Home » Review: The 2026 Honda Prelude Is A Hybrid That’s Actually Fun To Drive

Review: The 2026 Honda Prelude Is A Hybrid That’s Actually Fun To Drive

Honda Prelude Ts

At the 2023 Japan Mobility Show (JMS), Honda dropped a major surprise on the world. Sitting there on the stand was a compact, white coupe, and it had a badge we hadn’t seen in more than two decades – Prelude! Details were scarce at first on what the automaker was calling a concept, but when it showed up at the LA Auto Show a few weeks later, Honda confirmed it was a hybrid.

Then, in 2024, Honda confirmed that yes indeed, it would be produced. Japanese customers started taking delivery in September 2025, and the first examples for American customers are due on November 18. In the days following the 2025 JMS, Honda took us to its Tochigi proving ground in Japan for a first taste.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

It’s 2025, so of course that means some people were disgruntled when they heard the 2026, sixth-generation Prelude was going to be a hybrid. But let me just say – Get Over Yourself! Going back to the five previous generations of Prelude from 1978 to 2001, this was never a hardcore sports car.

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It was a sporty coupe that added a splash of two-door style and sometimes some interesting technology to underpinnings that were shared with more mainstream Honda products, generally variations of the contemporary Accord.

1979 Honda Prelude
1979 Honda Prelude.

Speaking of technology, all Preludes have had four-cylinder engines, with the first generation model having a CVCC engine based on the Civic, while the fourth-generation in 1991 got one of the first VTEC engines. The third generation introduced a novel mechanical four-wheel steering system.

1989 Honda Prelude Si 4ws
1989 Honda Prelude Si 4WS.

For those who whine about the lack of pop-up headlamps, the majority of vintage Preludes never had them either. Only the second and third generations hid their lamps when not in use, all of the others had fixed units so the new car is in good company.

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Given the steady growth of pretty much all cars from one generation to the next, it makes perfect sense that the Prelude would shift from the now large Accord underpinnings to the Civic. Even the Civic has grown substantially over the past several decades, with the current hatchback measuring 179 inches long over a 107.7-inch wheelbase. The Prelude loses about half an inch of length and 5.1 inches of wheelbase. The top of the roof is 2.3 inches lower than the Civic, while the Prelude is also 3.1 inches wider.

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Altogether, this gives the Prelude a notably different stance than the now-discontinued coupe version of the last-generation Civic relative to its sedan and hatchback siblings. With its sharper nose and fastback roofline, the styling is also markedly different from a Civic.

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Another important differentiator from the last Civic coupe is cargo access, with the Prelude getting a hatchback instead of a trunk. This is helpful since the Prelude only has 15.1-cubic feet of cargo volume behind the rear seats. But that lost wheelbase, roof height, and the profile mean that the Prelude rear seat is really only of any value for children or those under about 5-foot-5-inches (if that!). This is very much a 2+2. But since most Prelude owners will probably just be using the front seats most of the time, leaving the rears folded down combines with the large hatch opening to provide some serious utility when trolling estate sales.

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Anyone who has spent time in the current-generation Civic will feel right at home in the Prelude. Apart from the steering wheel and shifter buttons, almost every other visible surface of the cockpit is unique, and yet there is a familiarity that comes from sharing the identical mounting points and almost certainly the same wiring harness. The vents and buttons are all in the same place, and yes, the vents are fully manually controlled with a little joystick in the center of each one to direct the air flow.

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The 10.2-inch digital instrument cluster is the same, as is the 9-inch touchscreen infotainment display used in the Touring trims of the Civic. The infotainment software is the same Android Automotive setup with Google Built-in services that you’ll find in other current Honda models.

One element you won’t find in any current Civic is the S+ button to the right of the shifter on the console, but I’ll come back to that in a bit.

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Same ingredients, different dish

Under the hood of the Prelude is the same two-motor hybrid drive unit paired with a 2.0-liter, naturally aspirated, Atkinson cycle four-cylinder that you’ll find in a Civic, Accord, or CR-V. On paper it doesn’t seem fundamentally different from what you’ll find powering any current transverse engine Toyota. The engine can produce 141-hp and 134 lb-ft of torque, which is similar to what you’ll get in most engines of this specification. The primary electric motor cranks out 181-hp and 232 lb-ft of torque.

Img 1907

The combined system output is 200-hp. The 2.0-liter hybrid arrangement in a Prius has 194-hp but only gets 111-hp of electric propulsion. This different blend, along with a different control philosophy and the Honda engine, gives Honda’s hybrid system a fundamentally different character from a Toyota.

Toyota engines are objectively excellent – they are reliable and efficient, and with proper maintenance will generally run almost forever. But they are, to say the least, agricultural-sounding. Normally, this wouldn’t be the worst thing in the world. But step on the accelerator pedal of any front-wheel drive Toyota hybrid and the engine revs up to the 4,000 rpm torque peak and sits there while the e-CVT adjusts its ratio until the car catches up. It is to put it bluntly, not a very pleasant experience, efficient yes, but annoying.

 Ht31670

Honda starts from a place of much more refined-sounding engines and then uses them very cleverly thanks to some thoughtful software control and differences in how the hybrid drive works. To begin with, the substantially higher power and torque of the Honda electric drive allow it to become the primary source of thrust most of the time.

How the Honda 2-Motor Hybrid Works

Both the Toyota and Honda hybrids are series/parallel drives, but the Honda seems to spend more of its time in series mode, where the engine is driving the secondary motor/generator unit to provide electricity to the primary and battery. Thus, it’s generally not working as hard.

This also enables Honda to control the engine largely independently of the tractive effort that the primary motor/generator is applying to the wheels. Thus, the system is operating effectively as a range-extended EV with all of the benefits that come from electric drive.

Img 1918

Let’s step back and take a more specific look at how the Honda hybrid drive works. The overall architecture is a bit different than other hybrids, although it contains elements of what we’ve seen before. At its core, there are two motor/generator units (MGU), the Atkinson cycle engine, battery, clutch, and the final drive gearing. Both MGUs are connected to the battery, with one acting just as a generator while the other serves as a traction motor to propel the vehicle.

The engine is connected to the generator and also to the clutch. The traction motor and the clutch are connected to the final drive. There are three main modes: EV, Hybrid, and Engine driving. In EV mode, the clutch is open and the engine is off with the traction motor driving the vehicle. During braking, the traction motor also acts as a generator for regenerative braking.

Taba02

As the battery charge is depleted, the engine starts and drives the generator only with the clutch open. In this hybrid mode, the system basically works like Nissan’s e-Power system, a purely series hybrid where the engine runs to charge the battery, but the car is still just driven electrically with no engine torque being fed to the wheels. The Chevrolet Volt also worked in a similar fashion, although it had a much larger battery that provided 35 to 50 miles of electric range.

The downside of a series hybrid system is that there are conversion losses in going from mechanical torque to electrical energy for the battery and then back the other way through the traction motor. At lower speeds and variable loads, such as stopping and accelerating, the inherent inefficiencies of an internal combustion engine are still outweighed by these losses, so there is a net benefit. At higher speeds and load conditions, such as driving on the highway, it reverses, and it actually becomes more efficient for the engine to drive the wheels. This is when the clutch closes and sends power directly from the engine to the final drive and the traction motor mostly stops powering the vehicle, although it still recovers energy during deceleration.

 Ht30150

To summarize, the engine is mostly decoupled from the wheels when driving one of these Honda hybrid systems, which means it can be controlled independently of the vehicle speed. During normal driving, that eliminates the droning of a Toyota hybrid. It is also a key enabler of S+ shifting.

In standard hybrid driving, the engine will rev up to a more modest speed than the 4,000 rpm typical of the Toyota hybrids, so it’s not so loud and then rev more gently as you accelerate, doing a couple of simulated “step shifts” to drop engine speed and bring it back up again. It does all of this without any sound augmentation, acceleration dips or “downshifts” and makes for quite a natural and pleasant driving experience.

When S+ is pressed, the engine revs accelerate more aggressively as the drive unit steps through eight virtual gears, and each time it “shifts” there’s the same momentary pause in acceleration you get when declutching and shifting a manual gearbox. Hit the brakes as you head toward a corner, and it “downshifts” and blips the throttle to rev match. This all takes place automatically or when using the shift paddles manually on the steering wheel. While all of this is happening, the sound of the engine is augmented in the cabin.

Img 1798

If all of this sounds familiar, it’s essentially the same sort of thing that Hyundai does on the Ioniq 5N when N-mode is engaged. Just describing it makes it sound like a silly gimmick. But driving is a visceral experience, and part of the reason some enthusiasts don’t like EVs is the lack of feedback they get about what the machinery is doing. I can personally attest that I thought it was a gimmick when Hyundai did it, and I had a s**t-eating grin on my face when I got out of the Ioniq 5N for the first time. Gen-Z and Alpha drivers that have never experienced a great manual gearbox, combustion car may not realize what they are missing in the future, but those of us old enough to know can really appreciate this.

So Is It Any Good?

In a word, yes! We didn’t get a lot of time with the Prelude at Tochigi; longer drives will have to wait until the new year. But the time we had was on a handling track built for motorcycles. The sun was shining and the weather was a pleasant 60 degrees, perfect for our task.

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Remember, the Prelude was never a hardcore sports car, in fact, the first several generations weren’t even mild performance cars. This is not a successor to the S2000 or even a Civic Type-R (at least not yet!). It is a stylish, compact coupe that takes all of the best bits of the Type-R apart from the powertrain and merges it with arguably one of the best hybrid systems available.

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On our first recon lap of the track in normal drive mode brought back everything we’ve loved about the last two generations of Civic. As we approached the final corner on that first lap, we hit the S+ button and the car really came to life. Accelerating down the front straight, the sound became more engaging. It wasn’t the outrageously loud effect you get from the Dodge Charger’s Fratzonic exhaust, or the wail of approaching 9,000 rpm in an S2000, but enough to let you know what is going on under the hood. You can also feel multiple upshifts as the speed builds.

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As you lay into the brakes for a corner, you’ll hear the throttle blip each time the system executes a perfect “downshift.” Sure, it’s a simulacrum of reality, but it all feels very authentic and totally in keeping with what you would expect if you put the turbocharged Civic Si engine under the hood with a conventional eight-speed automatic instead of a CVT. However, an Si-powered Prelude probably won’t come anywhere near the expected 45+ mpg that a hybrid Prelude would, and likely wouldn’t be much quicker.

Besides the powertrain and how the software manages it, the other key mechanical aspect of the Prelude is the suspension and braking hardware that comes straight from the Civic Type-R. The only change is the spring and damping rates to compensate for the shorter wheelbase and different powertrain.

01 2026 Honda Prelude Dual Axis Front Suspension

The front suspension is a dual-axis system that separates the steering axis from the damping/spring axis. A fork supporting the bottom of the strut, allows the steering pivot axis to be moved outward, closer to the center of the wheel. This helps to virtually eliminate torque steer. With most of the tractive effort for the Prelude coming from the MGU and its instant torque delivery, the suspension was clearly doing its job. The steering provided nice feedback about what was going on between the front wheels and pavement and felt perfectly weighted.

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Honda conventional strut suspension vs dual-axis suspension

In addition, just like a Type-R, the Prelude responds nicely to trail braking. It is a Front Wheel Drive car, so physics would generally dictate that it’s going to have some understeer when you run into a corner with extra velocity. But if you keep a bit of brake pressure on as you turn in, it keeps the weight on the front tires and allows the rear end to slip enough to balance the car through the corner. It never steps out on you, it’s just a nice progressive adjustment to rotation that you can control with the brake pedal.

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While the interior components of the Prelude are mostly unique, they are also utterly familiar to a Honda driver. That includes the comfortable and supportive front seats.

Sadly, I didn’t have nearly as much time with the new Prelude as I would have liked. But the time I had provided an excellent sampler, and I can’t wait to get back behind the wheel soon.

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The first shipment of 2026 Preludes should be arriving on the West Coast in mid-November, with deliveries starting on the 18th. Honda hasn’t announced pricing yet for the single trim level of the Prelude, but at current exchange rates, the Japanese pricing works out to about $41,800 so right around $42,000 plus delivery should be about right. That price splits the difference between a Civic Sport Touring Hybrid and the Type-R.

All Photos Sam Abuelsamid unless otherwise noted

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George Danvers
George Danvers
5 months ago

Black wheels ?? still ??

Anonymous Person
Anonymous Person
5 months ago
Reply to  George Danvers

Here’s my theory on black wheels.

1.) First of all, they suck.

2.) They’re a part of “pop culture” now, as I’ve seen Barbie commercials where her “sports car” and her van both have black wheels.

So, in about 10-12 years, when these 5-6 year-old girls (or boys, I don’t judge) get to the age where they start driving, they’re going to see a vehicle with black wheels and proclaim, “Eww – that reminds me of the Barbie car I had when I was little. That’s baby-ish!

And just like that, the black wheel fad will finally die.

Younork
Younork
5 months ago

I hope it dies quicker than that. They make every car look like it was spec’ed by a 13 year old.

EXL500
Member
EXL500
5 months ago
Reply to  Younork

I consider it an immediate replacement cost.

Younork
Younork
5 months ago
Reply to  EXL500

I would agree with that, frustrating that basis silver isn’t even an option on most cars. I know nothing about working with aluminum, is it possible to just sandblast the black paint off and just have bare metal?

EXL500
Member
EXL500
5 months ago
Reply to  George Danvers

I wish I could like this 5x. My first expense would be powder coating. I hate this nasty fad.

Lotsofchops
Member
Lotsofchops
5 months ago

I do really, really like the way the Civic Hybrid drives. I don’t have a ton of hybrid experience, but I can confirm that the Toyotas I drove weren’t great. the Civic is smooth and the inputs are progressive as you want. I agree with others that this specific car doesn’t interest me; between the wife having a Civic and the lack of manual, it’s not what I’m after. But I want it to do well still! A 2+2 is a rare sight these days, and the more the merrier.
I just wonder why they aped Toyota’s headlight design for this. A Prius coupe indeed.

FndrStrat06
FndrStrat06
5 months ago

This is a Toyota Prius coupe, and you’ll never change my mind.

SlowCarFast
Member
SlowCarFast
5 months ago
Reply to  FndrStrat06

Even luxury cars are often made of the chassis of more mainstream models. By that logic, the Lexus LC500 is a luxury V8 Camry coupe. You are welcome to this framing, but don’t expect me to share your slant on it. An upscale Prius coupe is a good thing.

FndrStrat06
FndrStrat06
5 months ago
Reply to  SlowCarFast

If you thought I was talking about anything other than the exterior styling, you missed the point. It looks exactly like a Prius with two doors chopped off. That’s boring at best, and it’s a copycat at worst.

SlowCarFast
Member
SlowCarFast
5 months ago
Reply to  FndrStrat06

I guess I did miss that. Sorry. I blame time change.

FndrStrat06
FndrStrat06
5 months ago
Reply to  SlowCarFast

I’ve had an awful week, so I apologize for my combativeness.

SlowCarFast
Member
SlowCarFast
5 months ago
Reply to  FndrStrat06

No offense taken. Hope things get better for you.

Jdoubledub
Member
Jdoubledub
5 months ago

When was the last time Honda made a good-looking interior?

Younork
Younork
5 months ago
Reply to  Jdoubledub

The interior of Civic has been lauded my most (all?) reviewers as one of its many strong points. What’s wrong with any of them?

Jdoubledub
Member
Jdoubledub
5 months ago
Reply to  Younork

It’s mainly the shifter area (on the automatics) that looks cheap and an afterthought to me.

From the drivers eyeline I would agree that the Civic is looking fantastic, but look down at the shifter and it’s toy town.

Steve P
Steve P
5 months ago
Reply to  Younork

The cheese grater vents are a PITA to clean if you live in a dusty environment according to at least one auto reviewer.

EXL500
Member
EXL500
5 months ago
Reply to  Jdoubledub

I love mine.

AircooleDrew
AircooleDrew
5 months ago

I like hybrids, I really do. I just don’t think this will do terribly well. I’m one of the few people that actually loved the last-gen CR-Z with a manual, and came very close to buying one a few years back before I had a kid. This thing looks nice, but the lack of a manual in a small 2+2 just seems like a swing and a miss to me, especially when it’s at the price point of many much better and sportier cars on the gently-used market.

This seems to be somewhat okay at a few different things, and a master of none.

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
5 months ago
Reply to  AircooleDrew

There’s no manual? LMFAO this thing is dead before it arrived.

AircooleDrew
AircooleDrew
5 months ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

Nope. It’s surprising too given Honda’s track record of offering manuals in multiple hybrid coupes. Oh well, I wasn’t the market anyways. I’ll stick with my 57 year old 2-door.

Kelly
Kelly
5 months ago
Reply to  AircooleDrew

At $50k in the real world OTD this is not a car for kids who would want a 2+2. (those kids are having their parents buy them wranglers). It’s not usable for a family hauler so it’s relegated to the childfree crowd or empty nesters, and I can’t see either of those flocking to this particular vehicle.

So no manual, seems like no problem given the general lack of an enthusiast base who will pay for one.

5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
Member
5VZ-F'Ever and Ever, Amen
5 months ago

Nice write up! As with the last gen, there are certainly folks who will pay a premium for a good looking “sporty” car with great mpg. It seems differentiated enough from the civic hybrid to be a success, but we shall see.

Church
Member
Church
5 months ago

I love almost everything about it. I’m even okay with the cost. My complaint is that it’s a 2+2 at all. I hate big doors and by forcing a back seat in there, I’m getting stuck with a big door. If this was just a two-seater, I’d be sooo much happier with it.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
5 months ago

This review is winning me over on this. I’ve wanted to like it all along, but was worried the hybrid would neuter it too much as a fun car (even though it is an excellent hybrid). But it seems like the styling, suspension, and S+ shifting gimmick actually tilt this into being a really fun proposition that still gets 45 mpg.

I’m still a practical dad with limited funds and lots of fun things I like to do, but this does really appeal to me and is maybe practical enough to justify due to the excellent commuter capabilities. It looks excellent in this color, the interior seems well done, and I would love to experience the S+ gimmick because it does sound like fun.

Nsane In The MembraNe
Member
Nsane In The MembraNe
5 months ago

I’m one of the 2-3 people that actually thinks the project is pretty cool and I’m one of the increasingly rare enthusiasts who tries to be cognizant of their carbon footprint…but even I don’t really know who this is for. I think it’s neat and a cool engineering exercise, but I could never own one, and I suspect that the people who are interested in a small coupe and enjoy driving are going to default to the usual options.

Really my only hope for any of this is that they offer the same tweaks, hardware, etc. in an Integra or regular Civic. I think they’d sell a decent amount of them and I’d look at one. The idea of a sporty hybrid is cool to me. Unfortunately I don’t think it’s cool to the majority of people who want a fun couple and can make one work as a daily.

TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
5 months ago

The thing is, this isn’t even really an “enthusiast” car. For $42k, a carbon-conscious enthusiast can buy a great EV AND a great, used sports car that like… actually sports. I can pick up an acceptably used Ioniq 5 and an 86/Miata/Mustang/etc for the price of this thing

86-GL
86-GL
5 months ago
Reply to  TheHairyNug

This literally isn’t an enthusiast car.

TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

I was attempting to come across as, at least, mildly diplomatic

86-GL
86-GL
5 months ago

This isn’t that complicated. Buying a car like this requires three things:

-Money
-No kids
-A vague desire for something ‘fun’ , ‘nice’ or ‘different’.

Generally, this means empty-nesters. A gay couple. Or maybe a young executive or salesperson.

FloorMatt
Member
FloorMatt
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

I think this could be great training wheels for a future enthusiast. I’d consider getting one for my kid, for instance (were he a little older). Reliable, safe, cheap to operate, requires very little bandwidth in terms of maintenance and investment. I’d have loved one. Expensive for that, but not insane.

TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
5 months ago

“There are dozens of us! Dozens!!!” – future 2026 Prelude owners

Rippstik
Rippstik
5 months ago

I’d be willing to bet that the Type-R 2.0 bolts right in. A type-R swap would be pretty epic.

The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
5 months ago
Reply to  Rippstik

The bay would probably be able to accommodate it without a problem, but I don’t even want to think about the wiring nightmare that you’d run into trying to do that swap. You’d almost certainly have to remove the hybrid system and do a totally custom harness, and that’s completely ignoring whether this chassis even has the mounting points for the transmission you’d need. I’m sure someone will build a time attack car or drag car out of one of these with a K20C1, but there’s no way you could do it without basically stripping the whole thing to a shell.

86-GL
86-GL
5 months ago

Cue the “I would buy this if” comments:

-If only it cost $30k…
-Had the Type R engine
-Was nicer than a BMW that costs $10k more
-Comfortably fit 5 adults
-It was smaller
-Lighter
-Had pop-up headlights
-etc

No. This car isn’t for you. Just like the original wasn’t. You know who bought a new Prelude in the 1990s? My grandmother. A stylish grocery getter, and road trip car for a retired empty-nester. Something ‘Nice’ but not too fancy, avoiding a luxury badge.

Rest in peace to my grandma, and pour one out to her red Prelude- Which met its premature demise when it was crushed by a large pine tree at her cottage.

If you want something practical, buy a Civic Hybrid.
If you want a performance car, buy a Civic Type R.

Last edited 5 months ago by 86-GL
TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

A lot of people aren’t going to put down $42k on something that’s good at nothing. In fact, the vast, vast majority

86-GL
86-GL
5 months ago
Reply to  TheHairyNug

Sounds like it’s really, really good at driving places comfortably, efficiently and enjoyably with 1-2 passengers. You know, how most cars are used.

TheHairyNug
TheHairyNug
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

if it’s really, really good at doing what most cars are used for, I would expect it to sell really, really well. I’ll stick with my claim of it being good at nothing in particular, and we can circle back to the sales figures in 5 years to see who was correct.

The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
5 months ago
Reply to  TheHairyNug

It won’t sell really well because it’s not a form factor that most people want or need. That doesn’t make it a bad car.

*Jason*
*Jason*
5 months ago
Reply to  TheHairyNug

They did in the 90’s. A base 1995 Prelude cost $42,500 in 2025 dollars.

Skurdnin
Member
Skurdnin
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

A stylish grocery getter, and road trip car for a retired empty-nester.

Problem nowadays is that not enough people can afford a car that is hardly practical outside of these use cases. I think this new Prelude looks awesome but it’s too expensive to be a second car for me.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
5 months ago
Reply to  Skurdnin

Agreed – the danger here is the target market (younger people w/o a big family) can’t afford something this pricey.

86-GL
86-GL
5 months ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

The target demographic is old people.

Honda isn’t going to come out and say that because it’s shitty marketing- But that’s how it’s always been. Young people do not, and never really have, bought new 2 seater vehicles unless they are unusually wealthy.

Table Five
Table Five
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

Yep, and the early Japanese sales speak to that as well. This is for generally well-off older couple who want a little style, a little sporty pretence, but without too much of either.

It’s basically the Japanese economy-car version of the old “personal luxury coupe”. Not my demographic (yet?) but nothing wrong with that.

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

I never saw Grandmas driving 3rd gen Preludes.

86-GL
86-GL
5 months ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

That’s the one my grandma had!

Needles Balloon
Needles Balloon
5 months ago
Reply to  86-GL

Honestly, none of the points listed would be needed if it was priced lower than $42k. A top trim Civic Hybrid Hatchback goes for $34.6k including destination, and has all the same tech features as the Prelude excluding the S+ shifting; the only differences are the sportier seats, a slightly different dashboard look, and hopefully more liberal use of soft touch materials to justify the price. We have to consider that the Civic hybrid is already pricey for a compact compared to a Corolla or Elantra. Given it’s a unique lower volume design, I could justify paying $2k more at most for the Prelude than the Civic, leaving us at around $36k; that’s still not great value or anything for a compact coupe, but far more justifiable. Instead, the $42k base price puts the Prelude above a *top trim Accord* which goes for $41.9k with destination!

I think a big failure of this car is the styling, the proportions are disappointingly awkward and it doesn’t inspire the necessary emotions for me to pay such a huge premium like it really ought to.

Last edited 5 months ago by Needles Balloon
GreatFallsGreen
Member
GreatFallsGreen
5 months ago

That’s more where I’m at, the pricing. Sure the top Prelude almost always cost more than a top trim Accord, but the Prelude usually started alongside lower Accord trims; in the 4th gen, usually somewhere between LX and EX Accords.

There’s also the Integra to contend with at $40k for a top, non-Type-S. Not a hybrid, but has a manual option. Maybe the Prelude will indirectly provide more of a jumpstart to Integra sales.

Etancheite
Etancheite
5 months ago

When S+ is pressed, the engine revs accelerate more aggressively as the drive unit steps through eight virtual gears, and each time it ‘shifts’ there’s the same momentary pause in acceleration you get when declutching and shifting a manual gearbox.”

I’m sorry, this is not going far enough for true enthusiasts. We demand a real gear lever that uses mechanical feedback to simulate a non-synchromesh gearbox. Because how will we feel our mastery of machinery when coddled by synchronizers? A gearbox isn’t truly engaging — it doesn’t truly work — until it’s sufficiently brutal.

And to continue with the emotion of artificially paused acceleration, must we really boot the car by pushing a button? No soul! Let there be a hand crank out front, with simulated feedback of course since computers don’t have compression strokes. How do we become one with the machine if our physical effort doesn’t awaken the engine after a few attempts?

Or we could remember our Setright and realize that only one engine rpm is correct for a particular power demand in particular circumstances, appreciate with intelligence an engine which goes and stays there (if it’s even running), and also get excited by the steering.

The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
5 months ago
Reply to  Etancheite

If you want to wax poetic about a mechanical shaft sensation I may remind you that Honda currently sells a Civic Type R and Si.

SlowCarFast
Member
SlowCarFast
5 months ago
Reply to  Etancheite

I disagree with you. When I realized that asking my family to learn a manual transmission and not practice it at all until they needed my car in a pinch, that it is time to go automatic. But I decided that I was willing to give up some performance for that gear-shifting experience, versus the silky-smooth trans on the Audi A5. Too quiet for me, even if it is an awesome car.

Ideally, my family would all daily-drive a manual transmission for 4 months so they’d be comfortable switching. It won’t happen in our current situation, so I’ve decided to adapt.

Kelly
Kelly
5 months ago
Reply to  SlowCarFast

I love the fact that my extra car has the unfathomable 6-speed. No family can borrow it. And of course I can’t drive it and let them use my automatic minivan because the extra car only uses premium ethanol free fuel (’cause of the tune, bro). Can’t be wasting that driving around town wearing down my summer only tires.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
5 months ago

Given the fact that powertrain is exactly the same as a regular Civic, the two really need a side-by-side comparison to if the massive mark-up is worth it.

The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
The NSX Was Only in Development for 4 Years
5 months ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

I own a Sport Touring hybrid hatch, and it’s a truly phenomenal powertrain. It’s everything you want it to be whenever you want it to be those things, and is much quicker than it has a right to be. I can imagine that powertrain coupled with really good brakes and CTR suspension is going to be lots of fun. Whether it’s worth a ~$10k premium over a standard Civic comes down to personal taste and how much space you need and/or sporty driving you intend to do.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
5 months ago

But here’s the thing: the powertrain is not even tuned differently. IIRC, the quoted HP and torque numbers are all exactly the same.

Have you ever driven your Sport Touring Hybrid to the point where you felt the standard brakes were insufficient?

TooBusyToNotice
TooBusyToNotice
5 months ago

I’m glad to see you really liked it and that Honda seems to have executed well to their plan. I’m not sure Honda went in the right direction though. It sounds too similar to a 2 door Civic.. so no real performance advantage with less practicality (because 2 doors instead of 4). It seems an additional 40 or 50 horsepower to better bridge the gap to the CTR and take advantage of the performance suspension would give this a better market position. The author correctly points out that previous Preludes weren’t hardcore sports cars – but let’s not forget the previous Preludes didn’t sell well enough to stick around. There is a huge market for performance cars right now and Honda should be more purposefully competing against Toyota’s GR brand. I say this as a Honda fan boy with a GR86 sitting on my driveway. I would have preferred to buy Honda, but they didn’t have anything that interested me.

Last edited 5 months ago by TooBusyToNotice
Bill C
Member
Bill C
5 months ago

I have a Civic Hybrid hatch. The only thing I’d change is the “shifter” like this has. I use the flippers for regeneration and “engine braking”- sure it’s not a manual transmission, but its definitely engaging. It could be a lot more engaging though, with (much) more braking effect, as well as a simulated “upshift” effect. Just rolled 5k, no issues at all except the OEM tire grip in rain is not so great.

SlowCarFast
Member
SlowCarFast
5 months ago
Reply to  Bill C

I test drove the Civic Hybrid and it was an excellent experience! Unfortunately, my family hates the seats and the road noise. Different cars for different folks.

Tommy Santelli
Tommy Santelli
5 months ago

Maybe my selective reading glossed over it in the many articles written about this car, but why does it have the face of the Prius?

Kelly
Kelly
5 months ago
Reply to  Tommy Santelli

euro pedestrian crash regulations that state you must kill a pedestrian with blunt trauma over a wider percentage of their body vs. just cutting them down at the legs? I just assumed that’s why everything has a fat upright nose.

Noahwayout
Member
Noahwayout
5 months ago
Reply to  Kelly

I think he’s referring to the lobster claw headlights that seem to be part of the current Toyota design language. Truly a bizarre choice by Honda.

Justin Thiel
Justin Thiel
5 months ago

I really like it, ill have to keep an eye out for one in 8 years

Phuzz
Member
Phuzz
5 months ago
Reply to  Justin Thiel

Same here, I like reading about new cars, but the most modern car I’ve ever bought was still over ten years old when I bought it.

Steve P
Steve P
5 months ago

Still think it looks like an updated Mitsubishi Eclipse.

Ham On Five
Member
Ham On Five
5 months ago
Reply to  Steve P

agree!

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
5 months ago

Best part of the last two generations of the Honda Civic Type-R is that, underneath it all, it’s still a Civic with all the usefulness and practicality of a 5-door Civic.

This is the same advantage of the Subaru WRX/STI models is that, underneath, they are still cars you can live with.

Unfortunately: it wouldn’t have appealed to 20year-old-me as I wouldn’t even be able to tote around a group of us in the car as it doesn’t fit people in the back. This isn’t a 2+2, but 2+small dog, or 2+some groceries.

Tim R
Member
Tim R
5 months ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

Yeah that’s the problem for me. Might be a little underpowered for me to get anyways, but I would have taken a look if it had a usable back seat (like the civic). Might as well get a BRZ for 10k+ less

Last edited 5 months ago by Tim R
Kelly
Kelly
5 months ago
Reply to  Tim R

BRZ for $10k less, that’s quite a powerful argument for going that way if you want a fun less practical car than a 4 door.

DubblewhopperInDubbletrubble
DubblewhopperInDubbletrubble
5 months ago

Someone will put a proper transmission in this vehicle. Probably for SEMA 2026.

Jrubinsteintowler
Jrubinsteintowler
5 months ago

A lot of people are hung up on the hybrid portion of this car and don’t see that the chassis is a goldmine for tuners.

Short wheelbase, attractive coupe looks/proportions, Civic R suspension/parts compatibility.

I’d be surprised if people weren’t K-swapping this thing all over the place.

Mrbrown89
Member
Mrbrown89
5 months ago

This sounds like an excellent replacement for a Honda Insight Gen 1. Good MPG, good driving experience and sort of interesting looking or different at least.

This or a Mustang 2.3 Ecoboost? I know they have different customer type but they are not many coupes available right now.

Goose
Member
Goose
5 months ago
Reply to  Mrbrown89

I was just thinking that too, or a 230i. Probably wildly different customers again still, but surprisingly close on price. To me at least, FWD, low power, moderate weight, and automatic doesn’t sound like it would be all that interesting. The two best things about this, good fuel economy and good handling, don’t even seem close enough to offset the compromises that come with a 2+2 and the earlier detractors. While a Mustang, 2 Series, Miata, or 86 are even more compromised, they at least seem like they would be a whole lot more fun and 100% worth the extra $50 in gas a month.

Last edited 5 months ago by Goose
ADDvanced
ADDvanced
5 months ago
Reply to  Mrbrown89

1st gen Insights get 52-65mpg on the regular. This gets 45, same as the Toyota Prius. Idk man. Seems like a flop.

99 Sport
Member
99 Sport
5 months ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

Insight doesn’t handle great with the skinny re91s. And it’s quite small inside so not super practical. I’d take the mpg hit for the better handling and ability to carry more. Except my insight has a 5 speed and this doesn’t, so it’s a hard pass for me

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
4 months ago
Reply to  99 Sport

It handles fine imho. Very similar to a CRX, non Si.

99 Sport
Member
99 Sport
4 months ago
Reply to  ADDvanced

We’ll have to agree to disagree. With RE91s the Insight handling is poor – not unsafe, but very little grip and terminal understeer. It’s fine for what it is and quite comfortable, but there is zero sporting intent.

I owned a completely stock 4 door 1987 Civic, which shared a platform with the 1st gen CRX and it was a pretty good handler – light and nimble with lift off oversteer if you were a real hooligan. In fact, one of my best driving memories was driving it on a dirt road on an old, abandoned narrow gage railway in Colorado – rally style.

The second gen CRX shared a platform with the well-loved double wishbone / multi link suspension found the Civic gens 4 thru 6 and DC Integra (including the type R). I own 3 of these cars currently and the handling is truly outstanding. Properly set up, this is arguably the best handling FWD car of all time. The struts, torsion beam and narrow track width of the Insight deliver handling that in no way compares to that gen Civic/CRX – even in stock form

ADDvanced
ADDvanced
4 months ago
Reply to  99 Sport

I don’t have RE92s on my insight, I have some Kuhmos or something. I also have a 91 Civic Si. The EF is, as you said, fantastic. The insight isn’t as good.

But the insight, with normal tires, isn’t bad. I can fling it around corners pretty hard and it’s extremely lightweight (1800lbs) and short wheelbase make it pretty fun.

On a track, there is no comparison. On the streets, with speed limits, it’s really not horribly worse imho.

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
5 months ago
Reply to  Mrbrown89

Normally I’d say a Mustang all the way, but with a current-gen Mustang you get Ford reliability.

Though, I suppose most of the recalls I hear about for Fords don’t include Mustangs.

Alexk98
Member
Alexk98
5 months ago

It sounds neat and compelling, but not at 42k. I get that the CTR suspension and braking setup adds cost due to complexity, and any lower-volume 2 door car these days has a price premium due to being a niche product, but 42k is way too much. Sure it may drive well, but nearly no enthusiast is going to pay low-40s for a 200hp CVT FWD coupe when the GR86/BRZ exist as low as 31k. Anyone with enough of an affinity for Honda and 42k will likely just spring for a Civic Type R at 46k, or a slightly used one. Sure it’s got great fuel economy, but at 42k, the lifetime savings on gas just isn’t there, especially when a Civic Hybrid gets about the same MPG for 15% less money.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
5 months ago

Great, real-world review! Really seems like Honda nailed recreating the formula of the older Preludes – a practical, near-luxury everyday sporty car. An endangered automotive species if there ever was one, and I’ll be interested to see how it does in our “either crossover or hardcore sportscar” market.

Edit: the new initial caps Honda nameplate has been steadily growing on me. It really fits here.

Last edited 5 months ago by Jack Trade
Phuzz
Member
Phuzz
5 months ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

From a distance, the lettering on the rear of the Prelude looks very Porsche-like to me.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
5 months ago
Reply to  Phuzz

I can’t resist script-lettering badging. Something about the juxtaposition with the angles of the car that’s so pleasing to me.

That Guy with the Sunbird
Member
That Guy with the Sunbird
5 months ago

Good looking car for sure. Especially some the tester here is in my favorite color.

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