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Toyota Brings the Heat to Goodwood with Three New Sports Cars

At this year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed, the official theme is “The Rivals – Epic Racing Duels.” But no manufacturer seems to embody that spirit more completely than Toyota. While much of the industry continues its relentless march toward electrification, Toyota’s GAZOO Racing division is arriving in West Sussex with three dramatically different performance machines that all share the same philosophy: competition creates better cars.

Leading the charge are the all-new GR GT, the GR GT3 race car, and the Lexus LFA Concept, each representing a different chapter in Toyota’s evolving performance story. Together, they signal that the company isn’t abandoning driving enthusiasts—it may actually be doubling down.

The centerpiece is the GR GT, a road-going coupe that wears its racing pedigree proudly. Under its long hood sits an all-new 4.0-liter twin-turbocharged V8 paired with a single-motor hybrid system, a combination that immediately grabs attention in an era increasingly dominated by downsized four-cylinders and silent EVs. Toyota says the development focused not just on outright power, but on fundamentals that matter on both road and track: a low center of gravity, reduced weight, exceptional chassis rigidity, and carefully honed aerodynamics.

If the GR GT is the road car born from racing, the GR GT3 strips away nearly every compromise. Sharing its basic architecture with the GR GT, the GT3 machine has been engineered specifically for international competition, prioritizing outright pace, aerodynamic efficiency, and approachable performance for professional and customer racing teams alike. More importantly, it continues Toyota’s increasingly successful philosophy of developing race cars and production cars side by side, allowing lessons learned at the limit to flow in both directions.

That same philosophy extends beyond internal combustion.

Making its first close-up public appearance is the Lexus LFA Concept, an electric supercar that looks beyond today’s battery-powered performance cars while paying homage to one of the greatest Japanese supercars ever built. Rather than simply chasing acceleration figures, Lexus says the concept is designed to create an emotional connection between driver and machine—a fitting tribute to the original LFA’s legendary character. While technical details remain under wraps, the concept suggests Lexus still believes performance isn’t measured solely by numbers on a specification sheet.

What’s particularly interesting is that Toyota views these three vehicles not as separate projects, but as members of the same family. They all stem from a development philosophy championed by Chairman Akio Toyoda—better known to enthusiasts by his racing alter ego, Morizo—who has long insisted that the fastest way to build great road cars is to race them first.

The company even draws inspiration from an unlikely source: Shikinen Sengu, an ancient Japanese tradition in which Shinto shrines are dismantled and rebuilt once every generation. The purpose isn’t replacement, but preservation—passing craftsmanship from one generation to the next while continually refining it. Toyota believes sports cars deserve the same treatment.

Goodwood provides the ideal proving ground.

Unlike traditional motor shows where cars remain frozen under bright lights, the Festival of Speed demands action. The famous hill climb—with its steep elevation changes, narrow confines, and unforgiving barriers—offers one of the world’s best demonstrations of acceleration, balance, aerodynamic stability, and driver confidence. The GR GT and GR GT3 will make their first public dynamic appearances in Europe without camouflage, while the Lexus LFA Concept will be displayed in the Supercar Paddock.

Toyota’s racing credentials won’t be confined to prototypes, either.

GAZOO Racing is bringing several machines that have already proven themselves in competition, including the GR Yaris Rally1, fresh from multiple World Rally Championship successes, alongside the DKR GR Hilux rally-raid racer. Behind the wheel will be an all-star lineup featuring nine-time World Rally Champion Sébastien Ogier, current WRC points leader Elfyn Evans, Takamoto Katsuta, Oliver Solberg, Sami Pajari, and Dakar ace Henk Lategan.

Meanwhile, Toyota’s endurance racing dominance will also be on display through the No. 7 GR010 HYBRID, the Le Mans-winning prototype that recently secured Toyota’s sixth victory at the 24 Hours of Le Mans while propelling the manufacturer to the top of the FIA World Endurance Championship standings.

Of course, Goodwood isn’t just about celebrating race cars—it’s about showing how racing influences the cars ordinary enthusiasts can actually buy. That’s where the GR Yaris Aero Performance enters the picture, showcasing the latest aerodynamic developments for Toyota’s already acclaimed hot hatch. Sharing the spotlight is the all-new RAV4 GR Sport, a plug-in hybrid SUV whose suspension, chassis tuning, and visual upgrades borrow directly from the company’s performance division.

Taken individually, each of these debuts tells an interesting story. Together, they paint a much bigger picture.

At a time when many automakers seem eager to leave performance heritage behind, Toyota continues to argue that motorsport remains its greatest engineering laboratory. Whether powered by a twin-turbo V8 hybrid, built exclusively for the racetrack, or driven entirely by electricity, the company’s latest generation of sports cars all share one defining characteristic: they exist because someone wanted to go faster than the competition.

That may be the most fitting tribute imaginable to this year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed.

Source: Toyota