The Honda Accord is one of the best-selling bread-and-butter cars of all time, as the best-selling Japanese car in the United States from 1982 to 1997. In 1989, it was the best selling car in the U.S, beating the Ford Taurus. It was the model to take Honda beyond small cars, to bring Honda’s manufacturing operations to the U.S, to show what the Japanese carmaker could do when it just wanted to make a really good, durable and dependable daily driver. The Accord deserved to sell well, among all the Camrys and Corollas, and it did.
Over the years, there were even a number of Accords that were interesting from an enthusiast driver standpoint, since in some markets it got hot engines, big engines, all-wheel drive, four-wheel steering – albeit not in the same car, at the same time. Honda could turn the Accord into hatchbacks, coupes, wagons as well as sedans.

If it weren’t for the Accord, Honda would probably still be making tiny kei cars and Civics and little more. The oil crisis had given the then very small Civic the sales boost the company needed: the EPA rated it as the most fuel-efficient car available in the States from 1974 to 1978, and its CVCC engine didn’t need a catalytic converter or unleaded fuel to run clean. It did 40MPG, cost a little over two grand new, and as a result, it sold well. By 1975, Honda sold 100,000 Civics yearly in the U.S, soon tripling that. With its small car selling well, what else could Honda offer for American customers by the mid-‘70s? What kind of Honda would suit the wide open roads of the wide open America?
The Accord Gets Its Start in The Mid-1970s

The first Honda Accord was launched in May 1976. At first, it was still a hatchback like the Civic, but bigger. We’re still not talking about a particularly large car, as it weighed around 2000lbs tops, but it already appealed to buyers who had found the Civic too tiny for their needs. When I think of the first-gen Civic, I think about the scene in the first Police Academy movie, where the stolen Civic’s front seats are ripped off, and the guys sit in the back seat so the driver can fit behind the wheel.
The Accord’s sedan version was introduced in 1977-1978, and it did exactly the same as the Jetta and other hatchback-derived sedans would do throughout history: it looked bigger and more serious, thanks to the added trunk. The first automatic transmissions were still two-speed Hondamatics, and looking at it from 50 years in the future, it’s bewildering that a three-speed automatic would be something to improve things. That was added in 1980.

The second gen arrived in September 1981. It looked almost the same at a glance, and it also retained the hatchback version, but it was ever so slightly bigger. But it would need to be, as Honda, zeroing in on American requirements, started building Accords at its Marysville, Ohio, manufacturing plant. The first car factory in the U.S. from a Japanese automaker, it’s been churning out Accords since November 1982, having started out a couple of years earlier with building motorcycles. By 2023, Honda had built 30 million cars in the United States.
The Accord Was The First Car With A Navigation System

The Japanese-market second-generation Accord also featured an interesting piece of equipment that we’ve grown to take for granted: a navigation screen. Offered as an option, it was the world’s first commercially available automotive navigation system.
Since satellite-based navigation systems in cars were a long ways in the future, it was incredibly complicated in a completely different way. The Electro Gyro-Cator relied on small transparent maps scrolling on a 6-inch CRT display screen, indicating the car’s location using a helium gas gyroscope and a servo gear that would detect the car’s rotation and acceleration, once the driver had set off, tracing their way using dead reckoning and showing where to go. The driver could also highlight locations using a supplied pen. The maps needed to be specially created for the system to be precise enough for the car and driver to rely on, as the development vehicles initially deviated from the routes due to deformations in the cartography.
“Although the vehicle’s trajectory and the map had to be aligned manually on the display, or “map matching”, it was tremendously convenient for the driver to know the location and traveling direction of their own vehicle without using a regular map. The project made progress to the point where the system was ready for a road test, but the team ran into an unexpected problem during this real-world testing. At the road test, (Katsutoshi) Tagami drove the vehicle and Kume and Nobuhiko Kawamoto, then assistant general manager at Honda R&D (and later the fourth president of Honda) also got in the vehicle. They drove along the same test course several times, however, each time, at the exact same place, the vehicle would deviate from the course shown on the map, and nobody could figure out why. Thinking that the onboard instruments were being affected by some kind of electrical interference from a nearby facility, they used a field strength meter to detect any such disturbances, but none could be found.
After exhausting every possibility, Tagami finally hit upon an idea: “Could the map be wrong?”
He contacted the map distributor and learned that in the world of cartography, the use of simplified representations known as “deformations” was a common practice. For example, on a map with a scale of 1:100,000, a 10 meter-wide road would be represented by a 0.1 millimeter-wide fine line. In areas where several roads run close together, these lines would have to be simplified to avoid overlapping, and this inevitably sacrificed a certain degree of precision and accuracy. However, when it comes to route guidance, sacrificing precision was just not a viable option, so the team decided to work with a map maker to create a new set of map sheets dedicated to the system Honda was developing.”
The Electro Gyro-Cator weighed 20 lbs, cost a fourth of the Accord’s price in Japan, and it was only offered for a year until Honda shelved it. It’s unclear how many buyers went for it. Even as a paperweight, it’s cool.

As weird as it was, the Electro Gyro-Cator wasn’t the only fancy thing about the second-gen Accord: it got a perfectly ’80s-looking digital dashboard in Japan. “ALB” stood for Anti-Lock Brakes, before “ABS” was widely accepted as the acronym. I also enjoy that the electronic display says Electronic Display on it.
The ’80s Accords Look Even Sharper

What’s the cool thing about the third-generation Accord? Pop-up headlights! Honda designed the third-gen car to be nearly as good-looking as the Prelude of the time, and that meant a sleek shape and a low nose. It was a transformation after the somewhat ho-hum design of the first cars, and you can’t tell me the black Accord in that above desert shot doesn’t look seriously desirable. The salad shooter wheels help, too.
For the American market Accord, the low nose likely needed pop-up headlights for regulatory reasons; the Japanese ones had them to match the other Hondas sold at the Honda Verno chain of dealers, such as the Prelude.

It has to be said that the Accord coupe was now extremely close to the Prelude in design, especially as you could also get the Prelude without pop-up headlights in Japan.
In the above shot, the American-built coupe poses with a Gold Wing, also built in Marysville. In Japan, the American-manufactured coupes got neat little eagle logos, which you can spot above the exterior door handle.

European versions did without pop-up headlights, but since the engineering was already there, the trick lamps were also used in the fantastically cool Aero Deck three-door wagon sold in Europe and Japan.

While the sedan is one of the few four-door cars with pop-up headlights (do you remember any others?), the Aero Deck was about as fancy and sharp as a hatchback could be. And the hatch was even hinged in a slightly strange way for a larger opening. The available two-tone paint scheme made the Aero Deck look even more ’80s.
The ’90s Start Round Here

For the fourth generation, Honda used the Aero Deck name for its 1991 Accord wagon, the first one of its kind. Those were built in Ohio and exported from there to Europe and Japan, as was the two-door coupe: while the Accord now got a real wagon instead of a shooting brake, the three-door hatchback was dropped from the roster. The addition of a long roof was done very smoothly.

As the ’90s went on, the Accord’s Japanese, European, and American versions also started to deviate visually. While American Accord buyers could choose between a somewhat similar-looking sedan and coupe in 1993 – and select a V6, for the first time ever – the now British-built European Accord was a development of the Honda Ascot Innova (above). It looked otherwise identical, but the Ascot Innova was slightly narrower, had frameless windows, and was available with four-wheel steering, in the style of the Prelude. The UK-market Accord was raced in the British Touring Car Championship between 1995 and 2000.
Honda had been working with Rover since the 1980s, and Rover took the early-‘90s Accord as a basis for its 600 sedan. The 600-series definitely looks like a Honda, and the doors are almost identical to the ones on the European Accord. The cars also shared the windshield and the roof panel.

We’re counting the Rover 620ti as a Cool Accord in this piece, as it offered a 200-horsepower, intercooled, turbocharged four-cylinder Rover engine at a time when Honda didn’t really yet play with turbocharging in its passenger cars (the first-generation Legend and the Honda Jazz/City aside).
The 620ti especially is an interesting blend of Rover’s Olde English viking boat image and straight line speed. It could hit 60 mph in seven seconds and go all the way past 140 mph. In the 1990s, those were some serious numbers from a four-cylinder engine.
The Turn Of The Millennium

The sixth-generation Accord would be three different-looking cars, depending on where you did your business with Honda: the American, European, and Japanese sedans all differed visually from each other. The European car was also smaller than the other two.
As the CR-V and Odyssey took their place, there would be no more Accord Wagon for American buyers, but there was a neat-looking coupe (above) that had the slightest hint of NSX in the taillamp design. It’s great to think about how there was a market for coupes like this in the ’90s and early 2000s, plus you could get it with a three-liter V6.

European customers could choose a Type-R, which produced over 210 horsepower from 2.2 liters of displacement – without turbocharging. The thing screamed to 7200rpm. Some 3800 were built, out of which over 2000 were sold in the UK.
The same engine was also used in the Japanese market Accord Euro-R (pictured above), a model name that isn’t confusing at all.

The car that European Honda drivers knew as the seventh-generation Accord was sold in the U.S. as the Acura TSX. It is one of the best-looking Accords and a great-looking Acura, and you could buy it as AWD in Japan, as well as a 220-horsepower “Euro R” despite there not being a European Type-R anymore. The Japanese and European versions of the Accord were again visually similar, but the American car looked quite different.
As well as again being sold as an Acura TSX, the eighth-generation Accord would be the last one sold in Europe, as Accord sales ended there in 2015.

Importantly, the eighth-generation American Accord was sold as a V6 coupe with a six-speed manual gearbox, as was the ninth-generation coupe. Honda could just have sold them as automatic only, but chose to offer more.
The tenth generation would lose the coupe and the V6, signalling the end for Honda Accords aimed at enthusiast drivers: while there wasn’t a coupe anymore, the sedan at least has a fastback sort of roofline in the two most recent generations.
(Edit: The original version of this article neglected to include that, yes, the tenth-generation Accord was available with a six-speed manual in the Accord Sport. That and the 10-speed automatic are definitely enthusiast choices – maybe some of the coolest Accords I forgot existed)

In the eleventh-generation car, the only available transmissions are a CVT and an e-CVT. But in a market where passenger sedans aren’t even the obvious choice, the fact that there even is a factory-new, Ohio-built Honda Accord for sale among all the SUVs and crossovers feels warming.
Photos: Honda









Love Honda Accords. We’ve had a few.
My dream Accord (or Torneo) would be a sixth gen Japanese market SiR-T with the F20B engine. Shorter stroke than the H22A so will rev better / higher.
Oh the things I’d do for a mint condition 2017 Accord Coupe in Deep Blue Opal Metallic with the V6 and 6 speed manual… A 6 6 Accord could be my forever car
A 2012 Coupe with the V6 and 6 speed is still one of my top 3 cars to own right now.
First car was an 82 Hatch. Loved it.
I don’t think that was a stolen Civic in Police Academy, it was cadet Copeland’s personal car and he was teaching Hightower how to drive so he could pass the driving portion of his police training. Bubba Smith, the actor who played Hightower was 6’7″
Mahoney and Hightower stole it from Copeland and dumped it on a field after the driver training.
Ahh, that’s right!!!! I was trying to think back and I knew it belonged to cadet Copeland, I couldn’t picture the theft. I remember now. Mahoney, of course, the rascal
“While the sedan is one of the few four-door cars with pop-up headlights (do you remember any others?)”
Acura Integra
I suppose the Ferrari 456GT Venice counts here, despite the very low production numbers.
J-body Buick Skyhawk, wagon included, somehow.
Were those headlight a custom job? Other ’87 wagons seem to have just regular old fixed headlights:
https://smclassiccars.com/buick/685583-buick-skyhawk-wagon-1987.html
They were available across the line. The window sticker on that BaT one shows concealed headlamps were a $160 option. I guess pop-up isn’t quite right as they didn’t flip up. Sunbirds offered pop-ups on sedans and wagons though, although they had the narrow opening at the bottom.
Let’s talk about the 3rd photo from the top. I’ve been a Honda fan since the 80’s. I don’t recall ever knowing about a 1st Gen Accord with quad rectangular headlights. Is this AI, or was there some special model or local country variant I didn’t know about?
“its CVCC engine didn’t need a catalytic converter or unleaded fuel to run clean”
Really? It was able to scrub the lead out of the exhaust?
I love that first AeroDeck shooting brake.
Great piece Antti!
I had a 2003 V6 6-speed coupe and LOVED it. Silly torque steer but otherwise a joy.
I had a 2006 V6 6 speed sedan and loved it. That engine was turbine smooth.
The previous gen Accord 2.0 6-speed MT was the final of that Honda secret handshake to enthusiasts. They put the bigger engine into the four-door with the manual, which they had not done with the Accord before it (you could only get the uplevel engine option with the manual in a coupe). Heck, this was a detuned Type R engine! Heck, Honda even used the phrase “save the manuals” in the press release announcing the car! RIP to the manual Accord!
Several auto reviewers I respect thought the manual transmission in that car was very subpar. They made pretty convincing cases in their videos. Strikes me as Honda throwing a half-finished effort in there just to say they did.
That dashboard Inertial Navigation System is pretty cool.
The 6th gen coupe is a shockingly great looking car in my opinion. Always thought they looked great.
80s all day baby. Although that aero hatch thang looks magnificent!
Too bad we didn’t get a factory H22 Accord over here 🙁
And of course, the last Accord coupe inspired the new Mustang 😛
I learned how to drive a stick on an ’83 Accord sedan around ’91, and I fell in love with that car. It was a simple car that was great to learn on and to 15 year old me fun to drive. A couple years later my dad had an ’87 Accord hatchback that was sadly an auto but still fun to drive.
If I were to win the lottery, my garage would include an example of each of those cars.
I learned to drive stick in an 87 accord with a 5 speed. In the 26 since then I’ve driven very few transmissions as nice as the one on that car. It was running strong past 250k miles when I slide it into a curb on any icy night and I still feel guilty about it.
My first car was an 1986 Accord Lx with that buttery yet precise 5-speed. Dad’s first new car, and the car that brought me home from the hospital post-birth. I learned how to drive it in middle school, and it set the stage for a variety of manuals in my future life. Those pop-up headlights were so sleek and I felt like a spy driving it.
We sold it to a friend in need when I needed to upgrade in college, and shortly thereafter it was T-boned and totaled. My dad and I wept when we found out.
Fast forwarding 20 years, I have moved to the PNW where the mild weather has preserved some cars I never thought I’d see again – including a handful of this generation’s Accords. I’ve had some fun cars (08 S2000, 13 GTI, 98 SN-95 Cobra) but it still gives me such a thrill to see one of these pop up.
My Mom (and then later my sister) had a 6th-gen V6 sedan. That thing could GO when you needed it to. And yeah, it was prime Bulletproof Honda era.
How did your mom later become your sister?
A very specific combination of kink and time travel?
Or a weird brother. Mormons might figure in there somewhere.
That Aero Deck is really cool, I’ve never seen one. In person or even a photo until now. And the Euro-R looks pretty sweet.
I also love the Aerodecks (I’m in the UK) and there is a Type R uses my station carpark. I wonder if it will be there when my train gets in this evening?
It’s here! I think it’s a Japanese import
I drive 2015 Accord Sport Sedan K24 6MT. Love my car. Would’ve loved 2020 2.0T 6MT.
The day I showed up at the Honda dealership to hash out a deal on the 1988 CRX Si I knew I was going to buy, they happened to have what must’ve been a demo 1987 Accord 3-door hatch.
I’ve often wondered how my life might’ve changed if I’d gone with something that was, undeniably, briefly tempting. It was better looking in that champagne flake than you might imagine.
My dad bought a 1987 Accord Hatch in light blue new. Kept it for almost 10 years of Southern Ontario winters and 312,000km. I learned to drive in it. He spoke the most fondly of it of all the cars he owned over the years. He traded it in on a lightly used 1995 Accord which he took to 313,000 km. Rust and time was the eventual downfall of both as both ran great until the end. But replacing suspension stuff etc on a 10 year old rusty high distance car just isn’t worth it, especially if you are as mechanically inept as he was.
I’d add the 06 Accord V6 6MT to the list of honorable mentions. It’s generation started the 6-6 Accords and is the only Accord to get the 6-6-6 moniker. Outside America, where these were called Inspires instead got the first cylinder deactivation in a Honda. Also the hybrid version of this gen used a V6 as well; not sure why they didn’t decide to use that in other cars at the time.
Love my 14 Accord; taken that car through many road trips to California to visit the folks and back with no issues and 12 years later still only have under 100K on it.
I’m old enough that I sold Honda Accords in 1977. Buyers were amazed at the level of standard equipment: AM/FM radio; full carpets; reclining seats; side window defoggers; remote hatch release; locking gas cap. Best of all: it didn’t need that communist-plot unleaded gasoline.
Three colors, two transmissions. Sign here, please. We’ll probably have a car for you in about three months.
Fun Accord facts:
1. 1996 Accord is smaller than a 2026 Civic
2. The Accord entered the US market as a subcompact and now is classified as a large sedan.
Subcompact? What was the Civic?
It was classified as a minicompact (Less than 85 cu ft of interior volume)
Ah, my college car.. A 1988 Accord DX hatchback in Laguna Gold metallic. I got it in 1995 with 141k miles from a coworker of my dad’s. He offered it for what the dealer offered as trade-in value: $1500.
I took it to 216k in four years. The DX featured the carb’d A20A (the LXi got you EFI). 98 raging horsepower. Evwn with the 5-speed it was slow, but other than that an excellent car.
It led to a series of Accords being driven by my younger brothers, including a 1989 sedan and coupes from 91 and 93.
As a popup headlight enthusiast, I’m forever grateful to the 89 Accord for representing the only time that the best selling car in America featured flippy lights.
I had a friend in high school, around the same time, that had 3rd gen Accord hatch. Her’s was baby blue though, may have been a EX too. I only rode in it a couple times, 30+ years ago 😀 Great cloth interior though!
My interior was at least 2 shades of brown. I didn’t really like it then. I’d love an interior like that now, just because it isn’t black or gray.
Laguna Gold? I thought somehow it was champagne. But I think I’ll leave my comment above unedited to see if anyone notices.
Those popup headlamps were somethin’.
Champagne was a lighter shade that you saw more on the 4th gens. The common gold for the 3rd gens was Laguna.
I remember mom getting a new 1989 Accord SE-i when I was really small. The pop-up headlights were the star of the show for little me. With that low cowl, I can only imagine how great the visibility was on those Accords.
The first time I got into the driver’s seat I felt like I was sitting on the car rather than in it.
I miss this stellar outward visibility!