Tag Archives: Stelvio Quadrifoglio

Order Books Reopen: Alfa’s 520-HP Quadrifoglios Are Back

Alfa Romeo isn’t ready to let its loudest, angriest sedans and SUVs slip quietly into the night. Instead, it’s doubling down.

After hinting at the move during the 2026 Brussels Motor Show, Alfa has officially reopened European orders for the Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio and Alfa Romeo Stelvio Quadrifoglio starting in early March. More than a stopgap, this is part of a broader strategy to extend production of the current Giulia and Stelvio lineup through 2027—an olive branch to enthusiasts who weren’t ready to say goodbye to one of the last great internal-combustion Alfas.

The Cloverleaf That Refuses to Wilt

The Quadrifoglio badge isn’t marketing fluff; it’s a talisman. The four-leaf clover first appeared in 1923 when Ugo Sivocci painted it on his Alfa Romeo RL before winning the Targa Florio. A century later, it still signifies the sharpest edge of Alfa’s performance ambitions.

In modern form, that means a 520-hp twin-turbocharged 2.9-liter V-6 under the hood of both cars. It’s an engine that feels delightfully anachronistic in today’s hybrid-happy world—snappy throttle response, a midrange punch that borders on violent, and a redline that begs to be chased. In the Giulia, it drives the rear wheels in proper sport-sedan tradition. In the Stelvio, it pairs with Alfa’s Q4 all-wheel-drive system to make a 500-plus-horsepower SUV feel improbably eager.

The numbers matter. But the texture matters more.

Engineering with an Italian Accent

Both Quadrifoglios were engineered with the kind of obsessive weight-saving that would make a track-day regular nod approvingly. Aluminum for the engine. Carbon fiber for the driveshaft, hood, side skirts, spoiler, interior trim panels—even the dashboard. The goal is simple: keep the structure stiff, the mass low, and the weight distribution near ideal.

The Giulia’s active carbon-fiber front splitter adjusts airflow under the car to increase stability at speed. It’s not just aero theater; it’s functional, the kind of detail you feel through the steering wheel at triple-digit autobahn velocities.

And then there’s the exhaust. The available Akrapovič system doesn’t just make noise—it broadcasts intent. Deep at idle, metallic under load, and feral at full throttle, it’s a reminder that performance cars are meant to be heard as much as driven.

Backing up all that muscle is a mechanical limited-slip differential. In an era where brake-based torque vectoring often masquerades as sophistication, Alfa’s hardware-first approach is refreshingly analog. Power delivery is clean, traction feels natural, and corner exits are dispatched with a precision that makes you wonder why more manufacturers abandoned this formula.

Still a Driver’s Car—Yes, Even the SUV

The Giulia Quadrifoglio remains one of the most communicative sports sedans of its generation. The steering is quick and alive. The chassis feels balanced and alert. Every input—throttle, brake, steering—returns immediate feedback. It’s a car that seems to shrink around you the harder you push it.

The Stelvio Quadrifoglio, meanwhile, continues to defy physics with impressive conviction. At 520 horsepower, it has the straight-line speed to embarrass dedicated sports cars, yet it manages to corner with composure that belies its ride height. The Q4 system apportions torque with subtlety, preserving much of the rear-drive feel enthusiasts crave.

Inside, both cars lean into their motorsport heritage. Available “Racing Sparco” seats combine leather and Alcantara with exposed carbon-fiber shells, gripping you tightly without crossing into punishment. Burnished five-hole wheels—19 inches on the Giulia, 21 on the Stelvio—frame anodized gray brake calipers. Paint choices like Rosso Etna, Verde Montreal, and Blu Misano remind you that subtlety was never the point.

A Stay of Execution

Reopening orders isn’t just a business decision; it’s a cultural one. As the industry pivots toward electrification, the Quadrifoglio twins stand as unapologetic reminders of Alfa Romeo’s combustion-fueled DNA. They represent a philosophy centered on balance, mechanical purity, and emotional engagement.

Extending production to 2027 gives enthusiasts a few more years to experience that formula the old-fashioned way: six cylinders, two turbos, rear-biased dynamics, and a four-leaf clover on the fender.

In a market increasingly defined by silent acceleration and digital interfaces, the Giulia and Stelvio Quadrifoglio still speak fluent gasoline. And for now, at least, Alfa Romeo is letting them keep talking.

Source: Alfa Romeo

Alfa Romeo Giulia & Stelvio Quadrifoglio Collezione — Red Hot, Ultra-Rare, Instantly Iconic

Alfa Romeo has never been shy about leaning into its heritage, but with the new Giulia Quadrifoglio Collezione and Stelvio Quadrifoglio Collezione, the brand goes full ceremonial. These limited-run, 63-unit specials are rolling tributes to the most potent icon in the company’s 111-year history: the Quadrifoglio. Born on the Targa Florio in 1923, worn proudly by Ugo Sivocci’s victorious RL, the four-leaf emblem has since become shorthand for the best that Alfa can engineer—on the track and, starting in 1963 with the Giulia Ti Super, on the street.

Now, Alfa wants that legacy to circle the globe again.

Only 63 of Each — and Built with Ceremony

Produced at the Cassino plant—where hand-finished craftsmanship meets state-of-the-art manufacturing—the Collezione models wear their exclusivity openly. Each cabin carries embroidered numbering from “1 di 63 Collezione” onward. These aren’t just numbered cars; they’re numbered artifacts.

The tribute extends far beyond badges. Alfa has tapped deep into its paint archives to reinterpret the celebrated Rosso Villa d’Este—the luxurious, ink-rich red first seen on the 4C Concept and renowned for shifting from crimson to near-black depending on the light.

The result? Two distinct shades:

  • Giulia Quadrifoglio Collezione: Rosso Collezione Giulia
    Darker, moodier, almost blackened at the edges—fitting for the more aggressive of the duo.
  • Stelvio Quadrifoglio Collezione: Rosso Collezione Stelvio
    Brighter and more open, reflecting the SUV’s broader mission: speed with range and versatility.

Same heritage, two interpretations. It’s very Alfa.

Inside: More Boutique Atelier Than Factory Line

Slip into the cabin and the retro-romantic storytelling gives way to modern craft. A leather-wrapped dashboard stitched in red sets the tone, while the carbon-fiber Sparco shells remind you that these cars may be collectibles, but they’re not museum pieces. Leather and Alcantara cover nearly every touchpoint—including the door panels and the central armrest—creating the sort of cockpit that avoids gimmicks and instead builds a mood.

This is a racing brand grown up, but not tamed.

Under the Hood: The V6 Still Steals the Show

Both Collezione models are powered by the familiar—and ferociously charismatic—2.9-liter twin-turbo V6, now coaxed to 520 horsepower. It’s an engine that feels bred rather than built, and Alfa leans into that genetic drama with a standard Akrapovič exhaust system. Start it cold and you’ll swear the car is clearing its throat before delivering a speech.

Alfa also doubles down on carbon fiber: front badge, mirror caps, center tunnel trim, dashboard accents, and an exposed carbon roof that looks tailor-made to be admired under spotlights. The carbon-ceramic brakes come standard too, complete with burnished calipers stamped with a red Alfa Romeo script—a subtle flex visible through the spokes.

Driving: An Instant Classic, Not Just in Name

Alfa calls these “Instant Classics.” That’s marketing speak—but here, it’s justified. The Giulia remains one of the purist-driving sport sedans on the planet: tactile, alive, razor-sharp, and properly rear-wheel-biased. With the updated V6 and Akrapovič vocals, the car feels like an exclamation point on the Quadrifoglio mission.

The Stelvio, meanwhile, still handles like an SUV that resents being an SUV. The steering is unnervingly quick—almost Giulia-like—and the chassis hides its size better than physics should allow. In Collezione form, it gains an extra layer of road presence that borders on dramatic.

Neither car is radically altered mechanically, but that’s not the point. They’re distillations, not reinventions.

A Farewell, a Celebration, or a Beginning?

In an era rushing toward electrification, the Giulia and Stelvio Quadrifoglio Collezione feel like Alfa Romeo planting a flag—one last, deeply emotional salute to its combustion heroes. These cars aren’t merely special editions. They’re love letters, signed in carbon fiber and sealed in a shade of red that carries a century of racing history.

Collectible? Absolutely.
Cynical? Not even close.
They’re a reminder that passion is still a specification, and Alfa Romeo still knows how to engineer it.

Source: Alfa Romeo