Toyota is preparing a dramatic re-entry into the V8 supercar battleground with the all-new GR GT — a purpose-built coupe engineered to challenge the McLaren Artura, Mercedes-AMG GT, Aston Martin Vantage S and Porsche 911 GT3. Built from the ground up in the spirit of the Lexus LFA project 15 years ago, the car’s architecture, engine and drivetrain are largely new and engineered specifically for this model. A racing-ready GT3 variant has already been developed in parallel, so many of the road car’s packaging and proportion choices are driven by competition demands.
The GR GT’s core structure is an aluminium chassis with large-scale castings for the subframes to cut mass and boost stiffness. Carbon fibre-reinforced plastic panels keep outer skin weight low without resorting to an ultra-expensive carbon tub, which helps bring the price closer to supercar territory rather than hypercar extremes. Suspension is double-wishbone at all four corners with bespoke coil springs designed to keep body height minimal. Each corner rolls on 20-inch wheels and Brembo carbon-ceramic discs handle stopping duties. At the heart of the car sits a newly developed cross-plane 4.0-litre V8 with twin turbochargers nestled inside the cylinder banks — a hot-vee layout — and a dry-sump lubrication system that permits very low engine placement for a suppressed centre of gravity.
Total system output is quoted at 650 hp with 850 Nm of torque, driven to the rear axle through a hybridised transaxle that integrates a small electric motor, a limited-slip differential and a new eight-speed automatic using a wet-clutch instead of a conventional torque converter. Putting the electric machine ahead of the gearbox reduces throttle lag while adding usable torque and power for both tractable responses and explosive on-demand acceleration. The electrified element appears designed primarily for performance rather than electric range: battery capacity seems modest and is likely tuned to assist and boost rather than provide significant pure-electric driving.
A Boost mode on the drive selector points to a unified power delivery when petrol and electric outputs are summoned together.Toyota hasn’t confirmed full technical specs for the hybrid system or stated battery size, but the architecture promises instant throttle fill and sharper driveability than a pure internal-combustion layout. Layout and mass distribution are notable achievements. The transaxle arrangement helps secure a 45:55 front-to-rear weight split despite the front-mid-mounted V8, which should translate into balanced handling and confident turn-in. At 4,820 mm long the GR GT is relatively large for the class; compared with a flagship AMG model it’s almost 100 mm longer, slightly wider and 159 mm taller, reflecting the packaging required for racing-derived components. Target mass is around 1,750 kg — heavy for a traditional supercar but competitive for hybrids in this segment and roughly 200 kg lighter than some electrified rivals. Aerodynamics and form are pragmatic rather than purely aesthetic. The long bonnet and compact tail reflect the front-mid engine placement, while intakes and vents are positioned for cooling and downforce needs.
There’s minimal active aero on the production car and a quoted top speed of about 319 km/h suggests a slippery profile without excessive drag-inducing appendages. Inside, the cockpit follows function-first principles: low dash lines for excellent sight-lines, a compact digital cluster, physical HVAC controls and a main touchscreen. The steering wheel includes mode and traction controls and the seats appear to be carbon-framed Recaro buckets, underlining the performance intent. Space for luggage is limited by the transaxle packaging, though small storage options are provided between the seats.
Toyota hasn’t released pricing or exact launch dates for all markets yet, but the CO2-conscious electrified package should simplify homologation worldwide. For now, the GR GT presents a focused, competition-bred alternative to established supercars — a V8 thoroughbred with hybrid firepower and race-ready DNA.