Currently reading: 2015 Infiniti Q70 - pricing, engines and specification

Rebranded Infiniti Q70 now on sale, with prices starting from £32,650

The refreshed Infiniti Q70 saloon has gone on sale with prices starting from £32,650.

The Q70 was previously known as the M35, with the rebranding being part of Infiniti’s badge-changing strategy.

Three engine options and four trim levels are available, with the new model already on sale in the UK.

Engine wise, the biggest seller in the UK is expected to be the 2.2-litre diesel, which has been developed in partnership with Mercedes-Benz. It produces 168bhp and 295lb ft, with CO2 emissions of 129g/km.  This puts it in a higher tax banding than the more powerful Audi A6 2.0 TDI Ultra, which produces only 117g/km.

Along with the diesel there's a 3.7-litre V6 petrol producing 316bhp and 266lb ft, plus a hybrid option using an electric motor and a 3.5-litre V6, with total outputs – including the electric motor – of 359bhp and 403lb ff. Infiniti claims this will deliver a 0-62mph time of 5.3sec allied to CO2 emissions of 145g/km.

All Q70s, starting with the entry-spec Premium model, feature LED headlights and tail-lights, front and rear parking sensors, a rear-view camera, sat-nav, ventilated leather seats and 18-inch alloy wheels.

Sport models feature upgraded brakes and 20-inch alloys, plus a more aggressive front-end styling treatment.

Premuim Tech and Sport Tech trims include additional items such as adaptive cruise control, a Bose premium audio system, lane departure with blind-spot warning and a 360deg surround-view camera system.

Buyers are able to order the diesel engine in all four trims levels, while the hybrid is limited to Premium or Premium Tech models. The 3.7-litre petrol is available in Sport Tech trim only.

Infiniti has confirmed it will produce a long-wheelbase version of the Q70 for the Chinese and US markets, but it seems unlikely that this will be sold in the UK. 

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John Howell

John Howell
Title: Senior reviewer

John is a freelance automotive journalist with more than a decade of experience in the game. He’s written for most of the big car mags, not least as a road tester for Autocar and as deputy reviews editor for our sister brand, What Car?. He was also the features editor at PistonHeads and headed its YouTube channel.

Cars, driving and machines are in his blood. When he was barely a teenager he was creating race-bale racetracks on his family’s farm – to thrash an old Humber Sceptre around. It broke regularly, of course, which meant he got a taste (and love) for repairing cars. That’s why he eschewed university, choosing instead to do an apprenticeship with a Jaguar dealer. That’s where he built up his technical understanding.  

After that he moved into high-end car sales, selling Rolls-Royces, Bentleys, Ferraris and Maseratis through the franchised network. But it was a love of writing and appraising cars that, eventually, led him to use his industry experience to prise open the door of motoring journalism. He loves cars that exceed their brief in some way. So he finds as much pleasure in testing a great, but humble, hatchback as he does sampling the latest Ferrari on track. Honest.

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ahaus 3 October 2014

no more steam for Infiniti?

Rebadging the M models as the Q means that Infiniti has no plans to make a high luxury flagship model? This is a real shame, as Infiniti lacks the identity and some kind of sporty/luxury cache that tries to set it apart from its parent Nissan nameplate.
Moparman 16 April 2014

Space is the ultimate luxury

Buyers in China and the United States understand that space is the ultimate luxury. Whether the extra space is needed isn't as important as to what that extra space speaks of your bank account.

This update is interesting as, to my eyes, it looks like a cut-rate Maserati Quattroporte from the front and a new Chevrolet Impala from the back. The front part may have been intentional but I am not sure the rear resemblance was what they were aiming for.

fadyady 16 April 2014

Extra leg room for the Chinese!

I've read it before and failed to fully understand the need for the extra leg room in the cars destined for the Chinese market? No disrespect intended.