Home » The Next Honda Accord Is Going To Look Very Different

The Next Honda Accord Is Going To Look Very Different

Honda Kiwami Concept

I like the current look of the Honda Accord, which has a sleek profile that suits both its desire for efficiency and its status as one of the few remaining sedans on the market. Honda, a company that’s so far on its back foot it could push its heel through a marble floor, doesn’t agree with me and is in the process of rushing out a dramatic refresh of the model

As a Honda hybrid owner, it baffles me a little that Honda doesn’t have more of these on the market. I got a call from a dealer yesterday asking if they could buy my car, which isn’t something I’m interested in, but I might get a quote for an article. The poor salesperson tried to imply that maybe a bigger hybrid Passport was coming next year. I had to tell him it wasn’t. The mess at Honda will require strong leadership, and a cabal of ex-leaders reportedly tried to throw the current guy out for, among other things, spending too much time with golfers.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

It wouldn’t be The Morning Dump without some executive intrigue, and Honda’s CEO isn’t alone. The head of a startup truck company is having to face a lot of complaints from employees that he didn’t pay them. Oops. Ford’s CEO would like to keep selling affordable cars, and he’s asking for some fairness in the upcoming USMCA negotiations.

The 2027 Accord Will ‘Feel Like A New Model’

Honda Hybrid Sedan Prototype
Photo: Honda

The photo at the top of this post is of the 2003 Honda Kiwami concept, which looks curiously like the now-canceled Honda 0 Saloon, even though it debuted 20 years earlier. I initially doubted that the new Honda Accord would look anything like it, but it was a fun thought exercise to remember that Honda really, really, really likes this shape.

This month is the 50th annivesary of the Honda Accord and the car is selling well. The current Accord was nearly up 30% year-over-year in May and about 29% through almost the first half of the year. Unlike the Passport/Pilot/Odyssey, the Accord has a popular and excellent hybrid system available. Yet, it’s not selling well enough for Honda, which is planning a dramatic refresh.

Folks at Honda told Automotive News that the new car will be bolder than the current version:

Gary Robinson, American Honda’s head of product planning, described the changes as “pretty major,” declining to elaborate on what’s headed to dealerships in the second half of 2027.

“Customers will see a substantially redesigned Accord that will feel like a new model,” Robinson said.

What does that mean? AN‘s sources have some ideas:

The sleeker, more aerodynamic design draws inspiration from Honda’s scrapped 0 Series electric sedan. “The 0 Series went too far,” one of the people with knowledge of the update said. “The Accord strikes the right balance.”

It’s possible that this means it looks like the cleverly-named Hybrid Sedan Prototype shown by Honda in March, which was left-hand-drive and looks very American, with production-spec DOT-style reflectors, motors, et cetera. As Thomas pointed out:

Those details are far more intriguing here because this “Prototype” model features far more radical styling than the Acura crossover. It’s a dramatic two-box design with a serious slope to the roofline. The front lighting arrangement is like nothing we’ve seen from Honda, and plastic cladding on a sedan is rather unusual. While it’s hard to judge size from a photo alone, the Hybrid Sedan Prototype does appear slightly longer than the Acura Hybrid SUV Prototype, so it might be more Accord-sized than Civic-sized.

My guess is that it’s exactly this, which does indeed take some small cues from the Honda 0 Saloon, which itself took cues from the Honda Kiwami concept. Through the transitive property of car design, it means the Honda Accord that America is going to get in 2027 is based on a 25-year-old design. At least I hope it is, because I love the Kiwami concept.

Honda’s Old Guard Reportedly Tried To Boot Current CEO Toshihiro Mibe

Honda Golf Iwai Sisters
Photo: Honda

As evidenced by the above, Honda is not in great shape now and is having to execute a large turnaround amidst big troubles in also-large China, as well as tariffs. It’s therefore not a huge shock that some of the company’s old guard has a lot of concerns and at least, according to this detailed report from Reuters, considered removing current CEO Toshihiro Mibe.

It obviously didn’t work, but the attempt did surface a lot of the concerns around the company. In addition to Honda’s ill-fated push into EVs and rough go in China, Mibe himself is represented as not being involved in the genba of the company, which is how Honda refers to the “actual place” of the company, meaning the factories, labs, and sales rooms.

That Reuters piece includes this interesting detail:

During Mibe’s tenure, Honda’s share of the Chinese market nosedived, falling from 8 percent in 2020 to less than 3 percent last year.

Honda said the focus on the genba remained at its core, even as it worked to become more competitive in a changing market. It declined to specify how many times Mibe had visited China but said that travel was conducted as necessary.

Mibe, the alumni argued, was too focused on Honda’s golf sponsorship, including playing rounds with Akie and Chisato Iwai, pro sisters supported by the company.

When things are going well, the fact that you go out and play golf or drive cars or whatever makes it look like you’re a confident person with a well-balanced life. When things are going poorly, all of it is going to be used to paint you as a person who doesn’t have their eye on the ball. I don’t know what’s happening in Honda other than what’s reported, but if only for appearances I’d probably be playing less golf if I were Mibe.

EV Truck Startup Windrose Hit With Allegations Of Nonpayment

Windrose Truck Xray
Photo: Windrose

I haven’t covered the Tesla-challenging EV Semi startup Windrose because, after the whole Nikola disaster, or the Bollinger disaster, it seemed like maybe all of these companies might just fail. This one even has a young CEO who gets on a lot of lists at places like Forbes and then finds himself trying to explain to reporters why he’s not paying employees.

This time it’s Windrose’s CEO Wen Han, a 36-year-old Chinese native with a Stanford business degree. I am no oracle, but whenever I see “Stanford business degree” in an article about a tech startup I start to get a little concerned. For all of the hype surrounding the vehicle, things have not gone well according to this detailed report from Nikkei Asia:

Han hired more than a dozen American engineers, technicians, operation experts and factory managers — most former employees of defunct electric truck company Nikola — to develop Windrose’s U.S. operations and fulfill orders he said he had lined up. Most were in California while some worked remotely. By February, all but one had left the company or been laid off by text message or email, according to former Windrose employees.

Jason Gies, the former head of North American operations for Windrose, sued the company last October for $412,500 in unpaid severance after he was terminated by text, allegedly without cause. A federal court in the eastern district of Michigan ruled in Gies’ favor in January, after Windrose failed to respond to the lawsuit.

Han, who said it was a mistake to fire Gies over text, told Nikkei Asia he never personally received notices of the lawsuit. He said they were sent to the company’s office in Sunnyvale, California, which is shared with a boutique law firm and where he does not regularly check the mail.

The excuses just get worse from there, including an accusation of racial overtones that was denied by employees who said they just wanted to get paid and be treated fairly.

Jim Farley Would Like To See The Revised USMCA Become Fairer To Companies Building In The United States

Jim Farley
Photo credit: Spotify

There is a quirk of the current trade environment wherein companies that abide by President Trump’s first term United States-Canada-Mexico Agreement are somewhat disadvantaged relative to countries like the UK with flat tariffs. It’s hard to keep track of all of this because it seems to change every day, but the basic premise is that if you put a duty on imports that’s set at 10% for a vehicle, but charge 25% for parts brought into build a car in the United States, that could negate a lot of the advantages of building a car here.

Per the Detroit Free Press, Ford CEO Jim Farley addressed this concern:

“Really, our priority is to be able to import parts, build as much as we can in our country, but import parts to make the vehicles as affordable as possible,” Farley said.

[…]

“So what we’ll be looking for in the new negotiation is really making sure that if a vehicle is imported from Mexico and Canada, that it’s done as a level playing field, No. 1,” Farley said. “So, if you’re not compliant with USMCA, it should be very expensive to do that.”

Farley added, “We also want access to affordable parts, so we can make even more in the U.S., which is our plan, but be able to import parts without punitive tariffs,” Farley said.

Supply chains take years to move and Farley’s point is correct, that previously companies like Audi could skirt the USMCA and still import cars at a reasonably cheap price. If some version of the USMCA is to stay in place (whether as a trio of bilateral deals or one big deal), it doesn’t make sense to tariff those who follow the guidelines in a way that makes following them unecessary.

What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD

We are short basically the entire staff today, which means I gotta lock in. Why is my lock-in music the Icelandic jazz-pop performer Laufey? I don’t know, but I smirk every time I hear the “Blah blah blah” line in “From the start.”

The Big Question

What was the best Honda Accord?

Top photo: Honda

 

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Martian
Martian
4 days ago

I’m not kidding. My 76 year old mother didn’t buy the 26 Accord because it was ‘boring’. 76! And she chose the Camry Hybrid which she hasn’t learned to love yet because it’s ‘too complicated’. She loved two Lincolns through and through. Plush but simple!

Leicestershire
Leicestershire
4 days ago

can we get back to simpler and not so busy interiors? honda ruggedness and durability. please also ditch timing belt with associated maintenance requirement. timing chains for the win. 2nd and third etc owners will thank you and become lifelong fans.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
4 days ago

Anything will be an improvement to the current Honda Accord.

I have a current gen Accord as a rental, and holy crap is this car trash. My parents have had Accords in the past, so it’s not like I hate Honda, but this new model is soooo cheap feeling. Nasty oily/cheap feeling plastics. The touchscreen flexes in its mount. And this is a touch screen, so it’s something you interact with all the time, reminding you of the terrible build quality. The center console flexes with your leg and it is taking up way too much room – makes a reasonably large car feel small. My mother’s early 2000s era Accord felt far more expensive than this turd. And if you think it’s some highly abused rental, so of course it feels poorly made – nope. It’s got 2500 miles on the odometer. Still has that new car smell. I will say the cloth seats are comfy though. And it’s got a surprising amount of pep, like it doesn’t hunt for gears. Very few positives.

Phil
Phil
4 days ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

Ouch. Fun fact–Car and Driver awarded it 10Best without even fully testing it and then did it again the next year.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
4 days ago
Reply to  Phil

And that’s why C&D is trash. They all are.

Grew up reading all the car magazines. Normal kids had comic books and had story time. I’d be reading motor trend and C&D under the covers when I was supposed to be sleeping.

Slowly but surely cancelled them all after I got my license and got experience in a variety of cars. Sick of their biases. To the automotive press German cars could do no wrong and price was totally immaterial. Japanese cars were always given the benefit of the doubt for some reason. American brands could never get anything right. At least according to them.

Even with a severely reduced count of new sedans on the market, this generation Accord is just embarrassing.

Phil
Phil
2 days ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

Yeah, the magazines are garbage. That sick little relationship between C&D and the Accord, where they award it 10Best every year no matter what and then Honda advertises the Accord as a 10Best winner is really questionable, but their readers seem to eat it up.

Honda did them a dirty on the new Accord by releasing it so close to the 10Best that they couldn’t fully test it and had to make a choice: break the 30-year streak or just put it on the list and make shit up to justify it.

They chose the latter.

Phil
Phil
2 days ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

.
Yeah, the magazines are garbage. That sick little relationship between C&D and the Accord, where they award it 10Best every year no matter what and then Honda advertises the Accord as a 10Best winner is really questionable, but their readers seem to eat it up.
Honda did them a dirty on the new Accord by releasing it so close to the 10Best that they couldn’t fully test it and had to make a choice: break the 30-year streak or just put it on the list and make shit up to justify it.
They chose the latter.

Last edited 2 days ago by Phil
Nicklab
Nicklab
4 days ago
Reply to  Hazdazos

I’ll have to compare my in-law’s cars. They’ve got a current and a previous gen Accord. I didn’t find the current one bad at all, but I only drove it a short distance.

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
3 days ago
Reply to  Nicklab

I think the previous gen was a seriously handsome car. Especially in a few of those fun colors it came in and those sick ninja star rims. Every time I’d see one in that killer blue and those rims I’d do a double take because it looked so good.

The current one? Woof. So boring I forget what it looks like AS I’m driving it.

Parsko
Member
Parsko
4 days ago

Affordable parts, affordable parts, affordable parts! I want affordable parts, Jim wants affordable parts, we all want affordable parts!

Best: 1982 hatchback with 241,000 miles, my first car.

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
4 days ago

I see that first picture and I asked myself is the car of the future a copy of a space vehicle from 50 years ago?

1978fiatspyderfan
Member
1978fiatspyderfan
4 days ago

Okay what am I missing. The Supreme Court invalidated the tariffs companies are getting refunds but apparently some people think tariffs are still causing an issue. Is the fact the US can’t hunt whales anymore the reason the price per barrel is going up?

FloridaNative
Member
FloridaNative
4 days ago

“ What was the best Honda Accord?”

Third gen, of course! Pop-up headlights FTW!

Anoos
Member
Anoos
4 days ago

Is it an actual hatchback / fastback, or is it like the current Accord with a hatchback shape and no hatch?

I’d like to say I’m ‘in,’ but there’s always one or two things about a Honda that annoy me to the point of going somewhere else. I’ll wait for more information, but I’m paying attention.

I’d be paying even more attention if it were a wagon.

Last edited 4 days ago by Anoos
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
Member
RustyJunkyardClassicFanatic
4 days ago

The best Accord was the 4th gen, especially since it had a wagon version. I say it’s the best because it’s such a great all around design and fun to drive. We had a 91 sedan as a family car which my Dad bought in 91. It was sold at 240K and still running like a top. The 3rd gen is next, which I’ve had 2 of. They were awesome w/ the pop-ups and so fun to drive w/ stick. What an amazing body style too especially since they based the beautiful Prelude off of it.
The newer Accords are also amazing (I have a 9th gen and it’s awesome) but the best have to be the legendary/classic ones.
I’m sad about this new Accord redesign. It’s surprising and ridiculous. Don’t mess w/ perfection! It just works- just keep making small tweaks. Please don’t mess up the Accord.

DONALD FOLEY
Member
DONALD FOLEY
4 days ago

The fourth generation (1990-1992) is my favorite. Too bad I wasn’t shopping for sedan at the time. Stronger 2.2 liter engine. Well balanced design with the lower beltline and taller greenhouse. Beautiful headlights. First station wagon.

Butterfingerz
Butterfingerz
4 days ago

Gen 3 was my favorite.My wife had a 1989 hatchback that even she was unable to kill.Rust finally got the best of it but that was a great car.It honestly had over 240k and ran perfectly.

Huja Shaw
Member
Huja Shaw
4 days ago
Reply to  Butterfingerz

Gen 3 is the correct answer.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
4 days ago

Best Honda Accord:

The 1990-1992 4th gen Accords, which came as Sedan, Coupe and Wagon.

They were handsome, affordable (tho rarely sold for under MSRP) and spawned the interesting and handsome 5 cylinder Vigor and Inspire.

Or

The 2006-2008 European Accord which was concurrent with the Sixth Gen – sold in the US as the 1st Gen Acura TSX in Sedan and Wagon form.

Myk El
Member
Myk El
4 days ago

“What was the best Honda Accord?”

I loved my 2007 V6 Hybrid. Had the nice V6 power, but still did a respectable 24-25 mpg in pure city driving, but the cylinder deactivation usually meant I could do over 30 highway. Comfy as all get out. I hated when it broke in a way that made no financial sense to repair (expensive motor mounts made of unobtainum)

Emil Minty
Emil Minty
4 days ago

The Honda 0 Saloon would have made a better Luce than a warmed over Apple Car.

First Last
Member
First Last
4 days ago

I put 200k miles each on a 4th and 7th gen and have always had a soft spot for Accords. My opinion:

Gen 1,2: boring but good.
Gen 3,4: peak Accord
Gen 5,6,7,8 started good but progressively lost the styling plot, save for some coupes here and there.
Gen 9,10: Accord is back! Too bad everyone wants a CRV instead.
Gen 11: Fine, but fine won’t cut it anymore against Toyota’s hybrid juggernaut.

Gen 12 (Hybrid Sedan Concept): The first truly cool looking Honda in ages. Bring it on. I’ll take mine in hybrid AWD please.

Last edited 4 days ago by First Last
Scotticus
Member
Scotticus
4 days ago

Honda is rapidly approaching Stellantis levels of mismanagement. Legitimately cannot believe some of the own goals they’ve had recently.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
4 days ago

Why hasn’t Honda made a hybrid Pilot, Odyssey, or Ridgeline yet? WTF?

96Z26
Member
96Z26
4 days ago

We can oust people for focusing too much on golf and not having productive meetings with China? Why didn’t anyone tell me this???

Spikersaurusrex
Member
Spikersaurusrex
4 days ago
Reply to  96Z26

Well, it didn’t work, so there’s that. 🙁

SoCoFoMoCo
Member
SoCoFoMoCo
4 days ago

Honda had an EV push? Last I checked, it borrowed an EV SUV from GM and then gave up.

Lotsofchops
Member
Lotsofchops
4 days ago
Reply to  SoCoFoMoCo

There was a push, it just lost to some stronger blockage.

JurassicComanche25
Member
JurassicComanche25
4 days ago
Reply to  SoCoFoMoCo

Ah, so Honda pulled a GM. Weve tried nothing and are all out of ideas!

Anoos
Member
Anoos
4 days ago

Or maybe have one idea and talk about for a decade (Volt) and then deliver it years late and 60% over the promised price tag.

SoCoFoMoCo
Member
SoCoFoMoCo
3 days ago

At least they didn’t go full-GM and make something crappy, then immediately cancel it after finally getting it perfect.

Younork
Younork
4 days ago

I think the 10th-gen Accord was peak, but maybe that’s recency bias. Available with a 6MT in not one but two engine flavors, along with remarkably good styling that still looks modern today. I still take notice whenever I see a Sport with those good five-spoke wheels.

I too don’t care for the 11th gen’s styling (I think it looks like a late 90s Crown Vic), but lately it has grown on me. I do, however, quite like that it’s available as an efficient hybrid with lots of rear legroom. Furthermore, the price delta between a discounted Accord hybrid and a Civic hybrid is often small enough that the push up to the larger car is a relatively insignificant bump. If I needed to buy a vehicle today, my first stop would be the Honda dealer.

SoCoFoMoCo
Member
SoCoFoMoCo
4 days ago
Reply to  Younork

You are correct. That was a very handsome car.

Scotticus
Member
Scotticus
4 days ago
Reply to  Younork

9th-gen Accord coupe was the sweet spot for me

Phil
Phil
4 days ago
Reply to  Younork

I’ll be the contrarian and push back on the 10th Gen a bit. Most were 1.5 + CVT and I thought that was a laggy, irritating combo. That engine is having real problems now. And apparently the manuals were cheap and sloppy feeling. I never quite warmed to the hunchback styling either. The 2.0 with 10spd in red might get my attention, however.

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
4 days ago

Honda not developing a hybrid powertrain for their larger vehicles was… a choice.

I’m glad that they’re still considering putting real effort into the Accord. I know the sedan market has shrunk a lot, but there’s still some volume to be had especially with so little competition. It certainly could use a little more “zazz”.

Mike Harrell
Member
Mike Harrell
4 days ago

I got a call from a dealer yesterday asking if they could buy my car, which isn’t something I’m interested in…

Aha! Yet another reason to prefer defunct marques with no surviving dealerships.

Echo Stellar
Member
Echo Stellar
4 days ago

I hate the current Accord. It’s so utterly boring and oozed onto the market through either Honda’s fear or laziness. It reminds me a lot of the 2012 Civic debacle. Admittedly, I no longer find the 2012 Civics offensive, so they’ve managed to age okay.
I rushed to buy a 2022 Accord before the next generation hit the ground, but sold it to save money and avoid the L15 time-bomb problems. I applaud Honda’s efforts to adjust and wish them well.

MiniDave
MiniDave
4 days ago

Will someone tell me where all the trillions of dollars from these “sweet, sweet” tariffs is?

Echo Stellar
Member
Echo Stellar
4 days ago
Reply to  MiniDave

In Fanta Menace, et al.’s pockets, where they were designed to go, of course!

StillPlaysWithCars
StillPlaysWithCars
4 days ago
Reply to  MiniDave

In bombs we’re dropping on Iran.

LMCorvairFan
Member
LMCorvairFan
4 days ago

What about the missiles, they’re shooting the missiles

Strangek
Member
Strangek
4 days ago

The current Accord is a nice looking car. It’s surprisingly long and I dig the taillights. Looks like they’re going to make it all angled and pointy kinda like that new Lexus, too bad.

LTDScott
Member
LTDScott
4 days ago

The 4th gen CB7/9. I think this was peak Honda era in general. I love the design – thin pillars, large greenhouse, wrap around rear window, clean and simple gauge cluster, etc.

Two weekends ago I saw a total of 4 Nikola trucks going up and down the I-15 corridor north of San Diego, all towing Amazon trailers. I didn’t think any were in service.

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