Audi A3 3-door Hatchback (2013–2020): The Last of the Slim, Sharp Hatches — Plus the Floor Mats That Actually Fit

I’ve always had a soft spot for the Audi A3 3-door hatchback. The proportions are clean, the doors are gloriously long, and when you catch its profile in a shop window, it still looks tidy and expensive. During a few winter weeks with one (1.8 TFSI, S line, big wheels), I remembered two things immediately: it feels more premium than most rivals, and yes, the ride can get a touch choppy on rough city streets. Still, the Audi A3 3-door has that classic “compact German hatch” charm you don’t really find anymore — and when you’re done carving B-roads, it’s quiet enough to hear your kids arguing about who touched whose charger in the back.

Audi A3 3-door hatchback (2013–2020) side view
The 3-door: shorter, sleeker, and a little bit old-school cool.

Sportback vs Hatchback: What’s the Real Difference on the Road?

The short version? Doors and space. The longer version: the Audi A3 Sportback stretches out with an elongated roofline and five doors, so it’s better for prams, passengers, and IKEA runs. The 3-door hatchback tightens the shape, looks cleaner, and feels that bit more playful in tight corners. In my notes from a Surrey backroad test, I wrote: “3-door turns in eagerly; less visual bulk, feels special.” That still stands.

  • Boot space: 3-door ~365 liters; Sportback ~380 liters.
  • Rear access: 3-door needs a little yoga; Sportback is easy-breezy.
  • Style points: 3-door wins the catwalk; Sportback wins the school run.

Why the Audi A3 3-door Disappeared

As customer tastes shifted toward crossovers and five-door practicality, Audi quietly parked the 3-door. The brand focused resources on higher-demand variants and tech-heavy models. In other words, the 3-door’s niche appeal couldn’t keep pace with the market. If you want that coupe-like hatch silhouette today, you’ll be shopping used — which, frankly, isn’t a bad thing given how well these age inside.

Audi A3 (2013–2020) Shape Evolution: The 8V Generation Grows Up

Circa 2013, the A3 moved to the MQB platform. Translation: lighter on its feet, stiffer in corners, more tech inside. Mid-cycle in 2016, it gained sharper headlights, a neater grille, and the excellent Virtual Cockpit on higher trims. I loved the pop-up MMI screen — a neat party trick at the time — though a few owners have told me the mechanism can get sticky with age. Consider it a quirk, like vinyl crackle on a favourite record.

How the Audi A3 3-door Drives: Calm, Quick, or a Little Bit Naughty

Engines spanned frugal diesels to warm petrols, with the S3 for when you’re feeling saucy.

  • Petrols: 1.0/1.4/1.5/1.8/2.0 TFSI, roughly 110–190 hp. The 1.4 TFSI is a sweet spot for mixed driving; the 2.0 feels properly brisk.
  • Diesels: 1.6/2.0 TDI, roughly 110–184 hp. Good economy on a long motorway slog; expect 50+ mpg (UK) if you’re gentle.
  • S3: 2.0 TFSI, 292–310 hp depending on year; 0–62 mph in about 4.8–5.3 seconds. All-weather weapon with quattro confidence.

Steering is light but accurate, the cabin’s muted at speed, and wind noise is low — I recorded a podcast with friends at 70 mph and didn’t need to shout. Downsides? On S line cars with 18s, potholes can send a shiver through your spine. And the 7-speed S tronic can feel a bit fidgety in stop-start traffic unless you pop it into manual and show it who’s in charge. Small trade-offs for big-car polish in a compact shell.

Living With the Audi A3 3-door

  • Rear seats: fine for two adults on short trips; kids love the cozy feel. Fitting child seats requires a touch more patience with the long doors.
  • Infotainment: early cars have the pop-up MMI; later (2016+) bring Apple CarPlay/Android Auto. The rotary controller is intuitive; less faff than swiping at a laggy touchscreen.
  • Economy: petrols commonly mid-30s mpg (US high-20s to low-30s), diesels do their best work on the motorway.
Did you know? The 3-door’s longer front doors make parking sensors a must-have in tight bays. Also, the A3’s cabin materials punch above class — the click of the climate dials still feels properly “Audi”.

Audi A3 vs Sportback vs The Usual Suspect

Model Doors Boot (L) 0–62 mph (range) What it feels like
Audi A3 3-door 3 ~365 4.8–10.5s Neat, nimble, slightly sporty grand tourer
Audi A3 Sportback 5 ~380 4.8–10.5s Same polish, more practical rear access
VW Golf (Mk7) 3/5 ~380 4.6–10.9s Benchmark all-rounder; less posh inside

Reliability, Quirks, and Ownership Notes

  • Engines: TFSI units are generally strong; a few owners mentioned water pump seepage and the occasional coil-pack tantrum. Keep an ear out.
  • Gearbox: S tronic is quick; stick to fluid changes on schedule (typically around 40k miles for wet-clutch units) and it’ll stay sharp.
  • Tech: MMI pop-up screens can get sticky with age; a cautious clean helps. Later cars with Virtual Cockpit are lovely and usually trouble-free.
  • Suspension: S line rides firmly on big wheels. If comfort matters, try standard suspension and 17s — night and day on rough roads.

Accessories: AutoWin Floor Mats That Fit the Audi A3 3-door Properly

If you’ve ever had “one-size-fits-none” mats bunch up under your pedals, you’ll appreciate a proper, model-specific set. For the Audi A3 3-door hatchback, AutoWin does the homework so you don’t have to.

AutoWin blue floor mats fitted to Audi A3 3-door
Pop of color? Why not. The clips line up, the edges fit — as they should.
  • Premium materials: Tough, well-stitched, and designed to resist heel wear.
  • Custom fit: Cut to the A3’s footwells for proper coverage and neat edges. No curling, no sliding.
  • All-weather protection: Slush, coffee, kids’ muddy boots — sorted.

Need help picking the right set? The team at AutoWin can point you to the best match for your year and trim. And don’t forget to use the OE-style retaining clips — they’re there for a reason.

Black AutoWin floor mats for Audi A3 3-door
Classic black works with any interior trim. Simple, tidy, done.

Quick Highlights if You’re Shopping Used

  • Look for 2016+ cars for CarPlay/Android Auto and the sharper facelift.
  • If you value comfort, avoid the firmest suspension/wheel combos.
  • Service history matters — especially S tronic fluid changes and regular oil intervals.

Conclusion: The Audi A3 3-door Hatchback Still Hits the Sweet Spot

In an era of SUVs and screens everywhere, the Audi A3 3-door hatchback remains a breath of fresh air: compact, classy, and unflustered. It’s a premium hatch that wears its years well, rewarding careful owners with refinement and a dash of fun. Keep it serviced, pick your spec wisely, and protect the cabin with properly fitted AutoWin mats, and this last-of-the-line three-door will feel special every time you pull that long, elegant door shut.

FAQ: Audi A3 3-door Hatchback (2013–2020)

  • Is the Audi A3 3-door discontinued? Yes. Audi shifted focus to higher-demand versions like the Sportback and SUVs.
  • What’s the main difference vs the A3 Sportback? The Sportback gets five doors and a slightly bigger boot; the 3-door is sleeker and sportier to look at.
  • Which engine should I pick? For balance, the 1.4/1.5 TFSI is smooth and efficient. For pace, the 2.0 TFSI or S3. Long motorway runs? A well-serviced 2.0 TDI.
  • Any common issues? Watch for water pump seepage on some TFSIs, ensure S tronic services are up to date, and check the pop-up MMI works smoothly.
  • Which floor mats fit best? Model-specific sets like AutoWin’s Audi A3 3-door mats align with the factory clips and cover the footwells properly.
Emilia Ku

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