Home » I Never Want To Hear Any Of Us Complain About Not Getting The Wild Toyotas Ever Again

I Never Want To Hear Any Of Us Complain About Not Getting The Wild Toyotas Ever Again

2026 Toyota Grmn Corolla Ts

Some of the best moments in automotive history happen when marques go certifiably crazy. Audi stuffing a V12 diesel engine in a family SUV, Buick upstaging the Corvette, that sort of raw singular ambition. The GR Corolla already felt like a high water mark for Toyota, a homegrown sport compact car with a drivetrain to sin for. So how do you make it better? By going crazier. This is the all-screaming, all-dancing, hardcore, R-rated GRMN Corolla, a factory tuner special with eye-popping purpose. And you thought the Morizo Edition was bonkers.

In the current market of hot hatches, the GR Corolla occupies an interesting niche. Sure, its surprisingly potent 300-horsepower turbocharged 1.6-liter inline-three is quite the curiosity, but perhaps the highlight of the whole car is its all-wheel-drive system. Nothing else in this segment offers limited-slip front and rear differentials, and the result is an absolute weapon when the roads get slippery. I remember testing one mid-winter on Blizzaks and the confidence it served up was simply immense. As such, it shouldn’t be surprising that Toyota’s five-door hot hatch has already been spun off into a wild special edition. The Morizon Edition of 2023 ditched the rear seats, shortened the final drive ratio, upped the torque, and reworked the chassis to create something rather frenetic. Compared to the GRMN, it was just a warm-up lap.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Under the hood, the GRMN Corolla features roughly the same sort of engine that we’re now deeply familiar with. Horsepower still stands at 300, but peak torque climbs slightly from 295 lb.-ft. to 302 lb.-ft. of twist. Then again, numbers alone don’t tell the whole story here. Toyota claims its optimized under-the-curve output from 4,000 to 4,600 RPM, the sort of rev range where extra punch results in quicker corner exits on track. To stay cool under pressure, Toyota’s also added an intercooler sprayer, primed to hose down the air-to-air intercooler, reduce intake air temperatures, and keep the GRMN Corolla happier during long, hard track sessions.

2026 Toyota Grmn Corolla Gravel 007
Photo credit: Toyota

Speaking of the track, the “MN” in the GRMN Corolla’s name doesn’t stand for Minnesota, but instead “Meister of Nürburgring.” You know, that 12.9-mile racetrack in Germany that makes most club circuits look like karting tracks. Bumpy, fast and unforgiving, automakers have been pushing their machines to the limits on this stretch of tarmac for decades, and you can tell this Corolla’s been honed there just by how it’s been tweaked. Let’s start with the tires, sticky 245-section Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2s. High friction, high grip, but still enough tread to cope with a spot of drizzle. Speaking of traction, Toyota claims both the all-wheel-drive system and the steering have been retuned for high-speed running. The sort of thing you want when flat-out to the bottom of Fuchsröhre.

2026 Toyota Grmn Corolla Gravel 009
Photo credit: Toyota

Then there’s the suspension. Toyota threw the standard twin-tube dampers in the bin, instead speccing unique rebound-spring-equipped monotube dampers that prevent oil aeration over the relentless bumps of the Green Hell. With a standard layout up front and an inverted one out back, these dampers should be a substantial upgrade that trades a little bit of street comfort for a whole bunch of capability. Of course, hit a big enough bump and any car will run out of damper travel, which is why Toyota’s retuned the bump stops on the GRMN Corolla to make brief stints of low-level flight more manageable.

The gills appear to have some fender on them.
Photo credit: Toyota

Of course, the suspension’s a whole lot harder to see with the GRMN Corolla on the ground than the aerodynamic tweaks. If those heavily ventilated front fenders look like something off a Super Taikyu race car, you’re just seeing exactly where Toyota got its inspiration from. Louvers up top help extract trapped air from atop the front tires, and should help the new front winglets do their job more effectively. Around back, the GRMN’s wing element is adjustable through five degrees depending on how much downforce you want. Need more top speed? Trim it out. Want more stability? Steepen its rake.

Rear...um...not seat. Just a bar to keep your luggage from smashing the back of your head.
Photo credit: Toyota

Like the Morizo Edition, the GRMN Corolla gets its own regimen of weight-saving that starts with throwing the rear seat in the bin. Does that make it technically a van? Argue with your local taxman about that. Regardless, a carbon fiber hood with some hardcore venting also contributes to a weight reduction of 77 pounds over the standard GR Corolla, although U.S.-market examples won’t be getting the coolest weight reduction measure—a set of fiberglass bucket seats with seriously aggressive bolstering.

2026 Toyota Grmn Corolla Gravel 004
Photo credit: Toyota

Oh yeah, the GRMN Corolla isn’t forbidden fruit. This winged, vented, gold-wheeled, flocked-dash-equipped, Morizo-signed two-seat special is coming here. Toyota hasn’t officially announced how many will make it across the ocean or what each one will cost, but the answer to the former is likely not many. Regardless, this is a big deal because America usually hasn’t received the wildest Toyotas.

Toyota GR Supra A90 Final Edition
Photo credit: Toyota

The GR Supra Final Edition that Europe and Japan got featured some serious upgrades. A huge wing, an extra 47 horsepower, a complete new suspension package featuring high-end KW adjustable coilovers. Meanwhile, America’s Final Edition GR Supra was mostly an appearance package. It got some minor chassis calibration tweaks, but they were more-or-less the same as the standard final-year Supra in other markets. Then there’s stuff like the Lexus LBX Morizo RR, a hopped-up GR Corolla in a suit. Or the GR Yaris Sebastien Ogier 9x World Champion Edition, a ‘roided-up GR Yaris with a special AWD mode for high-speed gravel running. Neither of which made it to North America.

2026 Toyota Grmn Corolla Gravel 006
Photo credit: Toyota

In that context, the GRMN Corolla coming to America feels like a big deal. Not only is it the new top-dog Japanese hot hatch, it’s a moment of glorious overkill that North Americans will actually be able to enjoy. No waiting 25 years for this one. It’s a good sign, because if this takes off, it should mean that more wild Toyotas could come our way.

Top graphic image: Toyota

 

 

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TK-421
TK-421
7 minutes ago

25K miles in to my GR Corolla and still smile when I drive it. Like this or hate it, at least they’re still making fun &#%$ vs another SUV with an RS or M badge.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
10 minutes ago

It’s a GR(e)M(li)N. For tormenting that AWD M2 from earlier.

(…gonna head the AMC jokes off at the pass, here.)

Alexk98
Member
Alexk98
19 minutes ago

Like the Morizo Edition, the GRMN Corolla gets its own regimen of weight-saving that starts with throwing the rear seat in the bin. Does that make it technically a van?

No rear seats BUT rear door windows. Welcome back HHR SS Half-Panel

Edit: I have been made aware that the HHR Half panels did in fact have rear seats, and my day has now been ruined.

Last edited 18 minutes ago by Alexk98
Anonymous Person
Anonymous Person
26 minutes ago

In an alternate dimension, GM would see this and make a 2-door, AWD, 6-speed-manual version of the Trax, market it as a ‘hot hatch’ and call it the Trax SS. And then they would bring back a lowered turbo AWD 2-door Canyon and market it as a Syclone.

I wished I lived in that dimension. 🙂

Allen Lloyd
Allen Lloyd
26 minutes ago

In my opinion, the best thing they could do is replace the entire exhaust system. These things look cool and go like stink, BUT the noise they make is terrible.

Angrycat Meowmeow
Member
Angrycat Meowmeow
42 minutes ago

Corolla: AWD is amazing! Drive it in the winter with loads of confidence! So cool. Thanks Toyota!

M2: AWD is a crime. You can get by just fine on snow tires. We are witnessing the downfall of sports cars as we know them. It bothers me that this option even exists. Set it on fire.

V10omous
Member
V10omous
21 minutes ago

I laughed, but the steelman for that argument is losing a FWD economy car is unremarkable but losing a RWD sports car is sad.

Yes I know it’s only an option on the M2. I didn’t say it was the strongest steelman.

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
13 minutes ago

I appreciate that there’s someone else out there keeping a persistent context running between stories, too. I had the same thoughts.

GumpertApolloGuy
GumpertApolloGuy
44 minutes ago

I’ll always support a new and exciting car instead of a boring SUV, so good on Toyota. Not that I could afford one anyways

Username Loading....
Member
Username Loading....
46 minutes ago

I’m sad that this will probably be limited in production and priced out of reach for many but I like it!

This is how the base GR Corolla always should have looked. I want my turbo awd compacts to look either like
A.) A Fast and Furious extra.
B.) A stage rally car.

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Member
Arch Duke Maxyenko
47 minutes ago

Did they fix the transfer case overheating issues on this one?

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
52 minutes ago

So about the same amount of power and torque as a 20 year old STI. For probably 3x the money.

Why should I get excited? I keep on forgetting.

NC Miata NA
Member
NC Miata NA
45 minutes ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

Because when your GR Corolla engine blows up for using 40% of its capability, you get to experience the thrill of what excuse Toyota will use to refuse the warranty claim.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
14 minutes ago
Reply to  NC Miata NA

It amazes me how little press this issue gets. Oh wait, no it shouldn’t. Because our press is head over heals in love with their beloved Toyota.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
33 minutes ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

The GR Corolla is notable because Subaru still doesn’t offer a hatchback WRX (let alone in a halo STI trim).

10001010
Member
10001010
33 minutes ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

Because Subaru refuses to build the STi hatch these days.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
53 minutes ago

I didn’t know Mansory did Toyotas.

Albert Ferrer
Member
Albert Ferrer
55 minutes ago

This car is far too Nurburgring for me. It even has it in the name.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
1 hour ago

On one hand: this defeats the purpose of a hot hatch, it’ll be stupidly expensive, and dealerships will add obscene markups that JDM bros will happily pay for what’s more or less a few carbon fiber bits and a rear seat delete.

On the other: I’m quite happy it exists!

Albert Ferrer
Member
Albert Ferrer
54 minutes ago

This. So much this.

I don’t want it, but I want it to exist.

Last edited 54 minutes ago by Albert Ferrer
Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
35 minutes ago

Yes.

Happy that it exists.

But can we do a new model that slots in just under the current GR Corolla that’s slightly detuned for reliability, softer suspension for crossing train tracks or hitting potholes, a bit of added insulation to the cabin, without the silly three-port exhaust, and brakepads that I can buy in-stock at any automotive shop.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
18 minutes ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

What you’re looking for is a GTI

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
17 minutes ago

If they offered with a 6MT.

It's Pronounced Porch-ah
Member
It's Pronounced Porch-ah
12 minutes ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

You could check out the Acura Integra, it is significantly down on power compared to the GR Corolla or GTI, but genuinely enjoyable to drive and a nice place to spend time. The Type S gets you a similar power output but I assume it will be a harsh ride.

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