2026 Aston Martin Valhalla review: Quick Drive


There’s always been something just slightly… restrained about Aston Martin.

Beautiful? Always. Fast? Undoubtedly. But when it came to outright, mid-engined, take-no-prisoners supercars – the kind that go toe-to-toe with the very best from Maranello, Woking and Sant’Agata – Aston Martin has historically danced around the idea rather than diving headfirst into it.

To be fair, that’s not entirely correct. When the DB12 was launched in May 2023, with a drive program that kicked off on the tight and twisty roads around Monaco before opening up onto fast, flat-out expanses of pristine tarmac, it allowed the twin-turbocharged 4.0-litre V8 to unleash all of its 500kW and 800Nm – coupled with a sonorous sound that made you feel like James Bond himself, chasing the bad guys.

It delivered the Super Tourer performance of a proper 812 Superfast rival, capable of warp speeds while delivering pointy handling and great ride comfort to boot. The mechanical feedback was spot-on, and that inspired a great deal of confidence in almost any conditions.