The Dodge Viper was, for about 26 years, one of the scariest cars on the road. From its slithery styling to its charismatic V10, there hasn’t quite been an American sports car like it before or since. But America has been without a Viper since 2017, and that’s depressing. Dodge seems to be suggesting something is going to change, as it just teased something that looks high performance coming in about 2030. This new car could also be more or less Dodge’s take on the Mazda MX-5 Miata formula. Or it could be a high performance muscle car like the Superbird. Let’s look at where Dodge’s most famed sports car came from and where it could be going.
Stellantis just announced one of the most ambitious turnaround plans we’ve seen in a while. The automaker says it’s going to spend $70 billion to turn the corner, and the plan involves launching 60 new models by 2030, nine of which will be priced under $40,000. If you, like me, have lost track of time, that’s just four years from now!
Stellantis really wants to breathe some life into the brands that have seemingly been abandoned. Chrysler, which currently has just one car, is set to have four by 2030. Ram is getting a compact pickup truck, a revival of the Dakota, a Ramcharger SUV, and even a second ProMaster van! Then there’s Dodge, which will be getting a GLH.

But wait, what’s this? Dodge seems to be saying that it has an unnamed sports car in the works. Dodge CEO Matt McAlear has been talking about his desire to see a sub-$30,000 “entry-level halo” car in the Dodge lineup. Are we about to get a Dodge Miata? Is the Viper coming back in an affordable form?
Dodge Appears To Be Working On… Something
Sitting all by itself in the bottom left corner of the Stellantis Fastlane 2030 presentation is a new Dodge product. It’s shaped like a sports car, and Stellantis says that an SRT version is planned. However, this vehicle was never actually mentioned in the presentation. It doesn’t even have a name yet. What is this car?
One possibility is that Dodge is planning on making a sort of Viper-inspired affordable sports car. Back in early 2025, The Drive spoke with Dodge CEO Matt McAlear. When asked about the Viper, he said that it was “One of my favorite cars.”

Then, he brought up something fascinating when asked if there was a need for a halo car outside of the Charger. McAlear said that there is a market for an entry-level halo car and a flagship halo car. Things got only more exciting from there. From The Drive:
With that, McAlear introduced an entirely new element to the conversation—the prospect of an “entry-level halo.” So of course, we pressed. What would that even look like from Dodge?
“I don’t know what I’d compare it to,” he said. “I think there’s inspiration in seeing what some of the powersports companies have done. Not only the crazy side-by-sides, but the three-wheelers, the Slingshots, I think there’s something there.” “Everyone has so many hobbies these days, they want to spend their money on so many different things,” McAlear continued. “It’s tough to be all-in on one thing, put all my chips in one basket and say, ‘I gotta have that car.’ “It’s great for those who can afford it, but not all of us can or want to do that.”
[…]
“I think there’s some kind of entry-level, back to that sub-$30,000 mark,” he said. “I think there’s a market for people who just want to have that weekend car again, who would like a Viper, but don’t have that $100 or $120K. Something that doesn’t need all the safety features, doesn’t need the heated seats. Just a car.”

McAlear never confirmed development of a Viper or an affordable Viper-like car, but it was clear that he’d love to see something like it in the Dodge lineup. This wouldn’t even be the first time that Dodge has gone down this path.
In 2007, Dodge teased the Demon concept car. The Demon was about the size of a Mazda Miata NC and featured a 2.4-liter four with 172 HP and 165 lb-ft of torque. Had the Demon gone into production, it would have gone up against the Miata, the BMW Z4, the Pontiac Solstice, and the Saturn Sky.

Dodge had also considered an even smaller sports car. The 2004 Slingshot concept was built as a car that could have been pitched to young buyers as a compact sports car. It featured a rear-mounted turbocharged three-cylinder engine with 100 horsepower and a six-speed automated-manual transmission. In reality, the Slingshot was little more than a rebodied Smart Roadster.
If Dodge wanted to get really weird, there was also the 2009 Dodge Circuit EV, which was a hot orange Lotus Europa S with a battery pack and Dodge crosshairs on it.

So, Dodge can reach into its bag and pull out any idea here. Dodge could build another Viper, or it could make a Miata-like sports car with a sort of nod to the Viper. Or, it could do something else entirely. Sadly, Dodge is keeping its trap shut for now, so we have no idea.
However, it does appear that some sort of sports car is in the works. Given the state of the rest of Dodge’s lineup, this could have the potential to be Dodge’s most exciting car in years.
Why A New Viper Would Be So Cool

As Hagerty writes, legend has it that certified car guy executive Bob Lutz got the idea for a Dodge sports car after driving his Autokraft Mk IV Cobra replica. Further inspiration came from Carroll Shelby, who reportedly told Lutz that the Shelby Cobra deserved a reboot. Lutz was Chrysler’s president of operations in 1988, and at the time, Chrysler was known for slinging K-cars and was developing future LH sedans. But Chrysler didn’t really have anything to get people pumped.
As the story goes, one day, Lutz and design director Tom Gale encountered each other in a hallway and dreamed about “what if?” Lutz thought that building a modern Cobra could be a tool to excite both the workers within Chrysler and the public. A new Cobra could show the world that Chrysler could build more than just K-cars. Apparently, this excited Gale so much that he rushed back to his studio and started forming some clay.

Gale managed to produce a concept car in only a few months, which went on display at the 1989 Detroit auto show. The concept Viper at the show had half of a Chrysler LA V8 with six extra cylinders welded on, creating a V10. Metalcrafters had taken the clay body and made metal panels out of it. Meanwhile, hot-rodder Boyd Coddington gave the concept car a chassis. The Viper concept was rough and apparently barely ran, but it was a smash hit.
As Car and Driver writes, Lutz thought that Chrysler had the tools to make this sports car happen on a budget. Chrysler had Lamborghini in its portfolio and was already developing a V10 engine for heavy-duty Dodge Ram trucks. This sports car could even raid the parts bin of the Dakota for suspension parts. Lutz formed a team with Gale, lead truck engineer François Castaing, and Carroll Shelby to bring the sports car to life.

Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocca wasn’t sure about spending $80 million on a sports car that might not make a return on investment, but eventually greenlit the idea. A crack team of 85 engineers who were also largely racers was assembled to make the car a reality.
The heart of the Viper, its 8.0-liter V10, was developed with help from Lamborghini, and sported an aluminum block, iron liners, aluminum heads, magnesium valve covers, and forged internals. Some enthusiasts have long said that the Viper has a “truck engine,” but it doesn’t. The Magnum V10 and the Viper V10 aren’t the same engine even though they might have started at the same place. The Viper’s V10 was a work of mechanical art, too, with 400 HP and 465 lb-ft of torque on tap, all reaching the rear wheels through a five-speed Tremec T56.

The original Viper went on sale in 1992, and it was an instant legend. The team was so obsessed in making a pure sports car experience that everything else took a backseat. The only safety features in an old Viper come from your brain, there aren’t exterior door handles, and you don’t even get windows that roll up. Comfort? That’s cute. The pedals to operate the thing had to be offset to the left of the driver seat just to make everything fit. Dodge was kind enough to give you a fabric roof, but even that was basically an afterthought.
The Viper was like a concept car that you could buy with tri-spoke wheels, a side-exit exhaust, and looks like nothing else. The original Viper would gain a reputation for being unruly, unforgiving of mistakes, and generally uncomfortable. But who cares when you get a car that looks like a striking snake and sounds so epic?

Over time, the Viper lost its leg-cooking side pipes, gained a solid roof, and even got operable windows, yet, it continued to get lighter, faster, and louder. Vipers even went racing and earned class wins. The Viper only got crazier over time, eventually getting an 8.3-liter V10 with 500 HP on deck, the side pipes returned, and later, it even got 600 HP.
When the Viper was in its final years in the mid-2010s, it had become the flagship of the SRT brand and fired 645 HP and 600 lb-ft of torque from an 8.4-liter naturally aspirated V10. This was a car that hit 60 mph in the 3-second range and had a top speed over 200 mph.

When the Viper died in 2017, it didn’t go out in a sad funeral, but standing proud. The Viper was never a hot seller, with 31,850 examples going home over its 26-year run. But it did go out as an American icon. The Viper was such a legend that its engine didn’t even stay in its own body. Viper engines have been bolted to Ram trucks, more than one motorcycle, a British sports car, and even a Zagato.
Personally, I would love to see a Dodge Miata-like sports car with Viper-ish styling or something like that. A Viper has been one of my dream cars ever since I was a kid, but they hold their value so well that I don’t see myself buying one anytime soon. But I could swing a Dodge Miata. I suspect an affordable Dodge sports car probably has a better chance at being profitable, anyway.
Wait, Maybe It’s A Muscle Car?

You know what’s also profitable? Just make it a muscle car. Dodge already has one in the form of the Dodge Daytona, and there’s something interesting when you blow up the high-res version of the drawing. Look at that image and tell me you don’t see a giant wing. While none of this could mean anything and Dodge is just having fun with us, could you imagine something like… this?

While Plymouth is gone, the company doesn’t seem to have an issue with swapping badges around (see: Ram Dakota). The original was designed as a ridiculous homologation special to help the company compete in NASCAR. This is why you see the incredible body kit that’s mounted to a regular Plymouth Road Runner’s body. It’s also possible that it’s a Barracuda under there, although the wing feels more Superbird.
We will be watching Dodge’s next moves here. Is the Viper or something inspired by it coming back? What about a muscle car?
[Ed note: This post has been modified from an early version that didn’t include the muscle car, high-res image – MH]









The high-res version of the tarp covered car looks like it’s just the Hellcat version of the new Charger.
Some interesting possibilities there, but ultimately, a quick, light, stripped-to-basics, sub-30K version of the Viper that wasn’t out to kill the driver would be fantastic! And I’ll believe it when I drive it.
something is coming from Dodge, they probably will run the Charger in NASCAR but maybe they might have another model up their sleeve. Or they might want to go road racing again?
Do we need to remind everyone of the Fiata that didn’t sell worth a crap?
Honest question: Were they sold at Dodge dealerships?
Viperroadcudasuperbird?
Those cowards at corporate need to resurrect the Plymouth brand and call it the Road Runner.
Dodge could be the perfect brand for an American Ariel Nomad— a no-frills rallycross buggy with a Hurricane 4 Turbo in the back
But like, a four-seater
OR, hear me out, it will be another in a loooooonnnnggggg line of cool Dodge concepts that never get out of the design studio.
I’m pretty sure that’s just Lightning McQueen
In before we find out they just stretch the Charger by 4″ to fit a Hemi under the hood, then they drop in all fourteen different versions of the Hemi ending with a “final model year edition” using the Hellcat that’ll actually stretch for 3 model years, and then be resurrected 4 years later with a “final edition, we mean it this time guys” edition.
The problem with the Charger isn’t length – it’s a straight six for crying out loud – but width between the shock towers. The Factory Stock drag race car has a completely different front suspension to accommodate a Hemi.
Still holding out for a Chrysler Pacificat
I think Dodge should go wild with a new Viper and go rear mid-engine and go straight after the C8. The platform could be shared with Maserati for a performance car.
I feel like the Viper is the embodiment of the reason the Corvette engineers decided to go mid-engine, which is they were at the limit of what a front engine car could do and adding more power/downforce/whatever would just make it wildly difficult to drive, so they gave up the traditional layout in favor of driving dynamics and performance.
The Viper started out more powerful than what makes sense in a front-engine car, and just didn’t care. That’s part of the legend at this point, so I don’t feel like a mid-engine Viper would be a Viper at all.
I call absolute BS on them releasing a sub $30k sports car
TVR would like a word.
Do it right or leave it dead please.
Best I can do is a hybrid turbo-4 mated to an 8speed auto with paddle shifters.
Also, the electronic nannies don’t turn off.
Having an engine at all is better than some proposals from years past.
But I am nervous. And to be quite honest, Dodge should be a little nervous too. Viper owners are some of their best customers for Jeeps and Ram trucks to this day. If they are considering using that name again, they need to tread carefully.
Nameplate desecration has been running rampant, I agree it has to stop.
They’re going to get in bed with Mitsubishi again and get a badge engineered variant of the EclipseCross Sport. It will be called the ViperCross Sporty-ish.
I was waiting for your comment. 🙂
I do not believe any of this Stellantis PR deluge. They can say whatever they want, we’ll only see the lowest hanging fruit from any of it, which this is not.
Anything in the Miata/BGRZ86 price range and performance class will be appreciated. As long as it isn’t a rebadged and revived Peugeot RCZ. I know there’s technically nothing wrong with FWD, but it’d be disappointing nontheless. On the other hand, a RWD RCZ…
Also I posted that before the musclecar pivot and…hm. turbo Charger with aerokit, maybe? That isn’t as disappointing as a FWD RCZ but it’s still making me feel like Mark Hamill in Corvette Summer…
I hope some of that money went into quality improvements. It can pe a great sports car but people may not buy it if the quality is crap.
And then they threw out the back seat!
Math sorta checks out…..(Drinks some coffee. Squints at that sentence one more time….)
Thanks, I had a tough time with 8 / 2 + 4 = 10, but I assumed I wasn’t savvy enough to follow the engineering…
Dang it! Six extra cylinders! Math was never my strong suit. 🙂 Probably why I have 14 cars and not 4 cars.
Doesn’t even need to actually be affordable to sell. With financing lengths approaching mortgage lengths, they can fit the payments to every budget! Low monthly payments of $500 for 120 months!
In this day and age, automakers treat everything under $60,000 as “affordable”
You’re right. The more realistic plan is $800 monthly for 180 months for something like this. That puts it at the “affordable” $60,000 and poorly-qualified buyer 14% interest.
Yo Mercedes, please update your article to include the Dodge Razor concept, which was fugggggginnn awesome! SRT4 power, turned sideways, shoved in a RWD benz chassis. It was supposed to ship WITHOUT a radio or speakers, so that tuners could just add their own stuff. AFAIK Benz made sure it wouldn’t happen, because the $20k coupe would have outperformed expensive Mercedes coupes.
So bummed it never made it to production, the turbo 4 from the SRT4 was a great powerplant, and it would have been awesome to have it available in a RWD platform instead of a kind of terrible FWD economy chassis.