Official Fuel Economy for Bugatti Chiron is so Much LOL

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

The Bugatti Veyron EB 16.4 debuted in 2005 to spec sheet acclaim.

On paper, there had never been anything like it. It had 16 cylinders, four turbos, 987 horsepower. And it used 10 miles per gallon of premium gasoline.

The 2018 Bugatti Chiron is a better car, as it should be after more than a decade passed between development cycles. There are still 16 cylinders and four turbos, but Bugatti increased the power (having intermittently done so during the Veyron’s tenure) to 1,500 horses.

That 52 percent increase in power is not quite matched by a commensurate improvement in the distance traveled per gallon of premium gasoline. Not quite.

That said, the decision to add 513 horses — like adding to the Veyron the power of two Subaru Legacy six-cylinder powerplants — is not a decision that is expected to be associated with any fuel economy improvements. Nevertheless, time marches on, and the 2018 Bugatti Chiron will travel 10-percent farther on a gallon of gasoline than its Bugatti Veyron predecessor: 11 miles per gallon on the combined cycle.

ALSO SEE: Even Bugatti is Turning to Electrification for More Performance

In fact, the Chiron isn’t quite as efficient a highway traveler as some of the Veyron variants. The final five model years of the Veyron (2011-2015) were rated at 15 mpg highway. The Chiron drops to 14 mpg.

But because of the weighting the EPA testing procedure gives to city ratings — the Chiron is rated at 9 mpg city; Veyrons were 8-mpg cars — the 2018 Bugatti Chiron has the superior overall mpg rating. This is an important issue, a matter of grave consequence, as it speaks to the advances automakers make on the insides of engines and the outsides of cars to effectively reduce global emissions.

Granted, at top flight, a Chiron will empty its 26.4-gallon fuel tank in 12 minutes, so it may not be the darling of green car media. But if we could look forward to mainstream cars adding 50-percent more power and consuming 9-percent less fuel, all would be well with the world.

For the record, the Environmental Protection Agency says the Bugatti Chiron would annually cost $3,800 to fuel as a daily driver (8,250 city miles, 6,750 highway miles, $2.80/gallon) and $12,250 more to fuel than the average new vehicle over the course of five years.

A version of this article originally appeared on TTAC

Timothy Cain
Timothy Cain

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 2 comments
  • Kent Kent on Jul 27, 2017

    Like Bugatti owners care about fuel economy.

  • Rod Peacock Rod Peacock on Jul 27, 2017

    I have never considered the MPG of my car. I want the car, because I like it, for its looks and performance. For the record, I am not in the same league as a Bugatti owner - sadly.

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