Home » I Designed A Retro XT Coupe Tribute Crossover For Real Subaru Fans Who Don’t Love The New Outback

I Designed A Retro XT Coupe Tribute Crossover For Real Subaru Fans Who Don’t Love The New Outback

Subaru Xt40 Ts

Sales of the brand-new SUV-like Subaru Outback are down this year compared to last – by a lot. Many people and even other websites are claiming that it’s because the appearance of the latest Outback is, well, less than appealing. However, our own Brian Sylvestro wrote a piece countering that opinion, claiming that there are other factors at play to cause this sales drop.

Commenters to his story generally felt that Brian might be right, but they also were adamant that his reasoning didn’t take away from the fact that this new Outback is ugly as a mud fence. I think that “ugly” might be the wrong word here; the biggest issue for many is that this new Outback just ain’t an Outback. Honestly, it doesn’t even look like a Subaru.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Maybe focus groups told them to add an F-150 face to their once-pioneering crossover to increase sales. I have no idea, but I also kind of think this thing sucks.

2026 Subaru Outback Wilderness 01
source: Subaru

What the Hell is going on in back? All those lumps and bumps and gold hexagon-framed backup lights? It looks like someone went nuts with those cheesy aftermarket off-roading accessories you see on SUVs that you simply know will never stray from the tarmac. I thought it was one of those awful AI “what the next whatever could look like” things, but this purports to be the actual car. Actually, I’ve seen it in the sheet metal (and lots of plastic, of course), so I know it’s real. The wheel arch trim in particular is kind of laughable.

2026 Subaru Outback Wilderness 04
source: Subaru

It’s highly unattractive, but I don’t need a new Outback to be beautiful: I need it to be weird. I can make that happen.

Strange ‘Bru

If I were to ask you what Japanese car was the soulmate of the European brand Saab, what would you say? Many people would instantly say “Subaru,” but it seems like that brand is, consciously or not, trying to change that image.

Subaru started out as a company making very, very weird cars that we Autopians generally adore. The 360 minicar was sold here by future Yugo importer Malcolm Bricklin in the sixties until the obvious safety concerns over driving such a tiny vehicle on roads full of two-ton American barges ended its run in America.

Yearmakemodel Subaru360
source: Subaru

That didn’t stop them. While most Japanese subcompacts of the time looked like scaled-down domestic cars, Subaru returned with some rather oddly shaped sedans, coupes, and wagons that were front-wheel drive years before Toyota and Datsun offered such a layout.

Cs Subaru Sedan
source: Subaru

Soobie wasn’t done. They added a transfer case and rear driveline to create what was arguably the first crossover with their 4WD station wagon (no center differential, though, so if all-wheel drive is your criteria for “crossover,” then the AMC Eagle is the true first). Suddenly, car shoppers in Colorado didn’t have to buy a big Blazer to get up the mountain.

Cs Usskiteam Subaru
source: Subaru

We can’t forget the time that Subaru decided to make an El Camino, which they dubbed the BRAT (Bi-Drive All Terrain, so it’s really BEEDRAT.) Naturally, such a vehicle would have been subject to the “Chicken Tax” that America put onto imported pickups, but Subaru sold theirs as a four-seater. Of course, two of the four passengers needed to sit outside in the bed, but that’s pretty creative thinking there.

Brat Old 7 19
source: Subaru

If Subaru were to make a sports coupe, you would imagine it to be as unconventional as Saab’s Sonett. In reality, it made the Saab look almost like a Camry by comparison. The Subaru XT coupe was gloriously bizarre, looking a bit like a doorstop with pop-up headlights and a black glass canopy on top.

85 Xt Turbo 1
source: Subaru

A full-width taillight fits in a band that runs the perimeter of the car, and the hidden door handles actually help the surprisingly good aero of the design.

051216 Barn Finds 1988 Subaru Xt Xt6 4wd 2
source: Bring A Trailer

The inside was even more insane, as I’ve written about before:

Thankfully, the gauge cluster lived up to the promise of the wild exterior. The “car” shape sat on a “road” formed by the graphic bar tachometer on one side and the mirror-image turbo boost gauge on the other. Also, if you raised the XT on its height-adjustable air suspension, that little graphic “car” in the center raised up as well.

The only way it could have gotten better is if the 4WD engagement button on top of the shifter instead fired laser-graphics out of the car shape on the screen. Use the Force, Luke!

Xt Gague 222
source: New Old Cars

Combine that with an asymmetric steering wheel, “satellite” switch pods, “Pasha” like upholstery, and window switches hidden in grooves on the door, and you’ve got an interior that looks like it was designed by someone who’d never seen a car interior before. It’s awesome.

Xt Interior 33
source: Ebay via Barn Finds

How cool is this thing? Remember this ad and you’ll want one again.

That, my friends, is what Subaru is about. Or, rather, it should be about. It’s a car brand that made products so strange and foreign that The Boss and Blondie even used it to act as a polar opposite of a big Cadillac in their songs.

I’m sure the new Outback will find plenty of buyers, but to myself and many readers, this thing is an affront to the very soul of Soobie. I saw that there’s even a version of this new Outback called the “XT.” Can you think of something more sacrilegious than that? Have they no shame? Build this thing if you must, guys, but give us that remember the old Subaru something we can sink our teeth into. I’m talking about a rebodied Outback that pays tribute to the real XT; the retro-style 2026 Outback XT40, because it’s been four decades since we’ve had a Subaru this interesting.

Less Live Stream Era And More Live Aid Era

A few years back on this site, I translated the looks of the XT’s equally-strange successor, the Italdesign-penned SVX sport coupe, into an SUV crossover wagon:

Fwprdhsaw2 2
source: Cars & Bids

This was a rather simple task, but applying the XT’s wedge styling details to a tall, boxy SUV proves a bit more challenging. Wow, after going through that Soobie history and seeing that SVX, I hate this new Outback even more.

Epson Mfp Image
source: Subaru

Here’s the pencil tracing/scribble I started with over the existing car:

Screenshot 2026 04 26 220818

The first thing I did with the current Outback (in particular the Wilderness model) is strip off all the black plastic I’m-a-truck junk to get back to the basic shape, which is essentially a nondescript box. With a flat engine, there’s no excuse not to bring the hood line down a bit to mimic the old XT sports car and to give better visibility up front. Does it need pop-up lights? No, but I’d add them. Let’s add a WRX-style hood scoop, too. Think it looks strange? Good!

Epson Mfp Image
source: Subaru

I’ve reduced the overwrought wheel arch trim to something similar. The ones on the current new Outback are ugly and actually are counterproductive since they make the relatively large wheels look like tiny thimbles! A recessed cut runs between the front lights and taillights along the side, just as on the 1985 car. Front door handles are flush, but the rear ones are incorporated into the C-pillars. Hey, look! A metal skid plate! That should make someone on staff happy and let him know that Subaru took his comments to heart. I’ve brought the approach angle way up, too.

Epson Mfp Image
EPSON MFP image

Let’s animate the original 2026 car over the retro XT40. Under the skin, the XT40 would be exactly the same as the current new Outback since virtually nobody has complained about how it drives and performs.

Subaru Xt40 4 25 Animation

In back, the all-black section over the cargo area copies the XT coupe; it’s raised in a manner similar to an old Land Rover Discovery. The low taillights blend into the side recesses of the car and copy the look of the old coupe- in fact, I photoshopped them off of an actual ’85 coupe. The two-part rear window is rather strange, as is the odd black trim below the rear quarter glass, but weird is what I want.

Epson Mfp Image
source: Subaru

Again, an animation of the “old” new Outback and the “new” retro-looking Outback.

Subaru Xt40 Rear 4 25 Animation

Obviously, we need the dashboard to be every bit as strange as the original XT. The asymmetric wheel is still there, and the gauge display has a number of configurations, including one replicating the 1985 dashboard. There’s a screen in front of the passenger side as well (which the driver can see) that can display things like a clock, inclinometers, and altitude gauges. There’s a “satellite” switch pod on the right of the steering column for wipers, front and rear defoggers, and cabin temp (either driver’s side or synced based on menu options).

On each door panel, below the vents are switches for seat heating or cooling, plus cabin temperature on the passenger’s side. Wow, no need for the shotgun passenger to stare at the center stack for ten minutes trying to figure out where the effing buttons are!

Epson Mfp Image

Also, note that the gear selector has a button on top just like the 1985 car, but on this new Outback, it engages “off-road” mode that raises the suspension, takes the transmission out of “sport” mode, turns on the inclinometers, and could even lock the differentials if you set it to do that in the menus. A gimmick? Of course! Just be happy that I didn’t put a flip-up “cyclops” lamp in the middle of the grille. Or maybe I should have?

Soobie-Do Or Soobie-Don’t?

I’ll be the first to admit that the XT40 is probably too strange for the average buyer; sadly, many of them might prefer the truck-styled new model, and that’s fine.

I can tell you this, though: if a Soobie is almost identical to a Honda or a Toyota and it costs about the same, I’d probably take one of those two top-tier brand cars anyway. If you’re just buying something with the expectation of it being a bland, reliable, and capable car, why not get one that you simply know will never, ever blow head gaskets, headlights, or whatever other maladies that Matt Hardigree’s Subaru had that made him buy a CR-V instead?

This is a brand with a long history of interesting cars; to see them follow the herd and go the way of something like Nissan seems like a dead end. We may never get another ST  or SVX, but the spirit can at least live on. Subarus should be weird, and built to stay that way.

Top graphic images: Subaru

 

 

 

 

 

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
90 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Adam
Member
Adam
14 days ago

Sorry, but “ugly” is quite appropriate in describing the new Outback.
As your own reviewer wrote, “The end result looks a bit like a Ford Taurus X that’s been covered in glue and run through a plastic cladding factory.”
]
And why does the Outback need to look weird? Why can’t be a butched-up wagon?

Last edited 14 days ago by Adam
Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
15 days ago

I am sorry. But that looks bad. Mismatched leftover Legos bad.

Tallestdwarf
Tallestdwarf
15 days ago

I wonder what’s wrong with the eyes of the readership on this site.
Seriously… calling the ’26 Outback ugly, and then turning it into an alt-universe Pontiac Aztek?

The hood scoop is too wide for a Subaru. Pop-up headlights are a non-starter.
Four bolt wheels, with a weird two spoke design that will never look right (I realize these were on the OG XT, but they’re stupid-looking)… there are so many choices made here that make the car worse-looking.

I also understand this is a design exercise, not a production model, but some of panel lines are not likely to work on a production vehicle. Why does the back end stnad above the roofline? That’s going to cause aero issues, and also will create some really weird water-flow characteristics in the rain.

JIHADJOE
JIHADJOE
15 days ago
Reply to  Tallestdwarf

The Subaru WRC cars also used 4 bolts (as did Mitsubishi’s)

https://www.sportscarmarket.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/2007-subaru-impreza-wrc-s12b-main.jpg

Tallestdwarf
Tallestdwarf
14 days ago
Reply to  JIHADJOE

Yeah, I know. They used them on cars that were well under 200hp.
There’s a reason why they don’t use them now… bigger wheels and bigger hp work better with more bolts.

Last edited 14 days ago by Tallestdwarf
The Bishop
Member
The Bishop
13 days ago
Reply to  Tallestdwarf

Was really planning on those being covers. And the ‘bolts’ are just black squares

Tallestdwarf
Tallestdwarf
13 days ago
Reply to  The Bishop

Interesting!
Thanks for your design updates – I generally really enjoy them.
I’m a bit of a Subaru fanboy, and make no illusions about them being beautiful LOL.

Anders
Anders
16 days ago

The new Outback is a strong candidate for the ugliest wheel trim every award.It’s really up there competing with Hyundai Ioniq 9 and 5 and the Kia Tasman. Come to think of it, it’s like they deliberately tried to make every single part of it ugly.. the plastic cladding, the lights, the grille, wheels and of course the surfacing, the proportions and lest we forget, the logo!

Buddybears
Buddybears
16 days ago

This legit looks better and like a viable design ( except popup lights are now banned )

Really No Regrets
Member
Really No Regrets
16 days ago

Yes, PLEASE!

Bishop, your design doesn’t need to look ‘pretty’ or whatever, and I’m here for it! This is so much better. Subaru needs something like this.

It reminds me of the story about Ford’s redesign of the Thunderbird, from squared 1982 to aerodynamic 1983. I don’t know about its truthiness, but the story in my faded memory is that Ford showed a mockup for their ‘new’ 1983 Tbird to a focus group for feedback. Legend has it that the more squared 83 turned off the folks with one asking if it was a joke. Whatever the reason, Ford introduced the 83 Tbird with elegant swoopy bodywork to praise.

With your redesign, it’d be easier to pick out my XT40 in a parking lot. Love the shape, with lower Cd and likely more quiet interior plus picks up an MPG or two. The taller rear load area is a plus as it means more room for stuff. OK, I’d accept the hood scoop and popup headlights, as they’re part of the funkiness of it.

Thanks for giving hope to a current Outback owner. Bland and blending-in is fine. The new BEV, the Toyota twins, look ‘better’ as they don’t look like a ‘try harder’ mess. I’ve learned that the Toyota BEVs don’t have Subaru’s mechanical all-wheel drive so that gives me pause.

Maybe there will soon be a redesigned Outback that’s using Toyota’s hybrid system while maintaining Subaru’s AWD system. I’d buy a version your XT40h (hybrid, of course).

Steve Wilson
Member
Steve Wilson
16 days ago

This is brilliant work. I cringe every time I see a new Outback and you’ve solved all its problems–the worst being that ridiculous high block of a front end that doesn’t coordinate with anything behind the A-pillar.

Hoonicus
Hoonicus
16 days ago

I almost always like the cut of your scrib. Definite improvement, but really low bar. Shrink ray the whole damn industry! I don’t begrudge a large family having a large SUV, but know several single people that have them, and the roads around me are over 50% ever larger view blockers with just one inside.

Scott Ross
Member
Scott Ross
16 days ago

I hate that the Eclipse is now a SUV. I hate that they slapped a Mustang badge on an SUV. Cool drawing exercise but I wouldnt want an XT SUV.

GirchyGirchy
Member
GirchyGirchy
15 days ago
Reply to  Scott Ross

I couldn’t care less what vehicles are named, or whether a new vehicle lives up to its name’s historical significance.

But fuck you for ruining the Outback, Subaru.

Tallestdwarf
Tallestdwarf
15 days ago
Reply to  GirchyGirchy

There are still plenty of pre-’26 Outbacks out there to buy if you want one.

GirchyGirchy
Member
GirchyGirchy
15 days ago
Reply to  Tallestdwarf

We own a ’21 so it won’t need to be replaced for a while. Hopefully the next gen will fix their sins.

Church
Member
Church
16 days ago

I would be on a waiting list within an hour.

Carlos Ferreira
Member
Carlos Ferreira
16 days ago

I would buy this immediately

Luxobarge
Member
Luxobarge
16 days ago

Too beautiful for this world, Your Excellency.

I’m left hoping that, by the time our 2020 Outback is up for replacement, Subaru will have realized their mistake and have redesigned it yet again to be more car-like.

GirchyGirchy
Member
GirchyGirchy
15 days ago
Reply to  Luxobarge

Ha, we’re hoping the same for our ’21.

Twobox Designgineer
Twobox Designgineer
16 days ago

Seeing those pics of the (real) current Outback reminds me how shockingly bad it looked in person at the auto show. And I say at the auto show because I haven’t seen any on the streets. Not. A Single. One.

Carlos Ferreira
Member
Carlos Ferreira
16 days ago

I’ve see a few; you’re not missing anything.

Horizontally Opposed
Member
Horizontally Opposed
16 days ago

I wooda totally bought that as my third Outback. But alas they didn’t ask you for ideas and now they screwed the pooch.

Shot Rod Lincoln
Member
Shot Rod Lincoln
16 days ago

I unironically love this. Maybe next the Sienna and other minivans could get the 80s treatment

UncleTravelingMatt
UncleTravelingMatt
16 days ago

Latter-day Previa would be stupendous.

Ranwhenparked
Member
Ranwhenparked
16 days ago

I don’t know if this would appeal to fans of the old Outback, but it would definitely appeal to lots of other people, maybe strike the same ’80s nostalgia chords Hyundai was sort of going after with the Ioniq 6

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
16 days ago
Reply to  Ranwhenparked

I like this. Or on the Hyundai front, how the Elantra’s front end absolutely looks like it has pop ups (which is why it’s my favorite part of the car).

Horizontally Opposed
Member
Horizontally Opposed
16 days ago
Reply to  Ranwhenparked

It does have some Santa Fe vibes and that one is def weird, goes to show that it can be done.

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
16 days ago

Oh no I love it.

Sucktastico!
Member
Sucktastico!
16 days ago

No! Bad Bishop! That shall not convert 80s icons to CUVs! No – you go lay down and think about what you’ve done!

My folks had both generations of these, the XT4 turbo with the star trek guages and the XT6 with some actual power. I drove the XT4 to prom. You SHALL NOT convert them to CUVs!

Last edited 16 days ago by Sucktastico!
Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
16 days ago
Reply to  Sucktastico!

Please tell me at least one of them was in that 80s tech-maroon. That was THE color for them back in the day from what I recall.

Sucktastico!
Member
Sucktastico!
16 days ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

The XT4 was the 2-tone baby blue over white they all seemed to come in and the XT6 was maroon indeed!

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
16 days ago

Subaru focus group event:

“Ladies, what would you like to see next from us?”

“More broad shouldered women wearing lumberjack shirts in your ads.”

Post event review:

“We got nothing. Lets just slap some more cladding on this baby.”

Shooting Brake
Member
Shooting Brake
16 days ago

A fun take on some sillyness! Subaru has been aggressive going normie for a while now and it hasn’t bitten them yet, we’ll have to wait and see if the new Outback is finally over the line or not. But I miss weird soobie like most enthusiasts. But the modern market doesn’t tolerate risk well unfortunately.

Horizontally Opposed
Member
Horizontally Opposed
16 days ago
Reply to  Shooting Brake

The new one is positively NOT normie

RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
Member
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
16 days ago

“What the hell is going on in back?”

Out back was right there…

I’ll take a 2026 AMC Eagle please…

Blondie’s Rapture
“You go out at night eating cars
You eat Cadillacs Lincolns too
Mercurys and Subaru
And you don’t stop
You keep on eating cars”

10001010
Member
10001010
16 days ago

We were just down at Subaru a few weeks ago buying the wife a new lime green Crosstrek (IT IS SO DAMN BRIGHT) and anyways while we were there we were looking at the new Ford Explorer Giant Outback and what I don’t get is the Ascent. They already make a big SUV, why did they grow the Outback to Ascent proportions? What does this do for the Ascent? If I’m honest, while we like the Crosstrek and I liked my BRZ and loved my WRX hatch I’m not in the market for either an Outback or an Ascent so maybe my opinion doesn’t matter but seriously, what’s the point of the giant Outback?

PBL
PBL
16 days ago
Reply to  10001010

Subaru just designed the exterior to look bigger–some focus group must have told them that’s what customers want. The new one is almost exactly the same size as the last Outback except 1″ wider and 1-2″ taller. The Ascent is significantly bigger than both in every dimension and some 600-700 pounds heavier too. But the styling of the Ascent is much more conservative to downplay its heft.

GreatFallsGreen
Member
GreatFallsGreen
16 days ago
Reply to  PBL

The Ascent is also more than a generation behind the rest of the lineup as far as design language, having debuted in a more conservative time in Subaru design. The entire run of the prior Outback generation fits within the Ascent’s run, with a year on either side so far.

I would not be surprised if a next-gen Ascent squares up more to boot. Even the Getaway, while not so cladded, is a pretty squared off and sort of blocky design.

Epochellipse
Epochellipse
16 days ago

I would buy one of these immediately, even though the shifter looks like a broken toe. I really love the wheels and the wiper arm that’s on that CRX-ish back window split.

Whaleya
Member
Whaleya
16 days ago

Fun fact. the USA spec XT6 (1987) had 4 wheel air suspension. The schematic showed a switch (Canadian version maybe?) for high/low ground clearance but the USA version didn’t have the switch. The rest of the system was the same. You could apply voltage to the suspension CPU height switch pin and it would work to increase ground clearance. Source- my curiosity when studying the service manuals for my XT6. (Yes, I added a switch). Also the XT6 had two positions for the mono front wiper – on the glass for winter or tucked in the cowl for summer. Man, I miss that car!!

90
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x