Toyota has spent the better part of two decades rebuilding its enthusiast credibility, but the new GR GT makes one thing abundantly clear: the company isn’t interested in merely participating in the performance-car conversation anymore. It wants to lead it.

This is Toyota’s most ambitious road car since the legendary LFA, a front-engined, rear-wheel-drive hybrid supercar that arrives with 641 horsepower, an all-new twin-turbocharged V8, genuine GT3 racing pedigree, and one very specific target: established heavyweights like the Mercedes-AMG GT, Aston Martin Vantage, and Porsche 911 Turbo.
If the GR Supra was a statement of intent, the GR GT is the realization of that promise.
Built Like a Race Car—Because It Basically Is
Toyota calls the GR GT a “road-legal race car,” and unlike the marketing fluff that often accompanies such claims, this one carries unusual credibility.
The production model and its GT3 racing counterpart were engineered side-by-side from the beginning rather than adapting one from the other later. That simultaneous development means lessons learned for endurance racing directly influenced the road car’s chassis, aerodynamics, cooling, and driver ergonomics.
It’s an approach borrowed from manufacturers that dominate international motorsport, and one Toyota believes produces a fundamentally better driver’s car.

That philosophy was on full display when the GR GT made its dynamic public debut at this year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed, announcing itself not with extravagant theatrics but with unmistakable engineering intent.
A New V8 Marks Toyota’s Return to the Big Leagues
At the heart of the GR GT sits something enthusiasts have been hoping Toyota would build for years: an entirely new 4.0-liter twin-turbocharged V8.
Rather than relying solely on electrification to chase performance, Toyota has developed a compact hot-vee V8 featuring twin turbochargers mounted inside the cylinder banks, a dry-sump lubrication system, and lightweight packaging designed to keep the engine low in the chassis.

Combined with an electric motor, the hybrid powertrain is targeting 641 horsepower and 627 lb-ft of torque, all delivered exclusively to the rear wheels.
Toyota says development is still ongoing, suggesting those figures may even climb before production begins.
Performance numbers remain unofficial, but expectations are already lofty. A 0–62 mph sprint around 3.5 seconds and a top speed exceeding 198 mph firmly place the GR GT in modern supercar territory.
Perhaps even more encouraging is Toyota’s commitment to making this engine compliant with increasingly strict emissions regulations, signaling that the V8 isn’t destined to be a one-off curiosity. Instead, it could become the foundation for an entirely new generation of high-performance Toyota and Lexus models.
The Sound Matters Just as Much
In an era where artificial exhaust enhancement has become increasingly common, Toyota appears determined to let mechanical authenticity do the talking.

Engineers treated the exhaust note as a core element of the vehicle’s identity, carefully tuning the system to deliver the unmistakable soundtrack expected of a twin-turbo V8 while ensuring the sound evolves naturally with engine load and vehicle speed.
Early demonstrations suggest the result is every bit as dramatic as the specifications imply—a deep, muscular rumble under acceleration that feels refreshingly honest.
Hybrid Assistance Without Losing Character
Unlike many modern hybrids that prioritize efficiency above all else, the GR GT’s electric motor exists for one purpose: making the car faster.
Positioned ahead of the newly developed eight-speed automatic transmission, the electric motor fills torque gaps during gear changes, smoothing power delivery while maintaining relentless acceleration.

The gearbox itself replaces a traditional torque converter with a wet-clutch arrangement, enabling significantly quicker shifts similar to those found in the latest Mercedes-AMG performance models.
A mechanical limited-slip differential ensures all that power reaches the pavement with maximum effectiveness.
Designed Around the Driver
Toyota repeatedly emphasizes “car-driver unity,” and the development process reflects that philosophy.

Company chairman and accomplished racing driver Akio Toyoda personally worked alongside engineers and professional racers throughout development, helping shape a vehicle intended to inspire confidence both on a racing circuit and on public roads.
The cockpit follows the same philosophy.
Visibility, seating position, switch placement, and overall ergonomics were prioritized above digital spectacle. Toyota says every control has been carefully shaped and positioned for intuitive operation, whether the driver is attacking apexes or simply commuting through traffic.

Interestingly, there’s no Toyota badge anywhere on the car.
Instead, the GR GT wears only Gazoo Racing branding, reinforcing Toyota’s intention to establish GR as a standalone performance marque alongside Lexus and Century.
Lightweight Engineering Remains a Priority
Despite incorporating hybrid technology and a substantial V8 engine, Toyota has kept weight remarkably under control.
The GR GT becomes the company’s first production model to use an aluminum body-in-white, while additional aluminum body panels and suspension components further reduce mass.
Stopping power comes courtesy of Brembo carbon-ceramic brakes, while overall curb weight is expected to remain below 1,750 kilograms.
That places the GR GT roughly 300 kilograms lighter than the all-wheel-drive Mercedes-AMG GT, while landing almost exactly alongside the rear-drive Aston Martin Vantage.

Weight distribution sits at an ideal 45:55 front-to-rear, complemented by a new stability control system derived directly from Toyota’s Le Mans racing program.
The objective isn’t merely faster lap times.
Toyota wants the GR GT to feel progressive, predictable, and confidence-inspiring whether it’s carving through mountain roads or chasing tenths on a race circuit.
Carrying the LFA Legacy Forward
The original Lexus LFA achieved legendary status not simply because it was fast, but because it embodied Toyota’s engineering ambition.
The GR GT follows that same philosophy.
Veterans from the LFA development team contributed to this project, passing on decades of accumulated knowledge to Toyota’s next generation of engineers while helping shape what the company describes as one pillar of a new “trinity” of flagship performance vehicles alongside the forthcoming electric Lexus supercar.
The goal extends beyond building another halo car.
Toyota wants to demonstrate that motorsport remains its greatest laboratory—and that emotional, engaging performance cars still have a place in an increasingly electrified future.
The specifications alone make the Toyota GR GT compelling: a new twin-turbo V8, hybrid assistance, rear-wheel drive, lightweight construction, GT3-derived engineering, and more than 640 horsepower.
But what makes it genuinely exciting is the philosophy behind it.
Rather than chasing numbers for the sake of headlines, Toyota appears focused on creating a machine that rewards the driver above everything else—a car designed with feedback, balance, and emotional engagement at its core.
If it delivers on those promises when it reaches showrooms next year, the GR GT won’t simply mark Toyota’s return to the supercar segment.
It may well become one of the most significant performance cars of the decade.
Source: Toyota