When the Toyota GR Corolla first hit the scene, it felt like a fever dream made real. Nobody saw it coming—least of all the market analysts who thought Toyota was done building small, unhinged performance cars. Yet, there it was: a compact, turbocharged, all-wheel-drive riot that brought back the energy of Toyota’s rally-bred legends from the ’80s and ’90s.
With a high-strung three-cylinder engine, a proper six-speed manual, and a torque-splitting AWD system that could send most of its grunt rearward, the GR Corolla didn’t just revive the hot hatch—it redefined it. And now, a few years into its life, it’s getting even sharper.

We recently spent time at Sonoma Raceway wringing out the latest iteration, and the message is clear: Toyota’s Gazoo Racing division isn’t just keeping this thing alive—they’re evolving it.
How GR-Four Makes You Faster
At the heart of the GR Corolla’s lunacy is GR-Four, Toyota’s rally-derived all-wheel-drive system. It’s capable of sending up to 70 percent of torque to the rear wheels, but the numbers don’t tell the whole story.
“The front-to-rear torque distribution is determined through feedback control based on vehicle speed and G-forces,” explains Kohara Takashi, an engineer with Toyota’s GR Development Division.
For 2025, the new Track Mode takes that control logic a step further, actively adjusting torque distribution mid-corner. “At Fuji Speedway’s third sector, for example, it improves line tracing by varying the front-to-rear ratio from corner entry to exit,” Takashi says.
It all happens within a 60:40 to 30:70 torque window, shifting in real time with a kind of electronic clairvoyance. The result? You don’t fight the car—it helps you carve.
Cooling the Beast
The GR Corolla’s 1.6-liter G16E-GTS three-cylinder remains an absurd little powerhouse, punching out 300 horsepower and 295 lb-ft of torque in Morizo trim. For 2026, Toyota engineers turned their attention to a less glamorous—but absolutely vital—topic: heat management.

“The challenges we faced were related to oil and water temperatures of the engine and drivetrain, as well as intake air temperature,” Takashi explains. “We increased the capacity of the cooling fans, and for 2026, we’re adding a new cooling duct to address intake temperature.”
That new duct will be available as an upgrade for existing owners, which is almost unheard of in the industry. Despite the added cooling, Takashi insists that drivability and emissions remain untouched—a rare feat in a world of increasingly delicate performance cars.
The Weight vs. Rigidity Battle
Building a car like the GR Corolla isn’t a matter of mass production—it’s craftsmanship with a stopwatch. Toyota’s GR factory in Motomachi operates more like a race shop than a traditional plant, allowing engineers to obsess over every weld and adhesive bead.

“To balance weight reduction and torsional rigidity, we use more spot welds and structural adhesives than typical vehicles,” Takashi says. “This is possible because the production time per vehicle is several times longer than normal.”
That painstaking build process translates to precision. GR engineers validate each chassis not just in Japan, but also at the Nürburgring, chasing microscopic improvements in how the structure flexes under load. Each lap adds a brushstroke to Toyota’s evolving canvas of performance.
The Wildness Incident
Every great car has a story. The GR Corolla’s might be its best one.
During early development, Akio Toyoda—yes, the boss himself, known internally by his racing pseudonym Morizo—took the prototype for a spin. His verdict was brutal.

“It lacks wildness,” Takashi recalls. “Initially, the GR Corolla had the same specs as the GR Yaris. Morizo said, ‘It lacks power. This won’t do. Start from zero.’”
The team did just that. Drawing on lessons from Toyota’s hydrogen-fueled GR Corolla race car, they pushed the 1.6-liter triple to new limits. The phrase ‘Push, Break, Learn, Repeat’ became gospel, and “wildness” the new guiding principle. The result was the 300-hp Morizo Edition, a car as intense as its namesake.
Data, Instinct, and the Pursuit of Balance
Behind the scenes, the GR Corolla’s evolution is driven by a meticulous loop of feedback and iteration. Takashi describes how suspension geometry changes are informed equally by data and seat-of-the-pants intuition.
“Originally, we had challenges with inner-wheel grip in mid- to high-speed corners,” he says. “We restricted suspension extension using a rebound spring to utilize the jacking-down effect, which improved stability.”
Revised trailing-arm brackets fixed traction issues, but introduced new toe-angle quirks—so the team went back, fine-tuned geometry, and came out with a chassis that now grips harder and reacts cleaner, especially under power.
The GR team’s motto could easily be: Measure twice, apex once.
What Comes Next
While Takashi wouldn’t spill details on hybrid systems or future GR products, he offered one intriguing hint: the GR-Four system isn’t platform-limited. In other words, the same torque-vectoring wizardry that makes the GR Corolla so alive could soon find its way into bigger—or even electrified—GR models.
For now, though, the GR Corolla stands alone: a raw, relentlessly honed piece of driving joy. It’s not perfect—and that’s exactly why it’s special.
Because the GR Corolla wasn’t designed to be polite. It was designed to be wildness, refined.
Source: Toyota