW 5-Series.
Read our full Maserati Ghibli review