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Honda Confirms New Logo for the Electric Era
News

Honda Confirms New Logo for the Electric Era

January 14, 2026 Francis Mitterrand

Honda isn’t reinventing the wheel—but it is shaving the edges off the H. As the company accelerates toward an electrified future, it’s rolling out a redesigned logo that will quietly—but deliberately—signal which side of history its newest cars are on.

Starting in 2027, Honda’s updated, borderless “H” badge will appear on all newly launched electric vehicles and hybrids. Gas-powered models, at least for now, are excluded. According to a Honda spokesperson, “The new ‘H’ designation will apply to EV/HEV models launched after 2027,” adding that there are currently no details regarding its use on gasoline-only cars. Translation: if it plugs in—or partly plugs in—it gets the new look.

At a glance, the redesign is subtle. Gone is the familiar rectangular frame; in its place sits a flatter, cleaner emblem that looks more at home on a glowing EV nose than on a chrome-slatted grille. It’s the kind of minimalist move that’s become standard practice in the EV era, where brand identity is increasingly defined by light signatures and software interfaces rather than hood ornaments.

We’ve already seen the logo in the wild—sort of. It debuted on Honda’s 0-series concept cars revealed in early 2024, previewing a family of battery-electric vehicles that will anchor the brand’s next chapter. The first production model to officially wear the badge will be the Honda 0 SUV, slated for U.S. production in Ohio. That vehicle was originally expected to arrive in 2026, but Honda now says 2027 will mark the badge’s first confirmed showroom appearance.

Following closely behind will be the 0 sedan, a sleek companion model that also features an illuminated version of the new emblem—because of course it does. A third model, the compact 0 Alpha SUV, is being developed as a global entry with particular emphasis on Japan and India, signaling Honda’s intent to make this design language truly worldwide, not just a U.S.-market EV flex.

But this isn’t an EV-only affair. Honda has confirmed that the new badge will also appear on upcoming hybrids, and there will be plenty of them. Between 2027 and 2031, the company plans to launch 13 new models using an updated version of its e:HEV hybrid system. Honda promises improvements across the board: better efficiency, stronger performance, and tighter integration of major components. In other words, fewer compromises—and fewer excuses not to electrify.

That timeline puts some familiar nameplates in an interesting position. The revived Prelude coupe and the upcoming Super-One hatchback could end up being among the last new Hondas to wear the current, framed badge—unless Honda decides to quietly swap logos during a mid-cycle refresh. Don’t be surprised if that happens. Carmakers rarely miss an opportunity to align aesthetics with corporate messaging.

Notably absent from Honda’s announcement is any mention of future internal-combustion-only products. While that doesn’t mean ICE is dead at Honda, it does suggest the brand is drawing a visual line in the sand: the future gets the new logo, the past keeps the old one.

And the rollout won’t stop at the cars themselves. Honda says the redesigned “H” will gradually spread across dealerships, communications, and even motorsport programs. That last bit is especially telling. Motorsport has long been Honda’s technological proving ground, and applying the new badge there reinforces the idea that electrification isn’t a side project—it’s the main event.

The “H” has been Honda’s calling card since 1963, with previous redesigns landing in 1969, 1981, 1991, and 2001. This latest evolution is said to be inspired by two outstretched hands, symbolizing openness and collaboration—along with what Honda calls its “second founding.” Corporate poetry aside, the message is clear: this is a reset moment.

The badge may be small, but the implications aren’t. In an industry where every brand is racing to look electric, Honda’s approach is characteristically restrained. No wild typography. No name change. Just a familiar letter, cleaned up and pointed firmly toward what comes next.

Source: Honda

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