2026 Honda Prelude First Test: Sharp Handling, Hybrid Efficiency, Mixed Personality

Honda’s revived hybrid coupe delivers real grip, strong efficiency, and only flashes of greatness.

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Pros

  • Solid handling
  • Strong brakes
  • Good fuel economy

Cons

  • Slower than the Civic Hybrid
  • Hit-or-miss interior
  • Unconvincing S+ Shift

The Honda Prelude is back, but anyone expecting a reboot of the old-school Prelude formula should temper those expectations. The 2026 version isn’t a lightweight, manual-transmission-equipped throwback or a rebodied Civic coupe. Rather, it’s a front-drive hybrid with a tech-heavy personality and just enough hardcore hardware to keep us interested.

Despite a First Drive that left us with the impression of a car in need of more polish, we remain interested in it because the Prelude name carries real weight with enthusiasts. One of the last versions we tested, the sleek 1997 Type SH, used clever torque-vectoring hardware, strong-for-the-era performance, and serious engineering chops. In other words, it was a real driver’s car.

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The question we wanted to answer with our First Test was this: Do the numbers reveal a true bridge between the contemporary Civic Si and Civic Type R, or is this new generation of the Prelude little more than an average-performing, stylish coupe with a famous badge?

Slower Than the Civic Hybrid

To be fair, we didn’t expect the new Prelude to be a straight-line monster, and our testing confirmed it. The Prelude’s 6.4-second 0–60-mph run and 15.2-second, 90.7-mph quarter mile are both one tick slower than the Civic Hybrid with which it shares a powertrain, Honda’s 2.0-liter four, and electric motor with 200-hp and 232 lb-of torque.

For a little context, the new Prelude is comfortably quicker than the ’97 Prelude Type SH we tested, which used a 195-hp 2.2-liter four-cylinder and reached 60 mph in 7.2 seconds before covering the quarter mile in 15.6 seconds at 90.5 mph. It also outpaces last Civic Si we tested, which achieved a 7.4-second 0–60-mph time on the strength of its 200-hp 1.5-liter turbo-four.

Getting the best launch out of the Prelude takes some experimentation. You’ll want the battery fully charged for maximum straight-line performance, and our quickest runs came in Sport mode without the Prelude’s S+ Shift system engaged.

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As for S+ Shift itself, it aims to add some old-school character to the Prelude’s hybrid powertrain by simulating gear changes. But there’s little real interruption in power delivery, and the sound doesn’t truly mimic a conventional transmission working through ratios. It’s a clever enough idea that adds some theater, but the effect isn’t fully convincing. The car was also slower by at least a second to 60 mph in our testing when using it.

Even without S+ active, the Prelude simulates shifts unless it’s launched with pedal overlap. Power delivery as a whole is smooth, and the handoff between electric and gas power is well managed. In the end, although the Prelude is plenty quick for daily driving, its pace doesn’t quite live up to the promise its stance, tires, and chassis convey.

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Handling Is the Best Part

Look past the powertrain, and it becomes obvious Honda wanted the Prelude to be more than a Civic Hybrid in a coupe suit. Although it rides on a Civic-based platform, its wheelbase is 5.1 inches shorter than a Civic Type R’s, and it cribs some hardcore hardware from that car, including front suspension components, adaptive dampers, and brake hardware. Honda also gave the Prelude a handling-focused setup with a wider front track and staggered tire pressures, and our test car arrived on dealer-installed summer performance tires—a meaningful upgrade that likely played a major role in its grip and braking numbers.

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On the road and at the track, that setup shows real promise. Turn-in is immediate and sharp, body roll is well controlled, and the chassis feels mostly neutral when pushed. The Prelude also outgrips the current Civic Si and Civic Hybrid Hatchback and handily exceeds the old Prelude Type SH’s skidpad result, although, again, the new car’s tire advantage is significant.

There are limits to the fun, though. Traction control can only be reduced, not fully defeated, and it intervenes earlier than we’d like, allowing just a little rotation before stepping in. The result is a car with impressive handling capability but not quite enough freedom—or power—to fully exploit it. The ride is sporty but livable, with enough refinement for city driving and daily use, although those same performance tires likely contributed to its noticeable road noise.

Braking is another area where the borrowed Type R hardware pays off, helped by the extra grip from the summer tires (did we mention the tires yet?). The setup includes two-piece front rotors with aluminum center sections for more efficient cooling, and our test car stopped from 60 mph in just 104 feet. That’s a massive improvement over the 133-foot stop we recorded from the 1997 Prelude Type SH and close to the current Civic Si’s 102-foot result, while handily beating the Civic Hybrid Hatchback’s 113 feet. The pedal is a little soft at first and travels more than we’d like, but it firms up nicely, and the car itself stays composed under hard braking.

Steering is probably the least memorable part of the Prelude’s dynamic package. The car responds sharply and places itself accurately, but like many modern performance-leaning cars, it sends little meaningful feedback through the wheel. There’s also a bit of front-drive heaviness to the steering, a reminder that the same tires are handling both power and direction. It contributes to the sense that there’s a layer of technology between the driver and the fun.

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Living With It

Fuel economy is where the new Prelude makes its strongest case against its ancestors and sport-compact relatives. The 1997 Prelude was rated at 20/24 mpg city/highway with about 350 miles of range, while the current Civic Si returns 27/37 mpg and 384 miles. The Civic Hybrid Hatchback is still the efficiency benchmark at 50/45 mpg and 509 miles, but the Prelude’s hybrid setup lends it a clear efficiency advantage over its sporty Honda brethren, with a duly impressive EPA rating of 46/41/44 mpg.

Inside, the Prelude has more charm than practicality. At first glance the cabin appears stylish and mature, with a premium-leaning feel, comfortable front seats, and useful hatchback space once the rear seats are folded. But look closer, and some of the details aren’t as convincing. Manual seat controls, a small (but familiar) 9.0-inch touchscreen, hollow-sounding doors, a somewhat flimsy hatch, and largely token rear +2 seating make the price harder to swallow. It feels special in some ways, just not always $40,000-plus special.

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A Prelude to Something Better?

Visually, the new Prelude lands somewhere between the Acura RSX, the Honda CR-Z, and its own family history. Philosophically, it’s just as difficult to pin down. It isn’t raw enough to replace a Civic Si in the hearts of manual-transmission loyalists, and it isn’t fast or track-focused enough to be a cheaper Civic Type R alternative.

Instead, the Prelude seems built for someone who wants the idea of a sporty coupe more than the compromises that come with a traditional sports car. It has style, efficiency, refinement, and genuine handling ability, but it delivers those traits through layers of hybrid tuning, simulated shifting, traction control intervention, and carefully selected chassis hardware.

That makes its price and positioning hard to parse. A Civic Si is cheaper and more engaging. A Civic Hybrid is more practical and efficient. A Civic Type R is far more serious, albeit much more expensive. Like the S2000, the Prelude could be accused of being too pricey and impractical in its own time, but it will have to earn that kind of hindsight.

Its overall bones are good. The Prelude has real grip, excellent braking, and a chassis that wants more from the powertrain, though our car’s dealer-installed summer tires deserve some credit for its standout handling and stopping results. The hybrid system is smooth and efficient, yet the car needs more power, more steering feel, and less digital mediation to fully come alive.

Is it a clever parts-bin special? Maybe. On balance, Honda picked some very good parts to use. As a spiritual successor to the Preludes of yore, this car is intriguing, imperfect, and perhaps one revision away from being genuinely special.

2026 Honda Prelude Specifications

BASE PRICE

$43,195

PRICE AS TESTED

$44,878

VEHICLE LAYOUT

Front-engine, front-motor, FWD, 4-pass, 2-door hybrid coupe

POWERTRAIN

2.0L direct-injected DOHC 16-valve I-4, 141 hp @ 6,000 rpm, 134 lb-ft @ 4,500 rpm
Permanent-magnet motor, 181 hp, 232 lb-ft

TOTAL POWER

200 hp

TOTAL TORQUE

NA

TRANSMISSIONS

2 x 1-speed fixed ratio

BATTERY

1.1-kWh lithium-ion

CURB WEIGHT (F/R DIST)

3,232 lb (63/37%)

WHEELBASE

102.6 in

LENGTH x WIDTH x HEIGHT

178.4 x 74.0 x 53.4 in

TIRES

Continental ExtremeContact Sport 02
235/40ZR19 96Y XL

EPA FUEL ECONOMY,
CITY/HWY/COMBINED

46/41/44 mpg

EPA RANGE

466 mi

ON SALE

Now

MotorTrend Test Results

0-60 MPH

6.4 sec

QUARTER MILE

15.2 sec @ 90.7 mph

BRAKING, 60-0 MPH

104 ft

LATERAL ACCELERATION

0.97 g

FIGURE-EIGHT LAP

25.2 sec @ 0.74 g (avg)

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My dad was a do-it-yourselfer, which is where my interest in cars began. To save money, he used to service his own vehicles, and I often got sent to the garage to hold a flashlight or fetch a tool for him while he was on his back under a car. Those formative experiences activated and fostered a curiosity in Japanese automobiles because that’s all my Mexican immigrant folks owned then. For as far back as I can remember, my family always had Hondas and Toyotas. There was a Mazda and a Subaru in there, too, a Datsun as well. My dad loved their fuel efficiency and build quality, so that’s how he spent and still chooses to spend his vehicle budget. Then, like a lot of young men in Southern California, fast modified cars entered the picture in my late teens and early 20s. Back then my best bud and I occasionally got into inadvisable high-speed shenanigans in his Honda. Coincidentally, that same dear friend got me my first job in publishing, where I wrote and copy edited for action sports lifestyle magazines. It was my first “real job” post college, and it gave me the experience to move just a couple years later to Auto Sound & Security magazine, my first gig in the car enthusiast space. From there, I was extremely fortunate to land staff positions at some highly regarded tuner media brands: Honda Tuning, UrbanRacer.com, and Super Street. I see myself as a Honda guy, and that’s mostly what I’ve owned, though not that many—I’ve had one each Civic, Accord, and, currently, an Acura RSX Type S. I also had a fourth-gen Toyota pickup when I met my wife, with its bulletproof single-cam 22R inline-four, way before the brand started calling its trucks Tacoma and Tundra. I’m seriously in lust with the motorsport of drifting, partly because it reminds me of my boarding and BMX days, partly because it’s uncorked vehicle performance, and partly because it has Japanese roots. I’ve never been much of a car modifier, but my DC5 is lowered, has a few bolt-ons, and the ECU is re-flashed. I love being behind the wheel of most vehicles, whether that’s road tripping or circuit flogging, although a lifetime exposed to traffic in the greater L.A. area has dulled that passion some. And unlike my dear ol’ dad, I am not a DIYer, because frankly I break everything I touch.

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