Original Acura NSXs aren’t unicorns—you can still find them in decent numbers if you look hard enough—but every so often, one pops up that feels like it’s been trapped in amber. Case in point: this 2005 NSX-T now up for auction on Bring a Trailer, a car so well-preserved it might as well have rolled straight out of Honda’s Tochigi plant yesterday.

With just 4,300 miles on the odometer, this Long Beach Blue Pearl NSX has lived its entire life under the care of a single owner, who also happened to run Smithtown Acura of Saint James in New York. If you’re picturing a pampered existence filled with climate-controlled storage and meticulous service stamps, you’re exactly right. Maintained by Advantage Acura and Acura Honda, the car has been religiously kept up to factory spec, right down to a fresh timing belt, water pump, and valve adjustment.
And here’s the kicker: it’s still sitting on its original 2005 rubber. Yes, those tires. While any sane buyer intending to actually drive the car will swap them immediately, they’re proof of just how untouched this NSX really is. No aftermarket spoilers, no questionable exhaust swaps—just a pure, unfiltered late-model NSX exactly as Acura intended.

The visuals are classic NSX theater. The removable roof panel is painted to match the vivid Long Beach Blue Pearl body, offset by 17-inch forged silver wheels and gold-painted brake calipers that peek through with just the right amount of flash. Step inside, and the time-warp continues: Onyx leather seats show virtually no wear, the Bose audio system and six-disc CD changer remain intact, and even the original branded floor mats are in place.


Of course, what makes the NSX so revered isn’t just its styling or rarity—it’s the way it drives. Under the rear hatch sits the 3.2-liter naturally aspirated V-6, delivering 290 horsepower to the rear wheels through a six-speed manual gearbox. In the early 2000s, that meant Ferrari-like thrills without Ferrari-like maintenance bills. Today, it means an increasingly rare recipe: high-revving NA engine, stick shift, and a chassis engineered with Ayrton Senna’s fingerprints still in its DNA.

Bring a Trailer bidders clearly know what’s at stake. With nearly a week left on the clock, the price has already surged past $190,000. For collectors, this isn’t just another clean NSX—it’s as close as you can get to a showroom-fresh example, with provenance to match.
If you’ve ever dreamed of owning a factory-perfect slice of Japan’s supercar heyday, this might be the one. Just don’t expect to steal it—rarity, condition, and nostalgia are a potent (and pricey) mix.
Source: Bring a Trailer