2026 Toyota Supra MkV Final Edition First Drive: You All Were Wrong About This Car
We evaluate the car for what it is and what we’re about to lose, not what everyone wanted it to be.
When production of the Toyota GR Supra ended in March, it closed the books on what was the most controversial chapter in the Supra’s storied, five-generation history. It was a turbulent run burdened in part by the long wait for it, the German underpinnings, and the weight of trying to live up to the legendary MkIV Supra—a near-mythical beast often tuned with enough power to pull down the moon.
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So, as the sun sets on yet another Supra, we booked ourselves into a 2026 Toyota Supra MkV Final Edition. First, we wanted to give the car a proper sendoff. And second, we set out to understand—objectively and away from all the online chatter—what exactly it is we’re losing.
Long Time Coming
Between 1998 and 2019, we had no Supra at all. But we did get a great deal of teasers, starting with a trademark in 2010. Four years later, the automaker trotted out the FT-1 concept, a car that at the time was—but also sort of wasn’t—the Supra. In September 2016, we saw a camouflaged mule that didn’t really look like the FT-1 but in all likelihood was the upcoming Supra. The mule gained more FT-1 styling cues in November of that year.
More mule photography followed in 2017, along with a look at some taillights. With the car running around all over the place, surely it would appear at Detroit’s North American International Auto Show in 2018? Nope. That year yielded more spy shots, a GR Supra Racing concept, as well as a camo’d car that charged up the hill at the Goodwood Festival of Speed. By the time the production model finally showed up in January 2019, it already felt like the car was ready for a refresh.
When it did, the reactions were swift and largely brutal. Everywhere you looked—forum threads, subreddits, comments sections—fans dismissed the MkV Supra as just a “rebadged BMW.” It certainly wasn’t the first time Toyota did powertrain sharing with another automaker. But this one just hit different.
Maybe it was also because since the MkIV is regarded as such an automotive demigod with a huge cult following, a successor never really had a chance in hell of making Supra fans happy—regardless of how good it was. And maybe because the MkV took so damn long to arrive, it became a victim of its own hype. It was probably a combination of all those things.
Understandable? Certainly. Unfair? Completely.












