Home » How The Most ‘Boring’ Car Company Ended Up Building This Extremely Weird Car

How The Most ‘Boring’ Car Company Ended Up Building This Extremely Weird Car

Toyota Will Vi Ts2
ADVERTISEMENT

Toyota is not often a brand that emerges when someone says “weird.” The funkiest car sold by Toyota right now is probably the Crown, and even that is pretty mild as far as weird goes. But if you go back far enough, especially when you look at small cars sold in Japan, you can find Toyotas so weird you’ll be surprised they’re made by the same company that built your Corolla. Meet the Toyota WiLL Vi, a car that looks like it melted in the microwave. But here’s a twist; you can buy this car in America right here and right now.

This car is up for grabs for the next two days on Bring a Trailer. The laser-focused observers among you will note that this car is a 2000 model-year vehicle and it’s in Canada, but I have great news. This Toyota WiLL Vi was made in April 2000, which means it’ll be legal to head south of the border in less than a month.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Should you choose this weirdo as your next ride, you’ll get something very few others in America have. Most of the folks who import Japanese cars will choose a Kei car, a Nissan Skyline, a Toyota Century, or some sort of JDM legend. There don’t appear to be many people going after something like a forgotten Toyota that looks like a burrito from Taco Bell. Perhaps even sweeter is the fact that this car is still small, but it’s in a class larger than a Kei car, so you can actually take it on the highway.

2000 Toyota Will Vi Img 9822 251 (2)
BAT Seller lromanosky

Designed To Attract The ‘Yutes’

Your biggest question, which perhaps is the same question I have, is how on Earth does Toyota of all brands end up making something like this? Since there isn’t even a single Toyota badge here I wouldn’t fault you for thinking that this was one of those fabled Nissan Pike Factory cars like Jason’s Nissan Pao.

According to Toyota, this car was birthed from a 1999 multi-industry plan to attract a more youthful clientele to a variety of businesses. Toyota says the project originated from within its walls as the Virtual Venture Company. Its plan involved joining forces with Asahi Breweries, Kao, Kinki Nippon Tourist, Matsushita Electric Industrial (now Panasonic), Kokuyo, and Ezaki Glico in a venture named WiLL.

ADVERTISEMENT
Toyota Will Vi 2000 Pictures 1
Toyota

According to Toyota, WiLL meant:

“WiLL” stands for people who are determined and forward-looking. The “V” in Vi stands for vehicle, and the “i” stands for “identity,” “independence,” and “individuality,” as well as being the personal pronoun “I” — concepts we knew would appeal to the target customers (single women in their late 20s). The lower-case “i” was chosen to emphasize the unique “identity” of this vehicle.

Toyota was the only car manufacturer in the WiLL project, and here’s what it said about its involvement:

Each participant to the WiLL project introduced original products targeted at customers in their 20s and 30s, featuring the WiLL brand name and the orange-colored logo. The common product concept was “playfulness and authenticity.” Accordingly, Toyota launched the compact 4-door sedan WiLL Vi in January 2000. The unique body mounted on the platform of the first-generation Vitz, with its arched beltline and the backward-slanting rear windshield, gave a silhouette reminiscent of Cinderella’s carriage. The WiLL brand name represented the developers’ will to pioneer new markets and new consumer lifestyle.

2000 Toyota Will Vi Img 9885 264
BAT Seller lromanosky

As Toyota noted above, the WiLL Vi (pronounced ‘vee-eye’) was more or less a dramatic rebody of the first-generation Vitz subcompact. We never got the first-generation Vitz hatch in America, but we did its coupe sibling the Echo. For the WiLL Vi, Toyota gave the little car a neo-retro aesthetic. If you squint hard enough, you might see Citroën Ami 6 somewhere in there. Otherwise, Toyota made this thing look trendy like a handbag. Actually, let’s just directly quote the press release:

Several converging planes create expressive angles for a sharp look. Parallel grooves embossed in the body panels make for a distinctive style that combines with a cliff-cut silhouette reminiscent of the horse-drawn carriages of yesteryear.

The front view effectively positions the grille, head lamps, turn signals and smooth hood for a friendly expression.
The shape of the rear is similar to that of the front, creating the same atmosphere of friendliness.

The sides are symmetrical, with arched lines defining the front and rear fenders. With large blister fenders and 15-inch tires located at the four corners, the design creates a strong feeling of stability.

Img 0002 92464 Scaled
BAT Seller lromanosky
Img 9924 91781 Scaled
BAT Seller lromanosky

This theming continues inside, where you do get a modern dash, but classic colors and vintage touches like door pull straps. It’s all extremely cute, and when it launched in January 2000 it came right on time for the neo-retro craze. Toyota’s press release even claims that the WiLL Vi had an optional canvas top to even further emulate vintage French cars.

Power came from a 1.3-liter 2NZ-FE four, good for 87 horsepower and 90 lb-ft of torque. That delivers power to the front wheels through an automatic transmission. So it’s not particularly quick, but unlike my Suzuki Every van it should feel pretty okay on a highway.

ADVERTISEMENT
2000 Toyota Will Vi Img 9803 266
BAT Seller lromanosky
2000 Toyota Will Vi Img 9887 267
BAT Seller lromanosky

Part of the reason that you might not find many of these is because there just weren’t many sold. Toyota expected to sell 1,500 units a month. Production ended in December 2001 after only 16,000 examples were built. Technically, Toyota more or less hit its sales target, but it’s noted that Toyota built 697,000 Vitz cars over the same period.

Toyota UK Magazine figures that the WiLL Vi is even rarer today, then points out that only 21 imported WiLL Vis were registered in the UK as of 2021.

This 2000 Toyota WiLL Vi

Img 9830 90654 Scaled
BAT Seller lromanosky

That leaves us with the car on your screen today. According to the Bring a Trailer listing, this 2000 Toyota WiLL Vi was imported into Canada in 2024 and acquired by the seller that year. Aside from aftermarket wheels, the car appears to be stock and in pretty good condition.

If you flip through the photos, you’ll see pretty minty bench seats and a clean underbody. A lot of vintage Japanese cars come out of the country peppered in rust and this one isn’t that!

Img 9878 91443 Scaled
BAT Seller lromanosky

The listing notes features like a CD player, ABS, a cassette deck, power windows, and air-conditioning. In case it wasn’t clear, you’re also looking at cloth seating. In other words, aside from the weird looks, this is just a standard Vitz. That’s great! Sadly, the engine doesn’t appear to have a sibling in a U.S. Toyota model, but the 2NZ-FE was placed into countless cars all over the world, so getting parts shouldn’t be impossible.

ADVERTISEMENT

The biggest question, I think, will be pricing. As of now, the listing is at $4,950 with two days to go. A decent low-mile Toyota WiLL Vi will cost you about $1,600 in a Japanese auction. Then factor in another $2,000 for shipping at current rates. Then you have other miscellaneous costs like entry fees and port fees. That’s only half of the problem. Since the WiLL Vi didn’t even start production until January 2020, only a fraction of the tiny production is legal to import into the United States. None of the ones I found in auctions recently are even close to being legal yet.

Honestly, so long as this auction doesn’t go out of control, it’ll probably be a pretty decent deal. You’ll be able to buy the car, bring it south of the Canadian border in under a month, and have one of the only Toyota WiLL Vis in America. If you’re looking for a weird Japanese car to import and don’t want to wait months or go through the Japanese auction system, this might just be the ticket.

Popular Stories

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
53 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Ishkabibbel
Ishkabibbel
4 months ago

The front looks like the unholy combination of a 2nd gen Toyota Prius and a VW Thing.

EricTheViking
EricTheViking
4 months ago

During the heavy Nomikai session, one of the Toyota employees had a massive enlightment and saw the O Saint Citroën Ami floating amidst the clouds and sliding down the rays of sun.

Austin Vail
Austin Vail
4 months ago

I LOVE the WiLL Vi. I’ve always thought the styling was wonderfully unique and really looks like nothing else except itself. Sure you can see influences of assorted classic cars, but I love how the WiLL Vi clearly isn’t imitating one thing or another, it is its own car with its own unique identity and it’s great.

I’d never made the connection that it was meant to look reminiscent of a carriage before, but I totally see it! I still think it looks more like a very distinct car than a carriage as it’s not going overboard on the carriage cues, but that alone helps explain it to someone who absolutely doesn’t understand what they’re looking at, lol.

I also like that it’s a boring regular Toyota underneath. It really is a sensible, practical, responsible car like every other Toyota sedan ever made, and as such it comes with that Toyota feeling of reassurance that you’ll be fine because you made a smart decision. It just so happens that this particular good decision looks completely bonkers and out-of-this-world 🙂

And the best part is that it’s a very very well thought-out weird. It’s not like a Cybertruck where it’s a strange questionable shape that also looks like lazy design made to be weird and nothing else. There is nothing lazy about any part of the WiLL Vi, it was an extremely focused effort at creating a car with a totally different design language from anything else on the road, but it’s coherent and well thought out and just works.

I’d prefer a blue or green one, but this one would be tempting if I were in any position to own another car.

SonOfLP500
SonOfLP500
4 months ago

At the time, I thought that the WiLL project was a flaky proposition, but might be successful if it had included SONY and Shiseido instead of Matsushita and Kao, which seemed weirdly staid partners, lacking in brand identity, for a “lifestyle” project.

1978fiatspyderfan
1978fiatspyderfan
4 months ago

Looks like a Toyota Beetle. Seems like a good home model car.

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
4 months ago

Is Toyota a boring company?

I’ve had five Toyotas: four mid-engined sports cars and one a RWD coupe with a manual gearbox, standard LSD and deliberately low grip for easy skids.
They make a mad 300bhp rally car too.
And put their badge on the current BMW Z4 Coupe which may be inelegantly bedazzled with fake vents but it’s not boring.

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
4 months ago

Who does though? Even Citroen pumps out bland crap now.

The disappointing thing is that Toyota could afford to be more weird than it is. Where is the mk4 MR2? The next IQ? Is the weirdest thing they currently do the name of the BZ4X?

Black Peter
Black Peter
4 months ago

Since the WiLL Vi didn’t even start production until January 2020, only a fraction of the tiny production is legal to import into the United States.

Did you accidentally a “2”? I think the Vi was 2000-2001?

Ben
Ben
4 months ago

the WiLL Vi (pronounced ‘vee-eye’)

Now we know what the people responsible for the Bees Forks were doing back around the turn of the millenium.

M SV
M SV
4 months ago

Tons of fun little kei and 5 number cars from the early 2000s soon to be out of import jail. I always thought the will and the copen looked good together.

Rippstik
Rippstik
4 months ago

I know the 2NZ-FE didn’t sell in the US, but I have to assume that it’s fairly similar to the 1NZ-FE that sold in the Echo, XA, XB, and Yaris (and to a degree, the 2nd gen Prius).

Austin Vail
Austin Vail
4 months ago
Reply to  Rippstik

Ooooh and if it’s similar enough to the Prius engine, you could convert that Prius engine into a high-compression engine and do racecar things with a WiLL Vi!

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Grey alien in a beige sedan
4 months ago

It has a front bench seat. That alone scores bonus points in my book. The fact that it’s a Toyota (despite the tiny engine with miniscule power) is just icing on the cake.

Scott
Scott
4 months ago

.

Last edited 4 months ago by Scott
Accordian
Accordian
4 months ago

This brings back memories playing Road Trip on my PS2 lol. This body-style was choose able and I think there was a princess character using it.

Mgb2
Mgb2
4 months ago

Like the weirdness of the car, but that marketing copy is insufferable.

Black Peter
Black Peter
4 months ago
Reply to  Mgb2

I mean it’s marketing copy, so….

Scott
Scott
4 months ago

The Crown Signia is my current favorite Toyota, and probably the only model they currently sell in the States that I find at all interesting (well, the regular Crown is pleasantly unusual too, but I’d rather have the wagon-like Signia version). But let’s be real, I’m not about to spend $50K to drive a new Toyota crossover when my 21-year-old Volvo SUV cost me just $3K.

BUT OF COURSE I know about the WiLL Vi from a variety of online content and Youtube videos covering JDM cars. I always think of it as a sort of French-looking Nissan Pao for some reason… as if Toyota had it’s own Pikes Peak skunkworks. It’s SO DELIGHTFULLY WEIRD LOOKING… I’m sure your average F150/RAM buyer would deride it as ‘ugly’ and that fact only makes it MORE appealing to me. 🙂

Plus, it came in this very pale, desaturated metallic pink, and I’m 100% in favor of that. I suppose Toyota assumed that Japanese ladies and Hello Kitty fans would be in the WiLL Vi’s target demo, hence the pink. But it’s a really good pink… one that a 60-year-old American guy (secure in his masculinity and of a certain mindset) would happily drive. This car on BAT is “Pale Rose Opal” metallic, which looks less pink than what I recall, but that might just be the rose-tint of memory at work. 😉 But, what’s the deal with the trunk/roof/hood of this car being pinker than the sides? I don’t remember that, but again, my memory is fallible. The aftermarket wheels are just OK and seem sort of contemporary to the car, but they bother me a little bit.

I didn’t know it was Echo-based… to me, that’s a good thing. I’ve driven Echos and have always been pleasantly impressed by them: they’re not enthusiast cars in the traditional sense BUT they WERE peppy enough, very easy to drive (the one I drove most was owned by a lady in her 90s who was legally blind there near the end), had great visibility and very decent interior room, etc… They were GREAT little city cars IMO, and could reach highway speeds much easier than my 200cc Suzuki can (a low bar I know). 😉

Jeez, I really would like this but it’s a long drive from Alberta to SoCal and it’s not like I really NEED it. I’ve always managed to avoid registering for a BaT account (needed to bid)… what’s the usual buyer premium on top of the purchase price at BaT… about +10% or something? Hmmmm…

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

I watched the video in which the seller explains the paint, the horizontal surfaces were refinished in the original paint, but the rest has faded over the years and no attempt was made to blend it apparently. The seller tried to get it addressed, but apparently no one had or would make the paint for him.

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

Oh, that’s interesting and appreciated info Brandon. I saw the bit about the hood/roof/trunk having been repainted but I didn’t assume that the sides/bumpers would have faded THAT much. It explains why the Vis I remember seemed pinker overall. But it’s not a deal breaker.

I just now set up a bidding account at BaT for the first time ever. I’d be more excited if this car had a manual transmission and its original wheels (which I think were steelies with hubcaps) and if it were all pink, but still, it’s interesting to me. I’m waiting to hear back from BaT about a shipping quote (I couldn’t get their shipping calculator to give me a figure). I’m not sure that I’ll bid on it, but at up to $6-7K total I could kind of rationalize it and enjoy it as a daily/city car.

I understand that the car is paid for by wire transfer for the sale price to the seller. And there’s 5% commission to BaT (on my credit card), and shipping ($?, to the shipping co.), and taxes (to the CA DMV when I register it… hope they know what a just-now-25-year-old JDM WiLL Vi imported from Canada is …fingers crossed).

Any other charges/issues/potential problems I should know about? Are there separate customs/import duties that I’d get a bill for? I never bought a car from overseas before… I did buy about $70K of hardware from a Canadian co. once (workstations originally manufactured in America) but it was so many years ago that I can’t recall any relevant details about customs/etc… at all.

If anyone’s purchased a car from out of the US via BaT and can shed light on any additional costs I should know about before bidding, the advice would be GREATLY APPRECIATED.

TBH, I’m not even sure whether I could register this in California at all, despite it being 25 years old. I guess I’ve got some googling ahead of me… the CA DMV page on this is complex and daunting: https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/vehicle-registration/new-registration/register-an-imported-vehicle/ …and it makes me THINK maybe I CAN’T register this JDM-via-Canada car in California (despite the fact that I do see kei cars with CA plates at JDM car shows sometimes).

Last edited 4 months ago by Scott
Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

You can get them registered in Cali, but it is not easy, nor is it cheap. I have always heard the process of bringing them into compliance costs at least 5 figures, probably not worth it for this car. If you want to dig deeper I might be able to get you in touch with people more knowledgeable than me on that. This will give you some basic info on it though: https://oiwagarage.co/blogs/kei-truck-legal-states/california-jdm-import-legalization

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

Brandon, please permit me to thank you again: that page you linked makes the process SO much clearer than the CA DMV page I linked to does. And yes, sadly, it would seem that my morning fantasy of winning the BaT auction for that mostly-pinkish WiLL Vi is destined to remain just that: a fantasy.

But really, thank you again for your help and insight… I really do appreciate it. 🙂

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

Happy to help! I’ve been playing in the import world for long enough to know some of the crazy things to look out for and wouldn’t want you to buy it and then not be able to get it registered.

Joe L
Joe L
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

Agreed, this really gives clarity to the BAR process!

I do wonder whether Kei trucks could be registered as an off road vehicle in CA without all this mess, but I doubt it.

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  Joe L

I’ve seen a LOT of kei cars/trucks in CA. Go to the big JDM show in Long Beach (or the Toyota-only show coming up there on June 28th that I’ll be going to this year for the first time) and there are literally 100s of keis, and (guessing here) like 70% have out-of-state (not CA) plates leaving the other 30% or so WITH CA license plates.

Presumably, these cars (30% is still a lot of cars) ARE registered (including the smog test/inspection required for valid CA registration) AND insured so that they can be legally owned and operated in CA.

Somehow, I doubt ALL of them went through the entire multi-thousand-dollar process including catalytic converters, etc… but what do I know?

Not much apparently.

Maybe it’s a Freemason thing or something. You don’t get to know the secrets until and unless you’re admitted into the group?

I bet that’s it. 😉

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

Guess I’m going to have to keep settling for just going to the big JDM show in Long Beach once a year, and maybe I’ll get myself a Calpico or Pocari Sweat t-shirt.

Seems a bit unfair this ‘no (easy/affordable) JDM cars’ in CA thing. 🙁

Nlpnt
Nlpnt
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

On the other hand it’s full of rust-free original US-spec Japanese cars for which road salt was like Kryptonite.

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  Nlpnt

I begrudgingly acknowledge your point. 😉

FlyingMonstera
FlyingMonstera
4 months ago

I’ve driven a WiLL! Not a Vi but my nephew’s Cypha which had been imported to NZ at some stage in its career and looked a bit like a Yaris had mated with Marvin the Paranoid Android. Lots of circle motifs inside, and an unfathomable G-Book GPS showing how far these things have come in 20 years. And it drove like a 20 year old Yaris, which I suppose is what it was. No Toyota badging at all, so is the make WiLL not Toyota WiLL (like a Scion isn’t a Toyota Scion)?

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  FlyingMonstera

Never hears of the Cypha before so of course I had to immediately look it up. It’s CUTE! A 20-year-old Yaris is still an awful good city car IMO, plus the Cypha has those funky headlights. 🙂

FlyingMonstera
FlyingMonstera
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

Yes saying it drove like a 20 year old Yaris is kind of a compliment!

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  FlyingMonstera

Just finished watching a handful of WiLL Vi and Cypha videos on Youtube, and I almost think I almost like the Cypha as a daily driver better, though the Vi is much weirder looking (and thus, objectively superior of course). 🙂

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
4 months ago
Reply to  FlyingMonstera

Sort of, WiLL was a Toyota sub brand, sold at Toyota dealers but without the emblems. That’s a pretty common thing to do in Japan. At one point Mazda had 4 sub brands, again sold at Mazda dealers, but with no Mazda badging on them.

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

Sure, like Autozam of AZ-1 fame! 😀 Another fave of mine that even Doug DeMuro didn’t deride too much. 😉

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
4 months ago

No! Don’t call attention to this! I want it! Ignore the fact that after shipping and import fees the current bid is already over what I was willing to spend, but man I want this thing!

BenCars
BenCars
4 months ago

Will? Would.

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
4 months ago

Ribbed, for your pleasure.
Shame the rear glass doesn’t drop like a Mercury Breezeway.

David Saunders
David Saunders
4 months ago

Its a shame about the automatic gearbox. These are super funky and definitely the sort of car to import. Fun looks but maintainable mechanical bits.

Believe it or not I found one of these in a scrapyard with a front end collision.

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  David Saunders

What part of the planet do you live on David? I’m just curious since there’s probably not a single WiLL Vi in a junkyard anywhere in California, and perhaps not in all of America either.

David Saunders
David Saunders
4 months ago
Reply to  Scott

I am in Alberta, Canada. It was in a junkyard in Calgary. Bright orange.

https://www.curbsideclassic.com/blog/junkyard/junkyard-2000-toyota-will-vi-less-known-retro-oddity/

Scott
Scott
4 months ago
Reply to  David Saunders

Thanks David. I’ve been to Calgary once years ago (in the winter as it happens) and all I can remember is how cold it was, even by NYC standards which is where I’m from originally). It was the first time I drove a Mercedes SLK too as it happens. It had the same dead steering as my own CLK (at that time) due to Mercedes’ recirculating ball.

But back to topic, I also just saw a little WiLL Vi video on Youtube (can’t find the link now for some reason) and it showed one in THAT metallic orange color… it even had steelies painted to match the car, with chrome rings and caps. Odd to see a Vi in such a saturated color (I always think of them as usually that great pink, or silver, or that pale blue metallic) but it works, and looks good with the terra cotta interior. 🙂

Bob the Hobo
Bob the Hobo
4 months ago

If you squint hard enough, you might see Citroën Ami 6 somewhere in there.

I was thinking the Ami 6 combined with a 2CV.

DialMforMiata
DialMforMiata
4 months ago

Sometimes the question isn’t “WiLL Vi”, but ShOULD Vi”. No, Vi shouldn’t.

Rich Hobbs
Rich Hobbs
4 months ago

It’s so far out it’s coming back!!!

Surprise me……
Surprise me……
4 months ago

When I would see them randomly still, some reason I would smile as they feel like the Multipla of Toyota. It’s a toyota so it is easier to drive still.

AssMatt
AssMatt
4 months ago

WiLL Vi?

No, we von’t.

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Arch Duke Maxyenko
4 months ago

Still better than anything from Will.I.Am has ever done

Bob the Hobo
Bob the Hobo
4 months ago

But he was in Rio… (the major motion picture, not the Kia)

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
4 months ago
Reply to  Bob the Hobo

I thought Michael Caine was in that?

Bob the Hobo
Bob the Hobo
4 months ago
Reply to  Ranwhenparked

How dare you compare that to the cinematic masterpiece about birds. I’ll let it slide if you Blame it on Rio.

53
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x