Buyer's guide

15 min read

Nissan Cedric

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1960-2004
US legal
2024
25-yr rule
Market range
$5K–$35K
median ~$15K
For sale
5
active now
Nissan Cedric Y34
Nissan Cedric Y34
On this page
  1. Overview
  2. Key takeaways
  3. Shared traits
  4. Generation timeline
  5. Should you buy?
  6. Common issues
  7. JDM vs USDM
  8. Technical specs
  9. Variants & trims
  10. Pricing
  11. Inspection checklist
  12. Comparable alternatives
  13. How it compares
  14. Gallery
  15. FAQ
  16. Sources & references

Quick answer

The Nissan Cedric is a classic Japanese executive sedan with strong VIP appeal, smooth sixes/V8s, and deep parts interchange with Gloria/Laurel. Values are rising for clean Y32/Y33/Y34 and rare trims, while rough ex-taxi cars remain budget-friendly.

Background

Overview

The Nissan Cedric ran from 1960 to 2004 across ten generations — 30, 130, 230, 330, 430, Y30, Y31, Y32, Y33, Y34 — and was never officially sold in North America. Export sales reached Europe and Australia as the rebadged Datsun 200C through 300C, ending after the 430; from the Y30 onward the car was JDM-only. The VG V6 replaced the L-series inline-sixes at Y30, then gave way to the VQ at Y33, with LD28 and RD28 diesel options running through to Y33 for taxi and fleet use. Y34 cars — the only generation to offer an RB25DET — began clearing the US 25-year threshold in 2024, which is why values for clean Y33 and Y34 examples are moving.

How the Cedric became Nissan's quiet flagship

Nissan launched the Cedric in 1960 as a direct competitor to the Toyota Crown, naming it after a character from the 1886 Frances Hodgson Burnett novel — a deliberately British-sounding name that signalled upmarket aspiration. The 30-series and 130-series cars shared mechanicals with the Datsun Bluebird and were sold abroad under Datsun 1900/2000/2300 badges. The 1966 Prince Motors merger folded the Prince Gloria into the Nissan lineup as a sportier sibling on the same platform, while the Cedric retained the comfort-first brief.

By the Y30 (1983-1987), Nissan introduced its first mass-production V6 family — VG20E, VG30E, VG30ET — and added Super Sonic Suspension on Brougham and Brougham VIP trims as an electronically adjustable alternative to Toyota Crown air suspension. The Y31 (1987-1991) added hands-free phones, colour TV, JBL audio, and Autech's VG20DET-powered V20 Turbo Brougham at around 230 hp. By the Y33 and Y34 (1995-2004), the VQ V6 had taken over, the Gran Turismo line carried the VQ30DET turbo, and ATTESA E-TS AWD from the Skyline GT-R appeared on selected trims.

Why the Cedric stays under-the-radar in 2026

Three factors hold Cedric values below the Toyota Crown despite shared engineering principles: lower brand recognition outside Japan, a heavy legacy of taxi-fleet use that left many surviving JDM cars with 200,000-plus km and ex-commercial wear, and the RB-engine gap — the Cedric never received the RB26, and only the Y34 40th Anniversary edition got the RB25DET. Clean, low-mileage Y33 and Y34 cars still trade for less than a comparable Crown S150 or Aristo, while sharing the same VQ V6 and parts crossover with the Nissan Gloria, Cima, and Laurel.

Common faults across the V6 generations cluster in four areas: coil pack failure (often from oil starvation), high oil consumption on aged VG and VQ engines, pre-catalytic converter disintegration that can reach the engine internally, and intermittent electrical faults from aged wiring. Drum rear brakes on early-generation cars and tight wheel-arch clearances on lowered VIP builds are the other recurring complaints. None of these are unusual for the era, but deferred maintenance on any one of them accelerates the others.

Editorial notes

Quick read

Key takeaways

  • Best value: clean Y32/Y33 turbo or VQ models
  • Top collectible: Y34 Gran Turismo/Ultima trims
  • Watch for: rust, tired autos, neglected cooling
  • VIP demand supports prices for stock, clean cars
  • Parts shared with Gloria/Laurel ease upkeep
  • Avoid ex-taxi/auction grade 3 cars if possible
From JDMBUYSELL

Import a JDM car — step-by-step guide

Read the guide

Constants

Common across all Cedric generations

  • JDM-market executive sedan; badge-engineered sibling of the Nissan Gloria
  • Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout across the imported generations
  • VG-series V6 petrol engines, including turbocharged variants, in most trims
  • Offered in private, executive, and taxi/livery specifications
  • Right-hand drive throughout all JDM production

Chassis history

Generation timeline

The Cedric ran from 1960 right through to 2004 as Nissan's JDM-only luxury sedan, and you can think of the run in two halves. The early L-series cars are charming but parts-thin. From the Y30 in 1983 onwards the Cedric got V6 power, and the Y31 through Y34 are the ones most people are actually buying today.

Y31

Y31 (1987–1991; taxi/livery production continued later)

Guide coming soon
Y32

Y32 (1991–1995)

Guide coming soon
Y33

Y33 (1995–1999)

Guide coming soon
Y34

Y34 (1999–2004)

Buyer's call

Should you buy a Nissan Cedric?

The Cedric is one of those cars where you're trading rarity for parts headaches. You get a smooth V6, real luxury for the money, and a sedan almost nobody else has. You also get drum brakes on older cars, a low ride height that scrapes everything, and a parts hunt every time you need anything trim-specific.

Why you'll love it

  • Strong VIP platformLong wheelbase feel, comfort tuning, and big-body presence suit VIP builds or stock cruising.
  • Smooth Nissan sixesVQ/VG/RB options deliver refined torque; excellent highway manners and daily usability.
  • Parts interchangeShares components with Gloria/Laurel/Cima in eras; used parts networks help keep costs down.
  • Undervalued vs rivalsOften cheaper than Crown/Aristo equivalents for similar luxury, making it a value JDM sedan.
  • Comfort and featuresMany trims offer power seats, climate control, soft ride, and strong NVH for the money.
  • Tuner and swap supportCommon Nissan drivetrains mean aftermarket support; manual swaps exist though not cheap.

Why you might not

  • Many are high mileageEx-fleet and commuter use means worn bushings, tired autos, and deferred maintenance are common.
  • Rust and underbody wearOlder gens and coastal Japan cars can rust at sills, arches, and subframes; inspect thoroughly.
  • Automatic-only realityMost are automatics; manual conversions are possible but add cost and can hurt originality value.
  • Complex aging electronicsClimate control, soft-close, and power accessories can fail; diagnosis can be time-consuming.
  • Trim scarcity on older carsY30/Y31 exterior/interior trim can be hard to source; repaint and restoration costs climb fast.
  • Import compliance costsUS buyers face shipping, brokerage, and baseline service; clean examples cost more landed.
Who should not buy this
  • Anyone needing modern crash safety
  • People who can't DIY or lack a JDM specialist
  • Buyers needing easy OEM parts at local stores
  • Rust-belt residents without indoor storage
  • Anyone needing perfect A/C and electronics
  • Drivers wanting set-and-forget reliability
  • People who hate chasing vacuum/boost leaks
  • Owners without budget for cooling refresh
  • Those who must pass strict emissions testing
  • Anyone expecting modern fuel economy
  • People who can't tolerate old-car squeaks/rattles
  • Buyers who won't do preventative maintenance
  • Anyone scared of wiring/previous owner hacks
  • People needing strong resale liquidity
  • Those who want tight handling without suspension work
  • Anyone who can't wait on parts shipping delays
  • Drivers who need Apple CarPlay/modern infotainment
  • People who park outside in heavy rain/snow
  • Anyone buying a heavily modified turbo example
  • Those who can't afford a trans rebuild if needed

Reliability

Common issues & solutions

The Cedric is mechanically tough as long as you stay on top of basic service. Most of the trouble comes from age and neglect, not the engineering. The VG and VQ V6s burn oil if you don't keep an eye on it. Coil packs and spark plugs fail together and take each other out. The pre-cats break apart on neglected cars and get sucked back into the engine, which is the one failure that ends a Cedric quickly.

IssueCauseSolutionEst. cost
Severe underbody rustSalt exposure; clogged drains; poor past repairsWalk away; proper cut/weld is only real fix$2000-12000
Front strut tower rustWater traps in fender seams; old seam sealerCut/plate repair; treat seams; repaint properly$1500-6000
Trunk water intrusionShrunk tail light seals; seam sealer cracksReseal lights/seams; repair rust in spare well$150-1500
Overheating in trafficClogged radiator; weak fan clutch; air in systemNew rad, thermostat, cap; bleed; fan clutch$400-1200
Head gasket failurePast overheating; detonation on turbo modelsGasket set, machine head, refresh cooling system$1800-4500
Oil leaks (front seals)Aged crank/cam seals; timing cover RTV failureReseal front; do timing service at same time$700-1800
Rear main seal leakAge/hard seal; crankcase pressure from bad PCVReplace seal; service PCV; inspect clutch/TC$900-2200
Turbo smoke / oilingWorn turbo seals; restricted oil return; blow-byRebuild/replace turbo; fix return; add catch can$800-2500
Boost creep/spikeTired wastegate; wrong boost controller setupService actuator; proper boost control; tune ECU$300-1500
Detonation on boostOld fuel pump; clogged filter; no tune for modsFuel system refresh; wideband; conservative tune$600-2500
Vacuum leaks/idle huntCracked hoses; intake gaskets; brittle PCV linesSmoke test; replace hoses/gaskets; clean IACV$150-800
IACV stickingCarbon buildup; coolant leak into valve on someClean/replace IACV; refresh coolant hoses$200-700
MAF sensor failureAge; oiled filters; wiring fatigueOEM MAF; repair connector; avoid cheap remans$200-600
Ignition misfire under loadCoils/igniter aging; cracked plug boots; bad groundsReplace coils/igniter; new plugs; clean grounds$250-1200
Fuel pump weak/whineOld pump; varnish from storage; clogged sockReplace pump/sock; new filter; clean tank if rusty$250-900
Injector failure/leakEthanol exposure; varnish; internal coil failureFlow test; replace set; new seals; clean rail$400-1800
Auto trans slipping/flaringWorn clutches; overheated ATF; neglected serviceRebuild or good used unit; add cooler; flush lines$2000-4500
Auto delayed engagementValve body wear; low line pressure; worn sealsPressure test; valve body service or rebuild$600-2500
Manual 2nd gear grindSynchro wear; wrong fluid; aggressive drivingCorrect fluid; rebuild trans if persistent$120-2200
Clutch slip/shudderWorn disc; oil contamination; warped flywheelClutch kit; resurface/replace flywheel; fix leaks$700-1800
Driveshaft vibrationCenter support bearing torn; U-joint wearReplace CSB/U-joints; balance shaft$300-900
Diff whine/leaksLow oil; worn bearings; pinion seal hardReseal; refill; rebuild if noisy$200-1800
Rear subframe clunkSubframe bushings collapsed; diff mount tornReplace bushings/mounts; align rear$600-1800
Front end wanderControl arm bushings; idler/pitman wear; alignmentReplace worn joints/bushings; full alignment$400-1500
Air suspension sagLeaking struts/bags; cracked air lines; tired compressorRepair leaks; rebuild compressor; many convert to coils$600-3500
Air suspension warningHeight sensors corroded; relay issues; leaksTest sensors/relays; fix leaks; recalibrate$200-1200
Seized brake calipersOld fluid; torn boots; corrosion on slide pinsRebuild/replace calipers; flush fluid; new hoses$300-1200
ABS light onWheel sensors; cracked tone rings; brittle wiringScan ABS; replace sensor/repair wiring; clean rings$150-900
Brake hard line corrosionRoad salt; trapped dirt on clipsReplace lines with NiCopp; full bleed$400-1500
Power steering leaksOld rack/box seals; high-pressure hose cracksReplace hose; rebuild rack/box; flush system$250-1600
A/C weak or warmLow refrigerant; condenser leaks; tired compressorLeak test; replace failed parts; evacuate/recharge$250-1500
Heater core leakCorrosion; old coolant; electrolysisReplace core; flush system; new hoses/clamps$600-1600
Window regulator failureWorn cables/gears; dried tracks; weak motorsReplace regulator; lube tracks; check switches$200-700
Central lock failuresWeak actuators; cracked door harness wiresReplace actuators; repair harness at door jamb$150-600
Cluster/gauge glitchesAged solder joints; capacitors; poor groundsReflow/recap cluster; clean grounds; repair harness$150-700
ECU capacitor leakageAging electrolytic caps on older Nissan ECUsECU recap/repair; inspect board traces$150-600
Brittle engine harnessHeat cycling; oil contamination; ageRepair sections or replace harness; protect routing$300-1800
Fuel tank rust/contamLong storage; condensation; bad filler neck sealClean/coat tank or replace; new lines/filter$400-1600
Exhaust manifold cracksHeat stress; turbo backpressure; missing supportsReplace manifold; add supports; check studs$400-1800
Broken exhaust studsCorrosion; repeated heat cyclesExtract studs; helicoil if needed; new gaskets$300-1200
O2 sensor/cat failureAge; rich running; oil burningFix root cause; replace O2/cat as required$200-1800

Market

Differences between JDM & USDM

The Nissan Cedric was never officially sold in North America. There is no US-spec or Canada-spec equivalent — the closest export-market analogue is the Datsun 200C/220C/240C/260C/280C/300C, sold in Europe, Australia, and parts of Asia during the 230, 330, and 430 generations, after which the export presence largely ended. From the Y30 (1983) onward the car was JDM-only. As a result, every Cedric in the United States is a grey-market import under the 25-year FMVSS exemption: 1999 Y34 cars became legal in 2024, 2000 cars in 2025, and the final 2004 cars become eligible in 2029. Mechanical parts cross with the Nissan Gloria (effectively the same car), Cima, Laurel, and 350Z/Fairlady Z (shared VQ-series V6), so drivetrain support is workable. JDM-only items — exterior trim, interior plastics, climate control panels, Bose audio modules, and the Autech V20 Turbo Brougham-specific air suspension — are harder to source and often require breaking another Cedric or Gloria for parts.

Specs

Technical specifications

Engines run the full Nissan catalog. Early Cedrics use L-series inline sixes, the Y30 through Y32 use the VG V6 family, and the Y33 and Y34 use the VQ V6. The turbo cars are where it gets interesting. The Y31 Gran Turismo gets the VG20DET, the Y32 Ultima gets the VG30DETT twin turbo, and the Y33 and Y34 Ultima trims get the VQ30DET. The Y34 40th Anniversary car is the only Cedric ever fitted with an RB engine, the RB25DET.

Engine options

ChassisEngineDisplacementPowerBoostNotes
230L202.0LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
230L262.6LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
230L282.8LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
330L202.0LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
330L262.6LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
330L282.8LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
430L20B2.0LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
430L202.0LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
430L282.8LestimatedN/AExact JIS net varies by year/market
430LD282.8LestimatedN/ADiesel; exact output varies by year
Y30VG20E2.0LestimatedN/ASOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y30VG30E3.0LestimatedN/ASOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y30VG30ET3.0LestimatedestimatedTurbo V6; boost/output vary by spec
Y30RD282.8LestimatedN/ADiesel; exact output varies by year
Y31VG20E2.0LestimatedN/ASOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y31VG30E3.0LestimatedN/ASOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y31VG20DET2.0LestimatedestimatedTurbo V6; output varies by year
Y31RD282.8LestimatedN/ADiesel; exact output varies by year
Y32VG20E2.0LestimatedN/ASOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y32VG30E3.0LestimatedN/ASOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y32VG30DE3.0LestimatedN/ADOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y32VG30DETT3.0LestimatedestimatedTwin turbo; output varies by spec
Y32RD282.8LestimatedN/ADiesel; exact output varies by year
Y33VG20E2.0LestimatedN/ASOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y33VQ30DE3.0LestimatedN/ADOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y33VQ30DET3.0LestimatedestimatedTurbo VQ; output varies by year
Y33RD282.8LestimatedN/ADiesel; exact output varies by year
Y34VQ25DE2.5LestimatedN/ADOHC V6; exact JIS net varies
Y34VQ25DD2.5LestimatedN/ANEO Di direct injection; varies by year
Y34VQ30DD3.0LestimatedN/ANEO Di direct injection; varies by year
Y34VQ30DET3.0LestimatedestimatedTurbo VQ; output varies by year

Transmission options

TypeRatiosAvailabilityNotes
4-speed Manualestimated230/330 base trimsExact ratios vary by gearbox code
5-speed ManualestimatedSelected 330/430 trimsExact ratios vary by gearbox code
3-speed Automaticestimated230/330/430Early JATCO; ratios vary by year
4-speed Automaticestimated430/Y30/Y31/Y32JATCO 4AT; ratios vary by model
5-speed AutomaticestimatedY33/Y34JATCO 5AT; ratios vary by engine

Lineup

Variants & trims

Cedric trims tell you what kind of car you're buying. Brougham and Brougham VIP are the soft luxury trims with velour and rear-seat comfort. Gran Turismo is the sportier trim with aero and firmer suspension. Gran Turismo Ultima is the turbo flagship. The Y34 also got the 300TX with direct injection. Anything badged Autech on a Y31 is worth a closer look because that's Nissan's in-house tuner.

GenerationTrimEngineKey features
230 (1971-1975)StandardL20 I6Bench seat, steel wheels, basic interior
230 (1971-1975)DeluxeL20 I6Upgraded trim, improved upholstery, chrome accents
230 (1971-1975)CustomL20 I6Higher-grade interior, additional brightwork
230 (1971-1975)Special SixL26 I6L26, higher output, upscale interior
230 (1971-1975)2800L28 I6L28, top engine, luxury-focused equipment
330 (1975-1979)StandardL20 I6Bench seat, steel wheels, basic interior
330 (1975-1979)DeluxeL20 I6Upgraded trim, improved upholstery, chrome accents
330 (1975-1979)CustomL20 I6Higher-grade interior, additional brightwork
330 (1975-1979)2000GLL20 I6GL equipment, upgraded interior, power options
330 (1975-1979)2600GLL26 I6L26, GL equipment, higher output
330 (1975-1979)2800GLL28 I6L28, top spec, luxury equipment
430 (1979-1983)2000 StandardL20B I4Entry spec, steel wheels, basic trim
430 (1979-1983)2000GLL20 I6GL trim, upgraded interior, power options
430 (1979-1983)2800DLD28 I6 DieselDiesel economy, long-range cruising
430 (1979-1983)2800GLL28 I6L28, luxury equipment, higher output
430 (1979-1983)2800SGLL28 I6Top luxury, velour, power features
Y30 (1983-1987)2000GLVG20E V6V6, GL trim, power options
Y30 (1983-1987)2000SGLVG20E V6SGL luxury, upgraded interior, power features
Y30 (1983-1987)3000GLVG30E V63.0L V6, GL trim, higher output
Y30 (1983-1987)3000SGLVG30E V63.0L V6, SGL luxury, premium interior
Y30 (1983-1987)V30 Turbo SGLVG30ET V6 TurboTurbo V6, top spec, sporty luxury
Y30 (1983-1987)2800DRD28 I6 DieselDiesel, economy-focused, long-range
Y31 (1987-1991)BroughamVG20E V6Luxury trim, velour, power features
Y31 (1987-1991)Brougham VIPVG30E V6VIP rear comfort, higher luxury equipment
Y31 (1987-1991)Gran TurismoVG20DET V6 TurboTurbo V6, sport suspension, aero styling
Y31 (1987-1991)ClassicVG20E V6Traditional styling, luxury interior, comfort focus
Y31 (1987-1991)DieselRD28 I6 DieselDiesel economy, long-range cruising
Y32 (1991-1995)BroughamVG20E V6Luxury trim, power features, comfort suspension
Y32 (1991-1995)Brougham VIPVG30E V6VIP rear comfort, upgraded interior, higher spec
Y32 (1991-1995)Gran TurismoVG30DE V6DOHC V6, sport suspension, aero styling
Y32 (1991-1995)Gran Turismo UltimaVG30DETT V6 Twin TurboTT V6, top performance, sport luxury
Y32 (1991-1995)DieselRD28 I6 DieselDiesel economy, long-range cruising
Y33 (1995-1999)BroughamVG20E V6Luxury trim, comfort suspension, power features
Y33 (1995-1999)Brougham VIPVQ30DE V6VQ V6, VIP rear comfort, premium interior
Y33 (1995-1999)Gran TurismoVQ30DE V6Sport suspension, aero styling, VQ power
Y33 (1995-1999)Gran Turismo UltimaVQ30DET V6 TurboTurbo VQ, top performance, sport luxury
Y33 (1995-1999)DieselRD28 I6 DieselDiesel economy, long-range cruising
Y34 (1999-2004)BroughamVQ25DE V6Luxury trim, comfort suspension, power features
Y34 (1999-2004)Brougham VIPVQ30DET V6 TurboTurbo VQ, VIP rear comfort, premium interior
Y34 (1999-2004)Gran TurismoVQ25DD V6Direct injection, sport suspension, aero styling
Y34 (1999-2004)Gran Turismo UltimaVQ30DET V6 TurboTurbo VQ, top performance, sport luxury
Y34 (1999-2004)300TXVQ30DD V6Direct injection, high spec, luxury equipment

Pricing

Average prices & original MSRP

A rough Cedric still starts around $5,000 and a clean one runs $14,000 to $20,000. Y32 cars are the cheapest entry into VG-era VIP styling. Y33 and Y34 Ultima turbos and clean 300TX direct-injection cars are climbing fastest because they're the ones now becoming 25-year legal in the US. Ex-taxi Y31s are everywhere in Japan and almost free, but they've usually had a hard life.

Today's market range: $4,500 to $35,000 (median ~$14,500). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.

Prices are firming as 25-year imports expand demand, with clean Y33/Y34 rising fastest. Rough high-km cars stay cheap, but stock, low-mile, and rare turbo/trim packages command strong premiums; expect continued gradual appreciation.

Inspect

Pre-purchase inspection checklist

Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items are the ones to walk away from if there's no paperwork. The High items can usually be priced into the deal. Cedric-specific things to watch are the pre-cat condition on VG and VQ cars, rust at the strut towers and rear arches, and air suspension on Brougham VIP and Autech trims if it's still on factory bags.

Critical priority

High priority

Medium priority

Low priority

Cross-shop

Comparable alternatives

If the Cedric isn't quite right, the natural alternatives are the Nissan Gloria, which is the same car under the skin in a sportier trim, or the Toyota Crown, which is the obvious cross-shop. If you want something with more presence, look at the Nissan Cima or Nissan President. If you want the easier ownership experience, the Toyota Celsior gives you the same V8 luxury with much better parts support.

Compare

How it compares

Among the JDM full-size luxury sedans, the Cedric sits between the Crown and the Cima. It's roomier than a Crown but not as plush as a Cima or President. The Cedric wins on engine variety, especially with the turbo and twin-turbo options that the Crown and Celsior never got. It loses on parts availability outside Japan, which is the trade-off you're making.

FeatureNissan CedricToyota Crown S150Toyota Aristo JZS161
Market positioningExecutive/VIP sedanExecutive/VIP sedanSport-lux sedan
Typical enginesVQ25/VQ30, VG, RB1JZ/2JZ, 1UZ2JZ-GTE/2JZ-GE
Power (common trims)190-280 hp (varies)200-260 hp (varies)230-280 hp
Turbo availabilitySome VG/VQ turbo trimsLimited; some 1JZYes: 2JZ-GTE
Drivetrain layoutMostly FR; some 4WDFR; some 4WDFR
TransmissionMostly 4AT/5ATMostly 4AT/5AT4AT/5AT
Ride/handling biasComfort-firstComfort-firstSportier tuning
Interior vibeVIP plush, understatedTraditional luxurySport-lux, modern
Parts availabilityGood via Nissan shared partsVery goodGood; turbo parts pricier
Typical buyer riskHigh-km, ex-fleet wearHigh-km taxis exist tooModified/boosted wear
Value vs prestigeHigh value, lower prestigeHigher prestigeHigher performance cachet
VIP scene popularityVery strong (Y31-Y34)Very strongStrong but sport-leaning
Collector upsideRising for clean Y34Stable; top trims risingHigh; turbo premium

Gallery

Editorial

The buyer's read

The value sweet spot today is a documented Y33 Gran Turismo with the VQ30DE, or the VQ30DET turbo in the Ultima if budget allows. The Y33 offers a modern engine, a body that still reads current, and ATTESA E-TS all-wheel drive on selected trims — the same system as the Skyline GT-R and Stagea. Skip anything under $7,000 unless buying for parts; deferred maintenance is nearly universal at that price point.

For the cleanest turbo Cedric, the Y34 Gran Turismo Ultima is the pick. The VQ30DET makes real power and the Y34 body has aged better than most JDM sedans of its era. Direct injection on some trims, an early CVT on others, and aging Bose audio modules are the main trade-offs.

The Y34 40th Anniversary RB25DET car is worth chasing if you can find one with paperwork. Budget a few thousand above purchase price for the first couple of years regardless of which Y34 you choose.

Approach ex-taxi Y31s and rough Y30s with caution. The Y31 sedan stayed in taxi production until 2015, meaning the market carries many high-mileage commercial examples with wear patterns a private-use car would not have.

A clean Y30 with a VG30ET turbo and full service records is a solid buy, but documented examples are thinning. Buy on paperwork first, condition second, mileage third.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Which Cedric generation is best for importing and daily use?
Most buyers target Y33 (1995-1999) or Y34 (1999-2004) for modern comfort and parts support.
Are Nissan Cedrics rear-wheel drive?
Most are FR (rear-wheel drive), but some trims/years offered 4WD depending on market and engine.
What engines should I look for or avoid?
VQ25/VQ30 are smooth and common. Turbo trims are fun but need proof of maintenance and stock boost control.
What are the biggest reliability issues?
Expect aging cooling, worn bushings, and tired automatic transmissions on high-km cars; buy on condition.
How do Cedric prices compare to Toyota Crown?
Cedric is usually cheaper than Crown for similar spec, but top-condition Y34 and rare trims are closing the gap.
Is a manual transmission Cedric available?
Most are automatic. Manuals are rare; swaps exist but cost adds up and can reduce originality for collectors.
What should I check before buying at auction/import?
Verify auction grade, rust photos, service history, and underbody. Avoid heavy mods and ex-taxi wear patterns.
When is the Y34 Cedric legal to import to the US?
Under the 25-year rule, 1999 cars become legal in 2024; 2000 in 2025, and so on through 2004.

Citations

Sources & references

Sources (10)
  1. Nissan Cedric — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  2. 日産・セドリック — Japanese encyclopedic overview — Wikipedia (Japanese)Verified
  3. Nissan Gloria — sibling platform reference — WikipediaVerified
  4. Nissan VQ engine family — used in Y33/Y34 Cedric — WikipediaVerified
  5. Nissan VG engine family — used in Y30/Y31/Y32 Cedric — WikipediaVerified
  6. Nissan L engine family — used in 230/330/430 Cedric — WikipediaVerified
  7. Nissan RD engine family — RD28 diesel used in Y30-Y33 Cedric — WikipediaVerified
  8. Nissan Fuga — direct Cedric/Gloria successor from 2004 — WikipediaVerified
  9. Goo-net Exchange — Nissan Cedric Japanese used-market listings — Goo-net ExchangeVerified
  10. Nissan Cedric: The Ultimate Guide (2026) — JDMBUYSELLVerified

Sources last verified:

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