Toyota Finally Confirms a New V-8 Engine
The automaker's head of powertrains hints that Lexus will also use it.
We’ve spoken at great length about Toyota’s new, smaller, and lighter four-cylinder engines that will power everything. However, there’s been little information regarding a large-displacement ICE designed specifically for the company’s new flagship performance vehicle. The GR-badged supercar is set to premiere in early December, and yes, it will have a V-8 engine.
In an interview at the ongoing 2025 Japan Mobility Show, Toyota’s powertrain president, Takashi Uehara, confirmed the juicy rumors about a twin-turbo V-8. He explained that the foundation for this new eight-cylinder setup lies within the company’s upcoming family of modular gasoline engines consisting of 1.5- and 2.0-liter units.
In the mid-engine GR Yaris M concept, the 2.0-liter “G20E” has a target output exceeding 400 horsepower. Uehara told CarExpert that the new V-8 is “widely speaking” related to the four-cylinder engine mounted behind the hot hatch’s seats. The V-8 will deliver significantly more power, and not only because it has four extra cylinders and a second turbo.
The man in charge of engines at Toyota also confirmed another part of the rumor surrounding the GT3-derived supercar: the ICE will be part of a hybrid powertrain. However, he clarified that the performance machine will not be a plug-in hybrid. He further hinted that Lexus will use the electrified V-8 in a production version of the Sport Concept shown here, which, as we recently learned, is indeed a hybrid.
When asked whether Toyota’s luxury division would have access to the new engine, Uehara essentially confirmed it: “You can expect—you see the Lexus new sports car? That is that…” He also hinted that engineers are tuning the V-8 differently for Lexus compared to Toyota’s GR flagship:
'Maybe we could have a V-8 with a more gentle [character], or we could have a more muscular, heavy-duty version.'
We suspect Lexus will get the “gentle” version, while Toyota will employ the “heavy-duty” configuration, especially in the GT3 race car. It makes sense for the V-8 to power more than one vehicle; developing a new engine from scratch for a single, low-volume model would be difficult to justify financially. A racing counterpart helps make the investment viable, while a street-legal Lexus derivative improves economies of scale.
Toyota isn’t the only automaker investing in a new V-8. AMG has one in development, and its parent company, Mercedes, even remains committed to the venerable V-12. Meanwhile, BMW has already confirmed it’s tweaking the V-8 to meet upcoming emissions regulations, ensuring its mid-term survival. Through Porsche, the Volkswagen Group also intends to keep V-8s alive well into the 2030s.
So yes, the V-8 isn’t going anywhere.
Source: CarExpert
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
The Clever Engineering That Makes The Toyota GR GT So Special
Mazda Hits The Brakes On EVs, Doubles Down On Hybrids
Toyota Wants GR To Be a Standalone Brand. That's a Mistake
Toyota CEO: RAV4-Based Pickup Is An 'Opportunity For Us'
Toyota Won't Even Sell the GR GT at Its Dealerships
The Chevrolet Camaro Is Coming Back. Here's Everything We Know
Lexus Should Make the Electric LFA—Under One Condition