Wishing for More Time and HRC’s New Performance Parts For Our Yearlong Review Acura Integra Type S
Honda (and Acura) have new racing-inspired performance parts in the pipeline, promising to make a great car even greater.

We’re over halfway through our yearlong test of the 2025 Acura Integra Type S, and please bear with me because you’re likely going to wonder at first what I’m going on about here as I begin talking about racing. While we haven’t modified or taken our Apex Blue Pearl Integra Type S to any track days—let alone put it into any form of organized, competitive motorsport–we do have plenty of on-track experience with this car during our official testing regimen, and we’ve previously driven other examples on racetracks, so we know how sharp, hugely fun, and rewarding it is to drive. Based on our prior experiences with the Type S before we ever took delivery of this one, none of this has been a surprise.

What has surprised me as this Acura’s overseer during its time in our fleet is how much the Honda/Acura culture thing has hit me when I think about and view the car with the heart and eyes of an everyday owner. For starters, there’s the semi-regular experience of encountering other Integra Type S (and Civic Type R) owners, from passing nods and waves on the Los Angeles streets to smiles and conversations about the car sparked by strangers at gas stations and parking lots. It’s starkly similar to my personal-life experience as a longtime first-gen Porsche Cayman S owner, and it brings an emotional component to the whole thing that can’t be appreciated by simply poring over spec sheets and test results. You can’t place a dollar value on this sort of thing, but it’s real and an important distinction for car enthusiasts who purchase certain vehicles or aspire to own them for reasons beyond having access to mere transportation.
But What Was That About Racing?
Honda and Acura’s long history in motorsports adds to the emotional bit, too. Ahead of the IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship’s opening race of 2026, the Rolex 24 at Daytona International Speedway, I hopped into the passenger seat of an Integra Type S for a fast lap around the Daytona road course with racer/full-time Honda production chassis engineer Chad Gilsinger driving. (Not for nothing, he was part of the Civic Type R TCR driver lineup that finished second at Daytona in the IMSA Michelin Pilot Challenge event.) Not having driven the car on a track in a while, I was reminded immediately how impressively capable it is, pulling big cornering speeds while exhibiting excellent balance—doubly exquisite for a front-drive car—and allowing for notable chassis-rotation control via the brakes and throttle.
Even with the Gilsinger leaving some performance on the table in the name of safety, the pace was fast enough and so devoid of screaming tires to leave me questioning what modifications the hot-lap car boasted. The answer is hardly any, save for HRC (Honda Racing Corporation) front-brake pads and floating front-brake rotors, the same items used on the Type S race car that competes in the SRO TC America series’ TCX class.
That single flying lap had me thinking about our long-term Integra Type S; the prospect of getting home and steering the Integra on a fun road couldn’t come soon enough as I remembered just how precise an instrument I had access to, and how it represents part of a bigger picture within a company that places premium value on its racing programs.
“To pull out of motorsports or to not put the effort in motorsports is a very dangerous thing, especially from our perspective, because that’s where [Honda] started from,” former Acura vice president and brand boss Jon Ikeda, who is now vice president of HRC U.S., told me later. When I asked him if it’s possible to measure racing’s value to the company beyond concepts such as sharpening engineers like Gilsinger and sparking emotions and loyalty in fans and customers by winning races like the Indianapolis 500, Rolex 24, and others, he replied, “It’s difficult. [TV] viewership—you get the Nielsen ratings—and they have some funky algorithm that if a Honda [or Acura] logo shows up on a race car on TV for 20 seconds, it’s worth X [dollars].



