The new Honda Prelude is pretty hot. After all, most cars have a wave of hype that dies down after the initial reveal, but it’s been almost two years since the Prelude Concept dropped at the 2023 Japan Mobility Show, and we’re still stoked to talk about the production car. By now, we know about its Brembo brakes borrowed from the Civic Type R, about its clever suspension, about the way it fakes having a gearbox, and even what the rear seat’s like. However, a few unknowns still hovered, and some new figures are out there to clear the air.
We pretty much knew that the new Prelude would have around 200 horsepower, and indeed, that’s exactly what it makes. The spec sheet lists a peak electric motor output of 181 horsepower, same as our Civic Hybrid, gasoline engine torque clocks in at the same 131 lb.-ft. as the Civic Hybrid, and maximum output of 141 horsepower from the gasoline engine arrives at 6,000 RPM, precisely as expected. No alarms or surprises here. As for fuel economy, the new Prelude is good for 46 MPG city, 41 MPG highway, and 44 MPG combined. That’s noticeably lower than the Civic Hybrid’s rating of 50 MPG city, 47 MPG highway, and 49 MPG combined, but still exceptional for something sporty. An all-wheel-drive Toyota Corolla Hybrid is rated at 47 MPG city, 41 MPG highway, and 44 MPG combined, so on paper, the Prelude’s powertrain is a case of having your cake and eating it too.


Right, what about curb weight? While U.S.-spec figures haven’t been released yet, we do know what the Prelude weighs in Japan. The launch-spec JDM Prelude tips the scales at 3,219 pounds, a mere 11 pounds more than a U.S.-spec Civic Sport Hybrid despite the JDM Prelude coming as standard with bigger brakes, more sophisticated suspension, 19-inch wheels, and a Bose sound system. On creature comfort levels alone, it’s more comparable to the 3,252-pound Civic Sport Touring Hybrid, so Honda’s clearly been working hard to keep curb weight reasonable.

For greater perspective, the new JDM-spec Prelude only weighs 177 pounds more than a 2001 Prelude Type SH despite a quarter-century of advancements resulting in a safer crash structure, more amenities, and even electrification. Sure, horsepower output may stay about the same, but we’re looking at a huge increase in low-end torque over the last Prelude’s powertrain. Considering the current Civic Hybrid is good for zero-to-60 mph in the mid-to-low six-second range, that should be more than alright for a daily driver.

Mind you, we don’t yet know what the Prelude will cost in America, but things in that department are weird over in Japan. While Japanese market pricing isn’t directly convertible to U.S. market pricing, the launch-spec JDM Prelude starts at 5,618,000 yen if we exclude Japan’s consumption tax. That’s 1,075,000 yen (about $7,240 at current conversion rates) more than Honda’s real flagship, the Civic Type R.

Then again, if we do convert launch-spec JDM Prelude pricing out to greenbacks, we land in the neighborhood of $37,850. Still high, but not out of the question when a loaded U.S.-market Civic Hatchback Hybrid will run you $34,960 including freight. If Honda can keep U.S. Prelude pricing in that ballpark and it just turns out that we’re getting hosed on the Civic Type R, the new hybrid coupe should be dressed for success.

In any case, we won’t have to wait long to find out. The new Prelude arrives in American showrooms later this autumn, and given that the season will change to winter on Dec. 21, we should know exactly what Honda’s three-door hybridized liftback will run us before the holidays. It looks great, has some awesome handling hardware, and seems to hit a daily driver sweet spot of straight-line punch versus fuel economy.
Top graphic image: Honda
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I am under NO circumstances will trade my Civic Si for a Prelude. Unless they have a Prelude Si with 6-Spd coming down the pike. But the Nismo Z on the other hand….
So I’m admittedly already a hater, because I feel like Honda has lost the plot completely. Their “Integra” was just a rebadged ILX and captured absolutely nothing about what Honda Enthusiasts actually wanted. It was such a low effort attempt at recapturing what made the Integra a legend that it was honestly insulting, and really has made me quite certain there’s no hope for that company anymore.
THIS IS WHAT PEOPLE WANTED.
So then we have this Prelude. Kind of weak specs, but maybe it’ll be engaging, a “fun” hybrid with actually good MPG, unlike the joke of a CRZ that offered way less space than a civic hybrid without being any faster, or more efficient, so it was basically just a Civic Hybrid but worse by almost every metric.
However… I just can’t get on board with the front end. It looks wrong, broken, with misplaced headlights.
I don’t have my cintiq hooked up so I did this with a track pad in 2 minutes, but I took the original design, and shifted the headlights LOWER to match the main grill, and after that, I just raised the grill up to match the headlights.
Prelude Headlight Adjustments
Either of these proportions make way more sense to my brain, but the existing design just looks tall, narrow, and awkward.
Anyone else hung up on what I’m seeing? I feel like either of the two lower versions are a massive improvement.
That said… the 2001 design looks better, cleaner, and fresher than this. The “new” one looks busy, not cohesive, and has strange proportions.
I really wish Honda would get it’s mojo back… I’ve owned so many golden era hondas and they really are a magic combination of advanced suspension, motorcycle inspired engines, perfect/simple ergonomics, and clean styling. Modern Honda has nothing that I’d even desire to own. NOTHING. Sad.
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER
Ninja Edit: Forgot there’s no stickshift. FUCK THIS CAR. FUCK HONDA. YOU ARE DEAD TO ME!
I don’t see the hot. Bit cool to me. Not a lot of brand identity in the styling. If you took the Honda badges off I might have guessed Toyota.
Agreed. The proportions are bad. The design is not attractive.