Home » The Infiniti Q50 Was Born A Disappointment But It’s Dying An Underground Legend

The Infiniti Q50 Was Born A Disappointment But It’s Dying An Underground Legend

Goodbye Infiniti Q50 New Q50s Ts Copy
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It’s uncommon for a car to end production in a better place than when it started, but every so often, it does happen, thanks to great facelifts, big tech upgrades, or new powertrains. Infiniti has confirmed that for the 2025 model year, there will be no Q50 sedan, marking the end of an impressive 11 model year run. While it hasn’t been an easy eleven model years, the Infiniti Q50 has arguably finished strong, going from a softer G37 replacement with highly controversial tech to a bolt-on and tune darling.

It’s generally good journalistic practice to kick off reports like this with a quote, so here’s Infiniti’s official statement on the discontinuation of the Q50:

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Acting on our commitment to transform our vehicle line with four new products beginning with the all-new 2025 QX80, the INFINITI Q50 sedan will not be available in the United States and Canada after the 2024 model year.

The Q50 has an incredible fan base as a formidable sports sedan, while remaining one of our most popular vehicles since its introduction in 2013. The Q50’s spirit will certainly live on in our future sports sedan EV, previewed by the Vision Qe concept that made its debut last October.

You’ll likely still be able to find Q50s on dealership lots, but if you want to get your order in, that time is coming to a close. However, if you’re looking for a Q50, you’re probably looking at a used one, because over the model’s life, it became all about what you can put into it. Here’s how that happened.

2014 Infiniti Q50s

When the Infiniti Q50 launched in 2013 for the 2014 model year, this G35 replacement virtually evaporated brand equity overnight. Not only did it not keep the naming scheme of its predecessor, it was overall a softer, more luxury-focused product than before. The option of a six-speed manual gearbox was gone, the standard 3.7-liter VQ37VHR V6 was a carryover unit, and the highlights of the range were a slow-to-load dual-screen infotainment setup, an optional hybrid powertrain, and a particularly wretched optional steer-by-wire setup called Direct Adaptive Steering. Just read what Car And Driver had to say about the latter system in a long-term road test of a 2014 Infiniti Q50 Hybrid:

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So universal was the dislike for the steering and braking dynamics that logbook entries frequently declared them not yet ready for prime time. Specifically, the fully electric, by-wire Direct Adaptive Steering (DAS) came under fire for being completely devoid of feedback and feel and also for being “absurdly quick,” even on the Standard setting. The brakes, on the other hand, were grabby, with a hard transition from regenerative mode to friction braking under hard deceleration, making it nearly impossible to modulate them with any subtlety. As enthusiasts, we knew many of the elements required to make a decent chassis were in place, so the Q50S’s overanxious steering and braking behavior had us particularly miffed. A reflash of the steering software around the 15,000-mile mark failed to tame its harsh and unpredictable reactions.

That might sound harsh, but it really was an awful setup that would occasionally change its ratio mid-corner, spooky behavior that prevented keen drivers from ever trusting it. I hated driving every DAS-equipped press car with every fiber of my being because while there was so much potential in the chassis, the steering just killed it all. Sure, there was a mechanical steering column as an emergency backup, but when a key part of driving involves a system this bad, it really doesn’t make a bloody difference. Add in a scuttled Eau Rouge high performance model, and the Q50 started to feel like an also-ran.

2016 Infiniti Q50 Red Sport 400

Then, for the 2016 model year, things changed. While a new two-liter turbocharged four-cylinder base engine was nothing to write home about, for much of the range, Infiniti pulled out the VQ37VHR V6 and dropped in the twin-turbocharged three-liter VR30DDTT V6 engine. On paper, the standard 3.0T model was down 28 horsepower over the 3.7-liter model, but everyone knows that where turbos exist, torque exists, and a way of turning up the wick substantially is easily found. Oh, and that’s before we even mention the Red Sport 400 trim, which swapped in some new components and kicked things up to 400 horsepower. Who likes to party?

 Infiniti Q50 s 001.jpg

Unsurprisingly, after being deprived of a turbocharged rear-wheel-drive Nissan Motor Co. product since the end of the 300ZX, American tuners took to the revitalized Infiniti Q50 like moths to a flame. Burger Motorsports found that this engine would make 421 horsepower and 460 lb.-ft. of torque at the tires with cone-style intakes, an upgraded intercooler heat exchanger, a piggyback ECU, and a blend of 30 percent ethanol, 70 percent gasoline. AMS Performance took things even further, going to town and making a 600 wheel horsepower package for the Q50, resulting in an unassuming sedan that could beat up on Hellcats. People have pushed this platform to nine-second quarter-mile passes, an astonishing feat considering the bones of the chassis date back to the early 2000s.

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 Infiniti Q50 s 035.jpg

Oh, and as time went on, it became easier and easier to buy a high-spec Infiniti Q50 without having to deal with the dreadful steer-by-wire Direct Adaptive Steering system. Since it still rides on Nissan’s FM platform, it’s easy enough to get one of these cars to handle well, because the biggest limiting factor is simply how well you can parse an online parts catalog.

 Infiniti Q50s 022.jpg

Sure, the Infiniti Q50 wasn’t the greatest sports sedan out of the box, but with a bit of ingenuity coupled with a meaningful mid-cycle engine update eventually made it a tuner darling. Exactly what you’d expect from what was essentially a rebranded Skyline. In many ways, it was the last vestige of the Infiniti we knew and loved in the 2000s, which is why we’re sorry to see it go. At least some of its bones live on in the new Nissan Z, even if that rakish coupe isn’t nearly as stealthy as the Q50 was.

 Infiniti Q50s 020.jpg

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(Photo credits: Infiniti)

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DDayJ
DDayJ
4 months ago

I remember back during Covid times being mildly intrigued by these given the price point and the twin turbo engine. I actually always liked the styling too. But my coworker had one that I rode in a few times and I really didn’t like the interior or the tech. Didn’t even know about the steering. Every time I read DAS above my mind immediately went to Mercedes F1’s Duel Axis Steering, but clearly this aint that.

Shooting Brake
Shooting Brake
4 months ago

A buyers guide/beige car your sleeping on candidate if I’ve ever seen one. Sweet Christmas everything infiniti makes once this is gone are pointless.

Not entirely altruistic
Not entirely altruistic
4 months ago

I got my start in car sales in 2016 at an Infiniti dealership, right before they released the 2016 updated Q50. Watching a brand die slowly over the next four years was very frustrating. I ended up owning two Q50’s… leasing them actually. One 2016 with the 300hp V6 and leased my soon to be ex a 2018 with the 4 cylinder (from Mercedes, only lasted a couple years).

They replaced the hydraulic rack from 2014-2015 with a power electric rack in 2016 (not the direct adaptive steering, that was still standard on the top trims) that had absolutely NO feeling at all. Ironically, the 4 cyl still had the hydraulic rack had the best steering feel of all of them. I loved my 2016 though, lots of fun to drive and it was CHEAP. Infiniti just never put the money behind the Q50 to really compete all the way around, not even putting a LSD in the Red sport! That really was part and parcel of how they got where they are now.

Funny enough, the turbo 6 was a big part of why Johan said they changed the names, because they couldn’t imagine going from a G30 down from a G37 and that the public would be confused… Could have just gone the German route and just make up the numbers as you go… would have been better than every other person asking me what Q stood for…

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
4 months ago

Always liked the design of these; way less busy than toyota, front end has hints of jaguar styling. It’s a good looking car. It’s not great, but I think it’s far above average these days.

Last edited 4 months ago by ADDvanced
Alexander Moore
Alexander Moore
3 months ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

way less busy than toyota

That’s funny because it’s always looked like an old Toyota design to me. Especially the rear—it reminds me a lot of the final Mark X.

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/26/2009_Toyota_Mark-X_02.jpg

rctothefuture
rctothefuture
4 months ago

What will Hertz use for a cheap upgrade now?!

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