Home » It Sure Looks Like Toyota Is About To Get Weird With The Corolla

It Sure Looks Like Toyota Is About To Get Weird With The Corolla

New Weird Corolla Ts

What’s the best-selling car ever? If you define it by a single generation, it’s the Volkswagen Beetle, but if you define it by a nameplate, it’s the Toyota Corolla. We’re talking more than 50 million sold on every corner of this Earth, to people from all walks of life. Teachers, soldiers, criminals, the lot. It really is the default answer when much of the world wants to buy a car, and at this year’s Japan Mobility Show, Toyota gave us a glimpse at where the Corolla is going.

On first glance, there’s a whiff of post-recession to the appearance of this concept car, from the plunging beltline to the chamfered surfacing on the lower doors. Tropes we’ve seen before many moons ago, all but forgotten about, and are now almost reminiscing over. As a result, the Corolla concept isn’t exactly elegant from all angles, but the Corolla Furia Concept of 2013 taught us that proportions and surfacing can change for the better from concept to production.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Truthfully, I’m quite hoping it’s a five-door liftback for a couple of reasons. I mean, the silhouette certainly suggests it, and a liftback would be a practicality boost over a standard sedan, but I can’t imagine trying to stuff anything large in the back if we’re looking at a mail-slot trunk lid. At the same time, I do like the enormous Lucid Air-like windshield. More glass means more susceptibility to rock chips, sure, but also a greater connectedness to the world around you.

Toyota Corolla Concept Profile
Photo credit: Toyota

Speaking of changes, don’t expect the future Corolla’s interior to look like this. Console like a podium, huge pods coming off the gauge cluster, touchscreen way over on the passenger side? Come on. Then again, I wouldn’t be surprised to see a flat floor in the next Corolla, and while everything in here is exaggerated, you can get a sense of what might be going on if you squint a bit. The one thing I hope survives the trip from concept to production? A tiny Corolla-shaped shifter. How whimsical.

Toyota Corolla Concept 2026 Interior
Photo credit: Toyota

As for motive power, there is something on the Corolla concept that makes me curious: the absolute shedload of either fuel filler doors, charging port doors, or both. We’re talking one in each front fender plus one in the left rear quarter-panel. According to Toyota, “Technological innovation enables the flexibility for Corolla Concept to be a battery-electric vehicle (BEV), plug-in hybrid (PHEV), hybrid (HEV), or internal combustion engine vehicle,” and although this concept probably doesn’t try to roll all of these things into one demonstrator, the next Corolla should be as green as you want it to be.

Toyota Corolla Concept 2026 Rear Three Quarters
Photo credit: Toyota

With the production-spec Corolla as we know it knocking on the door of eight years old, I wouldn’t be surprised if we see a new one relatively soon-ish. While the Corolla Concept might look far-out, strip away some of the concept car fripperies, and we might actually be looking at Toyota’s next-generation compact. Consider this a new headlight pattern to recognize when your Uber rolls up in the dark.

Top graphic image: Toyota

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Fire On The Horizon
Member
Fire On The Horizon
3 months ago

Looking at that windshield, I’m curious what the wiper situation is going to be like.

Toecutter
Member
Toecutter
3 months ago

I could see a car company eventually offering the windshield, wiper motors, and blade mounts as an integrated unit. Then when the car is 20 years old and a wiper motor goes out, you need to pony up $5k to have working wipers again, instead of simply being able to swap in a $50 part.

Manufacturers already do this with things like door panels(integrated everything, so when a $5 door latch breaks, you have to spend thousands replacing an entire door), tail lights(instead of a $15 bulb, you have to spend thousands replacing an entire LED assembly unit), and so many other components.

That is the trend we are heading in thus far, and I don’t see that changing anytime soon, until/unless the industry outright collapses from its own bloat.

Last edited 3 months ago by Toecutter
Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
3 months ago

Looks better than the Lexus angry grill used in more recent makes.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
3 months ago

Concept =/= production

I have little hope for the production model to look anywhere near as cool as this. Especially for such a car that is sold in soooo many markets, many of them 3rd world countries where they don’t give a shit about styling and want something dependable, easy to work on and repair with an interior that will take a ton of wear.

Still, it does seem that Toyota has a renewed interest in design, so it might be a looker for it’s segment, similar to how the new Prius wowed everyone. I just hope the interior of the Corolla looks better since I absolutely hate the Prius interior.

Harvey Firebirdman
Member
Harvey Firebirdman
3 months ago

The front end is very polestar looking. I actually do not mind the looks of this the back end is a little weird looking though.

Ben
Member
Ben
3 months ago

I expected this would get a lot of hate in the comments, but pleasantly surprised to see a mix of reactions. I like the exterior. The interior looks wildly impractical and will definitely not make it to production, but it’s a concept so that’s fine.

Pisco Sour
Pisco Sour
3 months ago

I think it’s cool looking, though the first thought I had when I saw the side picture was “this looks like something Kia would make.”

Ben
Member
Ben
3 months ago
Reply to  Pisco Sour

That’s not an unflattering comparison to make in 2025 though.

D-dub
Member
D-dub
3 months ago

That front end doesn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of meeting European pedestrian safety regulation.

Stryker_T
Member
Stryker_T
3 months ago

the new corolla hatch is the best the corolla has looked in some 40yrs and the new prius design language they’ve been introducing I really like on their cars. So I’m optimistic that their take for the corolla is gonna look good too.

Phonebem
Member
Phonebem
3 months ago
Reply to  Stryker_T

I really like the current Corolla hatch, I’d probably have one if they offered it in a hybrid (which is a must for my next car, preferably a PHEV).

Stryker_T
Member
Stryker_T
3 months ago
Reply to  Phonebem

I desperately wished they released it in the US with a hybrid because my mom needed a new car and she loved it but I wanted to get her a hybrid for how much she drives.

I gave so much feedback through their channels and events to bring the hybrid lol.

we couldn’t wait anymore though, so we got one anyway.

Phonebem
Member
Phonebem
3 months ago
Reply to  Stryker_T

I’ve done the same and voiced my wants through every channel you have. My advantage is that I have a car that I like and don’t intend to replace until someone offers a car I’d like to replace it with. If they don’t offer what I want, I don’t see a reason to buy a new car…

Last edited 3 months ago by Phonebem
Ford_Timelord
Ford_Timelord
3 months ago
Reply to  Stryker_T

The current Corolla still looks really good in my eyes for something that is 7years old in the market. The wagon looks even better.

Stryker_T
Member
Stryker_T
3 months ago
Reply to  Ford_Timelord

absolutely agree, when they mentioned how long the newest design had been around I almost didn’t believe it because it still looks fresh.

Jesse Lee
Jesse Lee
3 months ago

Where did Toyota or Chevy get the notion that people like to have a mismatched black roof? They really need to stop this black roof idiocy. Same with the black mirror idiocy. Are you seriously upcharging me for generic black mirrors over body colored mirrors?

William Domer
Member
William Domer
3 months ago
Reply to  Jesse Lee

I think I’m with you, but I love the English flag on a Mini roof, and in some instances a complimentary color combo looks great: Blue car Orange roof of vice versa. But then I think black hoods (Bonnets) look like shit so I have opinions.

Ford_Timelord
Ford_Timelord
3 months ago
Reply to  Jesse Lee

Usually an option.

David Nolan
David Nolan
3 months ago

The cyber corolla

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
3 months ago

Geez! How much more is this thing going to cost me when it hits the road?!

*Jason*
*Jason*
3 months ago
Reply to  GhosnInABox

My guess is $24,000 – $25,000 to start.

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
3 months ago
Reply to  *Jason*

It’s gonna be a sad day when a Hybrid XLE stickers for close to 40k. Maybe not this gen, but it’s coming fast.

*Jason*
*Jason*
3 months ago
Reply to  GhosnInABox

$29K at the moment. $40k will happen eventually with inflation

For the last 30 years cars have been getting steady more expensive looking at MSRP but cheaper adjusted for inflation or weeks of median income.

Younork
Younork
3 months ago

Obviously, this is a concept, so you need to look past the concept stuff to see where Toyota is headed, but overall, I really like this. Moving the Corolla slightly up to compete with the Civic seems like the right move. Fastbacks are cool, and the large greenhouse looks like visibility would be great. I’m more than intrigued.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
3 months ago

What I see is mostly a riff on the current Prius, which I consider a very attractive car. And at this point, merging Corolla and Prius into a single model would make a lot of sense. Currently, the most expensive Corolla Hybrid approaches the price of a base Prius. Make them the same car, and call the basic models “Corolla” and the fancy, technologically-loaded version becomes the “Corolla Prius”.

Ryan L
Ryan L
3 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

This is likely the path of the future. Prius and Prime are already pretty close monikers.

Phonebem
Member
Phonebem
3 months ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

I mentioned above my frustration over Toyota not offering the Corolla hatch as a hybrid. I assume it’s to differentiate it from the Prius but it’s still frustrating since I want a proper hatch instead of a liftback.

Toecutter
Member
Toecutter
3 months ago

They should do a body targeting a drag coefficient of around 0.15. With their most basic 4-cylinder engine, you’d beat the current Prius’ highway fuel economy. Then give the Prius the same treatment so that it gets close to 80 mpg highway. This could then segue into pure electric options are are economical to operate from having a smaller battery.

It’s a basic sedan. It doesn’t need to look brutish. It just needs to function like a sedan, and save the operator money and time vs the competition’s offerings. Reliability and economy, as well as vehicle longevity, at a low cost, should be the focus. Not so much aesthetics.

A Reader
Member
A Reader
3 months ago
Reply to  Toecutter

Agreed!
I’m not so sure all that many Corolla buyers are shopping appearance.
Love the powertrain agnostic approach so buyers can spec it based on their own wants/needs.

Kevin Rhodes
Member
Kevin Rhodes
3 months ago

Nope. Another nail in the coffin of my desire to buy any more new cars. We seem to be getting ALL the aspects of the various dystopian movies of old.

You know what connects you to the outside world in a car? A relatively upright slim-pillared windshield that doesn’t have 3′ of dash between you and the base of it. See classic Saab 900 and myriad other 70s and 80s cars for how to do it correctly. This nonsense is the province of cool but incredibly annoying to deal with day-to-day exotica. Toyota needs to send their entire design department to the Betty Ford Clinic for a detox.

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
3 months ago

As a 90s kid, idk why blacked out canopy aesthetic ever went away. This car looks pretty great.

Jmfecon
Member
Jmfecon
3 months ago

Maybe we are going back to the days where concept cars were this, concepts, that would at most hint on how the future cars would look like, instead of the “almost ready to enter production” concepts of today. I mean, this is too much for Corolla, which has always adopted a “conservative” design.

I don’t dislike it, honestly. It does not look excelent from all angles, but there are more wins then losses, imho.

4jim
4jim
3 months ago

I have never been a fan of just going by the nameplate for car sales numbers There is little similarity between a 2025 Corolla and a 1st or 2nd generation Corolla.

Colin Greening
Member
Colin Greening
3 months ago

I don’t hate it. As much as I prefer older car design (80s-early 00s), I don’t mind the “cyberpunk” aesthetic more automakers are leaning into. Heckblende tail lights, angular design that isn’t *too busy*, etc. I would like to see a more practical interior however, and move the beltline down a bit. Rear visibility is probably crap too, why not make the whole back hatch glass instead of that little letterbox?

Timbales
Timbales
3 months ago

I think they might want to dial it back a bit. I wouldn’t be surprised if the average Corolla buyer isn’t quite that adventurous in terms of styling tastes.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
3 months ago

They need a little less 5th Element on the interior. It feels like Chris Tucker is gonna scream at me when I power it up.

The exterior is dope as hell, though.

Littlebag
Member
Littlebag
3 months ago

I would pay extra for Ruby Rhod to be the voice for my nav system (as long as I can mute it when I want).

Ben
Member
Ben
3 months ago

I’d be okay if there were a color called “Super Green” though.

Mr E
Member
Mr E
3 months ago

We no longer use silly old tech like keys to start the car. We use…a Multipass.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
3 months ago
Reply to  Mr E

I thought that was what Kia/Hyundai called the USB cable theives were using to steal cars.

Cristiana
Member
Cristiana
3 months ago

It doesn’t look that great from all angles, as the article says, for me it’s the profile. However, the exterior looks pretty good. Plus, I feel any boldness or weirdness is great. I hope we are getting out of the amorphous blob stage like the Mercedes EQ’s

Mark Hughes
Mark Hughes
3 months ago

I quite like the exterior, Not a fan of the interior though. Doesn’t look like many places to put things.

great-LEX-great
great-LEX-great
3 months ago

with the absolute domination of cross-overs, toyota can take a risk on the corolla.

David Greenwood
David Greenwood
3 months ago

I think the idea may be to follow in the footsteps of the Prius and the Leaf, new look-wise.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
3 months ago

Why must Toyota make the future so ugly?

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
3 months ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Remember how good concept cars looked in the 80s?
When we’re young, concept cars look cool and futuristic. When we’re old, concept cars look disjointed, ugly, and just “too damned edgy”.
The cycle of life.

D-dub
Member
D-dub
3 months ago

Am I out of touch? No, it’s the designers who are wrong.

Toecutter
Member
Toecutter
3 months ago
Reply to  D-dub

The designers design what they are told to design. They’re not selling their designs to the car-buying public, they’re selling the designs to the board of directors. What the board of directors want, and what the consumers want, are almost always at odds. Most consumers are 2nd/3rd hand buyers, instead of 1st-hand buyers, as well. The 1st-hand buyers are the only group that receives any significant consideration.

Toecutter
Member
Toecutter
3 months ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Because Tesla is doing it, so is Honda, so is Ferrari, so is Lamborghini…

Monkey see, monkey do.

I’d rather the future be of benefit to people: make operating costs go down, reliability go up, and have it in a product that someone can work on with a very basic skillset and tools. This is one of the ways where capitalism can increase actual living standards for everyone.

But we’re generally moving away from all of that. The C-suite’s vision is nothing more than maximizing extraction of money, and that is what is determining design trends and also driving enshittification, especially when coupled with dependence upon fiat currencies that are rapidly losing value due to endless money printing.

The cars we get both reflect and exacerbate real-world economic trends. The corolla that actually gets sold to use will reflect that as well.

Nvoid82
Member
Nvoid82
3 months ago
Reply to  Toecutter

As long as the incentives of the system are to maximize profits, this will be the outcome.

Toecutter
Member
Toecutter
3 months ago
Reply to  Nvoid82

In the USA, we’re very close to the end stage where no one has anything to extract except those doing the extraction. Consider how much of the new car market is fueled by debt. This is not a sustainable system, and cracks have definitely formed around the year 2008, that haven’t been fixed. The eventual failure will be catastrophic. Hopefully when the car market bubble collapses, I still have the money on hand and stable employment to pick up something I actually want, at a discount, but unfortunately most of my choices are already rare and in the hands of rich cash buyers that are sitting on them(eg. Alfa Romeo 4C).

Last edited 3 months ago by Toecutter
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