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2025 McLaren Artura Spider Review: Droptop With A Split Personality

2025 McLaren Artura Spider Review: Droptop With A Split Personality

Posted on August 23, 2025 By rehan.rafique No Comments on 2025 McLaren Artura Spider Review: Droptop With A Split Personality

“Twenty, twenty, TWENTY,” my mom screams, as I approach a 90-degree bend preceded by a 20 mph sign on a country road near her home in Bumpkinville, Wisconsin. I’m doing plenty in the McLaren Artura Spider, and slow to about 40 mph for the turn, which the car handles with ease.

“Are you trying to kill your mother?” she asks.

“No, mom, that would kill me too,” I reply. “This car has a lot of capability.”

That’s the engaging supercar side of the Artura Spider’s multifaceted personality. As a plug-in hybrid, it can also be an electric economy car or an everyday driver.

The Artura is McLaren’s entry-level supercar, and the Spider fills the droptop role. It features a power-operated hardtop that opens or closes in just 11 seconds at speeds up to 30 mph. Carbon-composite construction means the top adds just 136 pounds versus the coupe.

Electric Economy Car

A 2025 McLaren Artura Spider is parked on a gravel surface, with large rock formations in the background—a perfect setting to showcase this droptop with a split personality.

McLaren also limits the weight added by its plug-in hybrid powertrain, which consists of an axial-flux motor in the eight-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission, a twin-turbocharged V6, and a 7.4-kWh battery. The hybrid system adds just 287 pounds, which keeps the curb weight down to a reasonable 3,439 pounds.

The V6’s 120-degree V makes it spread wider and sit lower than the typical 60-degree V6s in mainstream cars. A dry sump oiling system lets it sit even lower, and the 94 horsepower and 117 pound-feet of the electric motor contribute to a total system output of 690 horsepower and 531 pound-feet of torque. 

Start the Artura and it defaults to the Electric mode, which can be used up to 81 mph and effectively gives this sleek supercar silent propulsion and the power of a Smart ForTwo. The small battery enables a modest 11 miles of electric range, so Electric mode is best used to save fuel in heavy traffic or when driving in emissions-free city zones. 

Everyday driver

A blue 2025 McLaren Artura Spider with its driver-side butterfly door open is parked on a road, surrounded by trees and mountains—a perfect setting for a review of this droptop with a split personality.

Click the powertrain controller on the right side of the instrument panel to Comfort and do the same for the suspension on the left side of the IP, and the Artura Spider becomes a comfortable everyday driver. 

The car can run on electricity in Comfort mode, but step hard on the throttle and the V6 fires up with a pleasing “whum.” In Comfort, the exhaust note doesn’t drown out conversation, and the transmission and engine are relaxed. A deep stab of the throttle will unleash all 690 horses, but it’s just as happy to chill. Comfort also maintains a five-percent charge in the battery, which is important because reverse gear only runs on electricity.

Close-up of a car steering wheel with a visible "ESC" button and directional controls, dashboard blurred—similar to the tech found in the 2025 McLaren Artura Spider Review: Droptop With A Split Personality.
Interior view of a modern sports car with two leather bucket seats, a steering wheel, and a tree visible through the window—perfect for experiencing the 2025 McLaren Artura Spider Review: Droptop With A Split Personality.

The Artura Spider is made from pretty exotic stuff. It’s built around a new mid-engine carbon-fiber tub called the McLaren Carbon Lightweight Architecture (MCLA), and it’s set on sticky 235/35R19 front and 295/35R20 rear Pirelli P Zero Corsa tires. That’s all aimed at performance, but the Artura manages to ride well enough to make it comfortable for regular duty. In their softest setting, the adaptive dampers absorb most bumps like a sport sedan. 

City and highway driving give me time to check out the interior. My test car is equipped with the heated, power-adjustable comfort seats that have big bolsters to keep me situated in the corners but leave room for wider backsides. The $9,400 Performance Spec includes high-quality Alcantara upholstery with orange piping, and a $1,600 black package adds gloss-black plastic trim. 

Engaging supercar

The 2025 McLaren Artura Spider dazzles as a blue convertible sports car speeding along a paved road in a desert landscape, its droptop design and split personality enhanced by the blurred backdrop.

The Mr. Hyde side of the Artura’s multiple personalities is accessed through the Sport and especially the Track settings for both the suspension and powertrain. 

My tester has the $5,100 sport exhaust system, which adds active exhaust valves and a symposer to pipe the exhaust note into the cabin. Sport mode opens the valves and activates the symposer, turning up the exhaust note’s volume so it becomes the entertainment rather than what’s playing on the radio. Track mode makes it even louder, which is great when dicing up the corners, but fatiguing when it drones on at highway speeds. 

Sport and Track also unlock the powertrain’s supercar rambunctiousness. The throttle gets touchier, and the transmission hangs on to gears longer.

Despite the torque fill of the electric motor, there is a touch of turbo lag from a stop, but after that, power delivery gets intense. I open it up on a country road and the Artura pins me back into my seat. The transmission fires through shifts as the V6 approaches its 8,500-rpm redline with a raspy crescendo. The 0-60 mph run takes just 3.0 seconds, extra-legal speeds arrive all too quickly, and the Artura Spider tops out at 205 mph.

Sport mode keeps the battery at about a 45-percent charge, while Track overrevs the engine to charge the battery. On a 45-mile cruise back home, Track mode charges the battery from 20 to 80 percent, though I could also charge it from 0-80 percent in 2.5 hours on a 240-volt home outlet. 

Sport and Track modes also firm up the dampers to make the ride busy on broken pavement and harsh over sharp bumps. The track is so firm that I wouldn’t recommend using it on anything but smooth pavement. On a twisty but patchwork country road, I put the suspension in Comfort to keep the tires on the pavement as much as possible. 

Close-up view of a luxury car’s steering wheel and digital dashboard, with mountains visible through the windshield—perfectly capturing the essence of the 2025 McLaren Artura Spider Review: Droptop With A Split Personality.
A 2025 McLaren Artura Spider cruises as a blue convertible on an empty road near the water under a clear sky, embodying the droptop with a split personality described in recent reviews.

The low-slung Artura leans slightly in corners, which translates as feel from my perspective. It feels hunkered down and stable mid-corner, where I can control oversteer or understeer by adding or subtracting throttle. I don’t get the chance to drive the Artura Spider on a track, but track time in the Artura coupe revealed that the Pirellis have unrelenting grip, the car rotates willingly, and the standard carbon-ceramic brakes are strong but have a wooden feel after initial bite. In that extreme circumstance, the transmission didn’t always downshift to the right gear for the best power out of corners. I found I could do better with the large carbon-fiber shift paddles.

The Artura’s best dynamic trait is its electro-hydraulic steering. It’s pleasingly quick and direct with good weight, and road feel is plentiful through the small-diameter, flat-bottom steering wheel. The car reacts to steering inputs with scatback agility, too. 

The 2025 McLaren Artura Spider starts at $281,008, including a hefty $5,000 delivery charge and a $2,208 fee for a few take-home goodies in the America’s Accessory Pack. That’s $24,700more than the coupe, and McLaren is happy to sell you as many expensive options as you like. With a smattering of options, my test car carries a substantial $332,348 price tag. 

That’s obviously a lot of money to spend on a car, but McLaren Artura Spider can be seen as three cars in one. It’s quiet and efficient for short bursts as an electric economy car and comfortable as a daily driver, but it’s the most fun as an engaging supercar that can scare the hell out of your mom!

A blue 2025 McLaren Artura Spider, its scissor doors open wide, is parked in front of a rocky cliff on a sunny day—a true droptop with a split personality.

Source: McLaren

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