Honda’s 0-Series Sedan Hits the Brakes, Now Slated for 2027

Honda’s 0-Series Sedan Hits the Brakes, Now Slated for 2027

Honda’s ambitious electric reset just lost a little momentum. The 0 Series sedan—one of the brand’s most important next-generation EVs—won’t arrive this year after all. In fact, it won’t be here until 2027, Honda has now confirmed, quietly stretching the rollout of its all-new electric platform.

When Honda first unveiled the 0 Series, the plan sounded refreshingly decisive: three new EVs on a clean-sheet architecture, all launching in 2026. The lineup included the reborn Acura RSX, a Honda 0 Series SUV, and a sleek 0 Series sedan meant to signal Honda’s electric future. Two of those vehicles are still on track. The sedan, however, has slipped a full year.

According to Jessica Fini, assistant vice president of communications at American Honda, the Acura RSX will lead the charge, arriving in the second half of 2026. The Honda 0 Series SUV will follow later that same year. The sedan, though, has been officially “postponed to 2027.”

The reasons won’t surprise anyone paying attention to the EV market. Over the past year, automakers have been navigating shifting regulatory requirements, new tariffs, and the effective disappearance of federal EV tax credits for many models. That combination has a way of turning once-aggressive product timelines into moving targets.

What’s interesting is how quietly this delay has been handled. Fini noted that Honda mentioned the sedan’s postponement during the Japan Mobility Show, but the news never really made the rounds. Even now, Honda’s own 0 Series website still states that production versions of both the SUV and sedan will arrive in 2026, suggesting the messaging hasn’t fully caught up with reality.

That said, a delay doesn’t necessarily spell trouble. Honda has a long history of taking its time—and often getting the fundamentals right. If the extra year results in better range, more competitive pricing, or a smoother transition to a software-defined vehicle architecture, buyers may never notice the wait.

Still, in an EV race where timing matters almost as much as technology, pushing the sedan to 2027 gives rivals another opening. Honda’s electric reboot is still very much alive—it’s just arriving a little later than promised.

Source: Honda