American Supercar: Your First Look at the 1,064-HP 2025 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1!
The engine might be in the middle, but the mightiest Corvette returns as the supercar with a muscle-car mindset.The Chevrolet Corvette just blew past the 800- and 900-horsepower barriers on its way to a claimed sub-10-second quarter mile and a top speed exceeding 215 mph. Powered by a flame-shooting, twin-turbo 5.5-liter V-8, the 2025 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 makes a towering 1,064 horsepower—a 309-hp mega leap over the last car to wear the ZR1 badge.
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A lot has changed in the five years since the previous ZR1 made its debut. Today’s most powerful cars run on batteries, and Corvette engines now push from behind the driver, yet the ZR1 persists as the supercar with a muscle-car mindset. Making its four-figure power rating even more outrageous, we expect it to cost at least $100,000 dollars less than the European exotica it’s built to beat.
Meet the Chevrolet LT7 Small-Block V-8
As with the 638-hp C6 ZR1 and the 755-hp C7 ZR1, the 2025 C8 Corvette ZR1’s tremendous output is the result of engineers squeezing as much power as possible from its small-block V-8 engine. “The reason they’re odd numbers is because we didn’t set a target horsepower ahead of time,” executive chief engineer Tadge Juechter said. “We want the most power technology will give us.”
In the case of the 2025 Chevy Corvette ZR1’s LT7 engine, the technology involves a rare combination of displacement, revs, and turbo boost. Like the Corvette Z06’s LT6, the LT7’s eight forged pistons spin a flat-plane crankshaft that unlocks a quicker- and higher-revving engine while also unleashing side-to-side vibrations severe enough that, if not mitigated, will shake the oil filter off the V-8. Automakers have traditionally kept this imbalance in check by limiting the displacement to 4.5 liters or less, but both Ford and Chevy have pushed higher with their recent V-8 screamers. For a flat-plane-crank V-8, 5.5 liters is positively huge.
Blowing the engine with two turbos rather than a supercharger keeps the inertia low to preserve the flat-plane high-rpm character. Torque peaks at 828 lb-ft at 6,000 rpm, the 1,064-hp max hits at 7,000 rpm, and redline is reached at an awesome 8,000 rpm. During a very short, very fast ride in the passenger seat at GM’s Milford Proving Grounds in Michigan, the LT7 emitted a loud, proud, star-spangled blare deeper than your typical flat-plane V-8, more of a wail than a howl.
Pointing speed sensors at the turbos allows the blowers to spin faster, with the compressor blade tips traveling up to 1.7 times the speed of sound. The turbine wheels are made of Mar, a nickel-based alloy with even greater heat tolerance than Inconel to withstand temperatures as high as 1,900 degrees Fahrenheit. At full chat, the engine runs on 20 psi of boost with so much air pumping through the cylinders that the exhaust exiting the four tailpipes pushes the car with 37 pounds of thrust.
Juechter insists the LT7 isn’t just a boosted version of the Z06’s LT6 engine. Development of the two V-8s nicknamed Gemini began in tandem and share a block casting, but Chevy says the ZR1 is built with unique internals, cams, and cylinder heads plus additional cooling measures, an extra oil scavenge stage, and a supplementary port fuel-injection system. For full details on what’s new and notable, read our deep dive on the 2025 Corvette ZR1’s LT7 engine.
Chevy promises us plenty of low-end punch, too, with the LT7 churning out more than 800 lb-ft of torque from 3,000 to 6,500 rpm. To cope with all that twist, the eight-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission is built with thicker gears, and the rear-wheel bolt pattern has grown from 120 to 130 millimeters (about 5.1 inches). The tire sidewalls read the same as on the Z06—either Michelin Pilot Sport 4S ZP or optional Pilot Sport Cup 2 R ZP in 275/30 ZR20 (97Y) up front and 345/25 ZR21 (104Y) out back—but the internal construction is modified to handle more extreme forces.




