A new V8 Lexus supercar that will rival the likes of the Aston Martin Vantage and Mercedes-AMG GT has been officially shown for the first time.
The GT Concept is the homologated variant of the incoming GT3 GR hardcore racer – itself revealed in concept form in 2022 – and both took to the hillclimb at Goodwood’s Festival of Speed.
The road-going GT3 GR – spotted by spy photographers over the past few months – is likely to wear a Lexus badge, rather than a Toyota one, in keeping with the premium brand’s history of large-engined sports cars, including the LFA, LC 500 and RC F.
As such, it is thought to preview what could be the spiritual successor to the acclaimed LFA – and may take the LFR name.
A production version of the GT Concept (previewed below by Autocar) is likely to hit showrooms at the end of 2026 and will be created because FIA homologation rules dictate that any GT3 racer shares its basic body design with a related road car. Aston Martin, BMW, Ferrari, Ford, Lamborghini, Lexus, McLaren, Mercedes-AMG and Porsche all currently sell GT3 customer cars.
Toyota has previously said it will continue “commercialising motorsports cars rather than simply adapting production vehicles for use in motorsports”, as it did with the rally-honed GR Yaris hot hatchback.
Running up the Goodwood hill, the soundtrack of the GT3 prototype - with a huge rear wing - is unmistakably that of a highly strung V8, but the quieter road car mule suggests it will add some type of hybrid assistance, most likely to meet ever-stringent emission regulations.
Currently, no GR models use a hybrid powertrain, but the performance division is extensively testing the technology. Speaking to Autocar last year, Hiroyuki Yamada, a GR engineer working on the project, said: “We can use hybrid for future cars. We will use it in our motorsport activities in the future, because of emissions.
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The outline looks great. I am sure it will be fantastic, but Lexus need an appealing car in the normal price range already. Just have a look at what they currently offer. All SUV, bar one soon to die FWD saloon, and an odd people carrier. Compared to a few years ago with IS, GS, RC, LC and LS, RWD saloons and Coupes, they dont have anything appealing or interesting.
As good as Lexus is (they're probably the best engineered mass-produced passenger vehicles), this isn't going to weigh under 1,300kg :-(
So what was the Lexus LMGT3 V8 running at Le Mans yesterday? Just asking.