Toyota Chaser JZX90
1JZ-GTE sedan benchmark; stronger resale ceiling
Buyer's guide
15 min read
Buyer's guide & specs
Background
The Nissan Laurel ran 34 years across eight generations, from the C30 of 1968 to the final C35 in 2002. Nissan sold it exclusively through its Motor Store domestic channel — no export variant, no LHD, every Laurel outside Japan a gray-market import. From the C32 onward, the platform tracked the contemporary Skyline (R31, R32, R33, R34), and the RB engine family — RB20E, RB20DE, RB20DET, RB25DE, RB25DET — gave the Laurel the same drivetrain buyers expected from the sportier badge at a lower entry price. Collector demand centers on the turbo Medalist (C32/C33), Club S Turbo (C34/C35), and Club S Type X (C35).
From the C32 in 1984 onward, Nissan built the Laurel and the contemporary Skyline sedan on shared platforms with shared engines and large portions of shared suspension hardware. The C33, launched in 1988, used the R32 Skyline sedan's platform and offered the full RB-series lineup — RB20E, RB20DE, RB20DET, RB25DE, and RB25DET. The C34 arrived in 1993 tracking the R33; the C35 in 1997 tracked the R34.
The dealer-channel split was deliberate: Laurel through Nissan's Motor Store, Skyline through Nissan Prince Store, each serving the same domestic buyer demographic under a different badge. That mechanical kinship is what makes the Laurel appealing to enthusiasts today — an RB25DET sedan with most of the drivetrain a buyer would expect from the Skyline, usually at a lower entry price and with fewer heavily modified examples in the supply pool.
The C35 (1997–2002) dropped the SOHC RB20E and consolidated the trim grid into Medalist, Club S, Club S Turbo, and Club S Type X. The Club S Type X paired the RB25DET — rated at the 280 PS Japanese gentlemen's-agreement ceiling — with sport-tuned suspension, the Type X aero kit, and a revised sport interior.
US import eligibility for C35s phases in from 2023 through 2027 as individual build years cross the 25-year threshold. Production ended in August 2002 when Nissan's Renault-alliance lineup rationalisation folded the Laurel segment into the Skyline sedan and Teana.
Editorial notes
Quick read
Constants
Chassis history
The Laurel ran for 34 years and eight generations, from the 1968 C30 to the final C35 in 2002. The early C30 through C230 Laurels are interesting old Datsuns but parts are scarce outside Japan. The C32 is where Nissan first put RB power in the Laurel, and the C33, C34, and C35 are the ones almost every enthusiast wants because they share so much with the Skyline.
C32 (1984–1989)
C33 (1989–1993)
C34 (1993–1997)
Buyer's call
The Laurel is a car you buy for what's under the body, not what's on top of it. You get Skyline running gear in a quieter and more understated package, usually for less money than the equivalent Skyline. What you give up is parts availability outside Japan, factory LHD, and any kind of mainstream resale market that isn't enthusiast driven.
Reliability
The Laurel itself is solid. Most of the problems come from age, hard use, and the fact that a lot of Laurels lived a drift life before they ever left Japan. The RB engines have a known oil pump drive weakness on pre-1994 cars. Automatics get tired. Rust at the rear arches and subframe mounts is the single biggest value killer on a Laurel from a wet climate.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rust in sills/jack points | Age, trapped moisture, poor past repairs | Cut/replace metal; treat cavities; undercoat | $1500-6000 |
| Front strut tower rust | Seam sealer failure, water intrusion | Metal repair; reinforce tower; align after | $1200-5000 |
| Rear subframe mount rust | Road salt, undercoat failure, neglect | Repair mounts; replace subframe bushings | $2000-7000 |
| Trunk water leaks | Tail light seals, trunk gasket, seam cracks | Reseal lights/seams; replace trunk weatherstrip | $150-800 |
| Sunroof drain leaks | Clogged drains, cracked drain tubes | Clear/replace drains; dry interior thoroughly | $150-700 |
| ECU capacitor leakage | Aging electrolytic caps on older Nissan ECUs | Rebuild ECU; clean board; repair traces | $250-900 |
| Overheating under load | Old radiator, weak fan clutch, clogged core | New rad, thermostat, hoses; verify fan/shroud | $400-1200 |
| Head gasket failure | Past overheating, detonation, old gasket | Head gasket; machine head; new bolts/studs | $1200-3500 |
| Oil leaks (multiple) | Aged seals: cam, front cover, rear main | Reseal; do timing service concurrently | $600-2500 |
| Low oil pressure hot | Worn bearings/oil pump; thin oil; sludge | Verify with gauge; rebuild bottom end if low | $1500-6000 |
| Timing belt overdue (some) | Neglected service; unknown history imports | Full belt kit, water pump, seals, tensioner | $600-1400 |
| Timing chain rattle (some) | Worn guides/tensioner; poor oil changes | Replace guides/tensioner; inspect sprockets | $700-1800 |
| Turbo smoking (if turbo) | Worn seals, poor oiling, clogged return | Rebuild/replace turbo; fix feed/return; tune | $800-2500 |
| Boost creep/overboost | Small wastegate, exhaust mods, bad plumbing | Port gate; proper boost control; verify AFR | $300-1200 |
| Detonation on boost | Bad tune, low octane, weak fuel pump, heat | Proper tune; upgrade pump/injectors; intercool | $500-3000 |
| Ignition misfire | Aged coils/igniter, cracked plugs, bad grounds | Replace coils/igniter/plugs; refresh grounds | $250-1200 |
| MAF/AFM failures | Age, oiled filters, wiring hacks | OEM sensor; repair harness; smoke test intake | $200-900 |
| Idle hunt/stalling | Vac leaks, dirty IACV, failing TPS | Smoke test; clean IACV; set TPS/base idle | $150-700 |
| Fuel pump weak | Old pump, clogged sock, low voltage feed | Replace pump/sock; relay rewire; new filter | $250-800 |
| Injector leaks/clogging | Old seals, varnish, ethanol exposure | Service injectors; replace seals; clean rail | $250-1200 |
| Auto trans slipping/flare | Worn clutches, overheated ATF, neglect | Service if mild; rebuild/replace if slipping | $300-3500 |
| Auto harsh shifts | Solenoids, TPS signal, old fluid, valve body | Diag TPS; service; solenoids/valve body work | $300-1800 |
| Manual synchro wear | Hard shifts, wrong oil, high power | Correct fluid; rebuild trans if grinding | $150-2500 |
| Clutch chatter/slip | Worn disc, glazed flywheel, bad mounts | Clutch kit; resurface flywheel; mounts if needed | $600-1800 |
| Diff whine/leaks | Worn bearings, low oil, old seals | Reseal; rebuild diff if noisy; set backlash | $250-2000 |
| Driveshaft vibration | Center bearing wear, U-joint play, imbalance | Replace bearing/U-joints; balance shaft | $300-900 |
| Steering rack leaks | Aged seals, torn boots, contaminated fluid | Rebuild/replace rack; flush system; new boots | $500-1500 |
| PS pump whine | Worn pump, air leaks at hoses, old fluid | Replace suction hose/clamps; flush; pump if needed | $150-800 |
| Front tension rod bush | Hydraulic bush leaks/tears with age | Replace bushes/rods; align; check caster | $250-900 |
| Rear subframe bushing sag | Aged rubber; oil contamination | Replace subframe bushes; inspect mounts for rust | $600-1800 |
| Brake caliper slide seize | Old grease/boots; corrosion | Rebuild calipers; new slides/boots; flush fluid | $250-900 |
| Warped rotors/pulsation | Cheap rotors, stuck caliper, improper torque | Quality rotors/pads; fix caliper; torque wheels | $250-800 |
| ABS light on | Wheel sensors, cracked tone rings, wiring | Scan/diag; replace sensor; repair harness | $150-900 |
| Heater core leak | Corrosion, old coolant, electrolysis | Replace core; flush system; new coolant | $600-1600 |
| AC not cold | Leaks, weak compressor, bad conversion work | Leak test; replace drier; proper R134a conversion | $300-1500 |
| Window regulator failure | Worn cables/gears; dry tracks | Replace regulator; lube tracks; check switches | $200-700 |
| Central locking issues | Weak actuators, cracked door harness wires | Replace actuators; repair harness in door jamb | $150-600 |
| Interior water/mold | Sunroof drains, windshield seal, trunk leaks | Fix leaks; remove carpet; dry; treat mold | $200-1500 |
| Hard starting | Weak battery, starter contacts, poor grounds | Load test; rebuild starter; clean grounds | $150-600 |
| Charging problems | Old alternator, bad regulator, belt slip | Replace alternator; check belt/pulleys; wiring | $250-800 |
| Exhaust manifold cracks | Heat cycling, thin castings, turbo heat | Replace manifold; check studs; add heat management | $300-1500 |
| Broken exhaust hangers | Age, rust, heavy aftermarket exhaust | Replace hangers; add supports; fix leaks | $100-400 |
| Parts availability delays | Discontinued OEM parts; JDM-only trims | Plan spares; use cross-refs; import used parts | $0-2000 |
Market
The Nissan Laurel is JDM-only. Nissan never sold a factory-export Laurel and never built an LHD variant — every Laurel manufactured between 1968 and 2002 was for the Japanese domestic market, sold through Nissan's Motor Store retail channel. There is no USDM equivalent and no rebadged Laurel sister car in North America: the Skyline shared the platform but was a different nameplate sold through a different dealer network in Japan, and the Skyline itself was also JDM-only through the R34 generation. For US, Canadian, UK, and Australian buyers, this means every Laurel on the road outside Japan arrived as a gray-market import under the relevant country's age-based import rule (25 years for the US, 15 years for Canada, no age restriction for the UK and Australia). The C30 through C33 are US-legal today; the C34 generation reaches full eligibility in 2022 and the C35 phases in between 2023 and 2027.
Specs
Every Laurel from the C32 onward runs an RB inline-six in the regular trims, with a base four-cylinder kept around to side-step Japanese road tax. The RB20DET and RB25DET turbo cars are the ones that matter today. Most Laurels shipped as automatics, and a factory 5-speed manual on a Club S Turbo is a real rarity.
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C30 | G18 | 1.8L | estimated | N/A | Carb I4; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C30 | H20 | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | Carb I4; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C130 | G18 | 1.8L | estimated | N/A | Carb I4; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C130 | L20 | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | Carb I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C130 | L20E | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | EFI I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C130 | L26 | 2.6L | estimated | N/A | Carb I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C230 | L18 | 1.8L | estimated | N/A | Carb I4; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C230 | L20 | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | Carb I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C230 | L20E | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | EFI I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C230 | LD24 | 2.4L | estimated | N/A | Diesel I6; exact output varies by spec |
| C230 | L28 | 2.8L | estimated | N/A | I6; carb/EFI varies by market/year |
| C31 | Z18 | 1.8L | estimated | N/A | Carb I4; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C31 | L20 | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | Carb I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C31 | L20E | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | EFI I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C31 | L20ET | 2.0L | estimated | estimated | Turbo I6; boost/output vary by year |
| C31 | LD24 | 2.4L | estimated | N/A | Diesel I6; exact output varies by spec |
| C31 | L28E | 2.8L | estimated | N/A | EFI I6; exact JIS net varies by year |
| C32 | CA18S | 1.8L | estimated | N/A | SOHC carb I4; exact JIS net varies |
| C32 | RB20E | 2.0L | estimated | N/A | SOHC EFI I6; exact JIS net varies |
| C32 | RB20ET | 2.0L | estimated | estimated | SOHC turbo I6; boost/output vary |
| C32 | LD28 | 2.8L | estimated | N/A | Diesel I6; exact output varies by spec |
| C32 | RD28 | 2.8L | estimated | N/A | Diesel I6; exact output varies by spec |
| C33 | RB20E | 2.0L | 125hp @ 5600rpm (estimated) | N/A | SOHC EFI; JIS net varies by year |
| C33 | RB20DE | 2.0L | 155hp @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | DOHC EFI; JIS net varies by year |
| C33 | RB20DET | 2.0L | 205hp @ 6400rpm (estimated) | estimated | Turbo DOHC; ceramic turbo on some specs |
| C33 | RB25DE | 2.5L | 180hp @ 6000rpm (estimated) | N/A | DOHC EFI; JIS net varies by year |
| C33 | RB25DET | 2.5L | 235hp @ 6400rpm (estimated) | estimated | Turbo DOHC; output varies by ECU/turbo |
| C33 | RD28 | 2.8L | estimated | N/A | Diesel I6; exact output varies by spec |
| C34 | RB20E | 2.0L | 125hp @ 5600rpm (estimated) | N/A | SOHC EFI; JIS net varies by year |
| C34 | RB20DE | 2.0L | 155hp @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | DOHC EFI; JIS net varies by year |
| C34 | RB25DE | 2.5L | 190hp @ 6000rpm (estimated) | N/A | DOHC EFI; JIS net varies by year |
| C34 | RB25DET | 2.5L | 245hp @ 6400rpm (estimated) | estimated | Turbo DOHC; output varies by ECU/turbo |
| C34 | RD28 | 2.8L | estimated | N/A | Diesel I6; exact output varies by spec |
| C35 | RB20DE | 2.0L | 155hp @ 6400rpm (estimated) | N/A | DOHC EFI; JIS net varies by year |
| C35 | RB25DE | 2.5L | 200hp @ 6000rpm (estimated) | N/A | DOHC EFI; NEO on late models |
| C35 | RB25DET | 2.5L | 280ps @ 6400rpm (estimated) | estimated | Turbo; late models often rated 280PS |
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4-speed Manual | estimated | C30-C31 (varies) | Early Laurel manuals varied by engine/year |
| 5-speed Manual | estimated | C31-C35 (select trims) | Common on sport grades; exact ratios vary |
| 3-speed Automatic | estimated | C30-C31 (varies) | Early JATCO 3AT; ratios vary by model |
| 4-speed Automatic | estimated | C32-C35 (most trims) | JATCO 4AT; electronic control on later |
Lineup
JDM Laurels came in a long list of trims, and the names changed over the years. The ones to know are the turbo Medalist on the C32 and C33, the Club S Turbo on the C34 and C35, and the Club S Type X on the C35. The Type X is the closest Nissan ever got to a factory sport Laurel, with the Type X aero kit and sport-tuned suspension.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| C30 (1st gen, 1968-1972) | Laurel 1800 | G18 I4 | RWD, 4-door sedan, base equipment |
| C30 (1st gen, 1968-1972) | Laurel 2000 | H20 I4 | RWD, higher output, upgraded interior |
| C30 (1st gen, 1968-1972) | Laurel 2000 GX | H20 I4 | GX grade, sportier trim, additional instrumentation |
| C30 (1st gen, 1968-1972) | Laurel 2000 SGX | H20 I4 | SGX luxury grade, improved trim, comfort options |
| C30 (1st gen, 1968-1972) | Laurel 2000 GL-6 | H20 I4 | 6-cylinder style grade naming, luxury-oriented |
| C30 (1st gen, 1968-1972) | Laurel 2000 GL-6 Super Deluxe | H20 I4 | top luxury for C30, premium interior |
| C130 (2nd gen, 1972-1977) | Laurel 1800 | G18 I4 | RWD, sedan/hardtop (market), base grade |
| C130 (2nd gen, 1972-1977) | Laurel 2000 | L20 I6 | RWD, inline-6, improved refinement |
| C130 (2nd gen, 1972-1977) | Laurel 2000 GX | L20 I6 | GX grade, sport trim, added gauges |
| C130 (2nd gen, 1972-1977) | Laurel 2000 SGX | L20 I6 | SGX luxury, upgraded interior, comfort options |
| C130 (2nd gen, 1972-1977) | Laurel 2000 SGL | L20 I6 | SGL luxury grade, additional sound insulation |
| C130 (2nd gen, 1972-1977) | Laurel 2000 SGL-E | L20E I6 | EFI (E), luxury grade, smoother response |
| C130 (2nd gen, 1972-1977) | Laurel 2600 SGL | L26 I6 | 2.6L I6, luxury grade, higher torque |
| C230 (3rd gen, 1977-1980) | Laurel 1800 | L18 I4 | RWD, base grade, sedan/hardtop (market) |
| C230 (3rd gen, 1977-1980) | Laurel 2000 | L20 I6 | RWD, 2.0L I6, improved refinement |
| C230 (3rd gen, 1977-1980) | Laurel 2000 SGL | L20E I6 | EFI, luxury grade, upgraded interior |
| C230 (3rd gen, 1977-1980) | Laurel 2000 SGL-E | L20E I6 | EFI, top luxury, added comfort features |
| C230 (3rd gen, 1977-1980) | Laurel 2400D | LD24 I6 Diesel | diesel, high economy, fleet-friendly |
| C230 (3rd gen, 1977-1980) | Laurel 2800 SGL | L28 I6 | 2.8L I6, luxury grade, higher torque |
| C31 (4th gen, 1980-1984) | Laurel 1800 | Z18 I4 | RWD, base grade, sedan/hardtop (market) |
| C31 (4th gen, 1980-1984) | Laurel 2000 | L20 I6 | RWD, 2.0L I6, comfort-oriented |
| C31 (4th gen, 1980-1984) | Laurel 2000 SGL | L20E I6 | EFI, luxury grade, upgraded trim |
| C31 (4th gen, 1980-1984) | Laurel 2000 SGL Extra | L20E I6 | higher luxury, added convenience equipment |
| C31 (4th gen, 1980-1984) | Laurel 2000 Turbo Medalist | L20ET I6 Turbo | turbo, Medalist grade, sport-luxury |
| C31 (4th gen, 1980-1984) | Laurel 2400D | LD24 I6 Diesel | diesel, economy, taxi/fleet use |
| C31 (4th gen, 1980-1984) | Laurel 2800 SGL | L28E I6 | EFI 2.8L, luxury grade, higher torque |
| C32 (5th gen, 1984-1988) | Laurel 1800 | CA18S I4 | RWD, base grade, carbureted |
| C32 (5th gen, 1984-1988) | Laurel 2000 | RB20E I6 | RWD, SOHC I6, smoothness-focused |
| C32 (5th gen, 1984-1988) | Laurel 2000 Medalist | RB20E I6 | Medalist luxury, upgraded interior, options |
| C32 (5th gen, 1984-1988) | Laurel 2000 Turbo Medalist | RB20ET I6 Turbo | turbo, Medalist, stronger performance |
| C32 (5th gen, 1984-1988) | Laurel 2400D | LD28 I6 Diesel | diesel, economy, fleet use |
| C32 (5th gen, 1984-1988) | Laurel 2800D | RD28 I6 Diesel | 2.8L diesel, higher torque, economy |
| C33 (6th gen, 1988-1992) | Laurel 2000 Medalist | RB20E I6 | Medalist, luxury trim, RWD |
| C33 (6th gen, 1988-1992) | Laurel 2000 Medalist Twin Cam | RB20DE I6 | DOHC, Medalist, improved response |
| C33 (6th gen, 1988-1992) | Laurel 2000 Medalist Turbo | RB20DET I6 Turbo | turbo DOHC, Medalist, performance |
| C33 (6th gen, 1988-1992) | Laurel 2500 Medalist | RB25DE I6 | 2.5L DOHC, Medalist, higher torque |
| C33 (6th gen, 1988-1992) | Laurel 2500 Medalist Turbo | RB25DET I6 Turbo | 2.5L turbo, Medalist, strong midrange |
| C33 (6th gen, 1988-1992) | Laurel 2800D | RD28 I6 Diesel | diesel, economy, long-range cruising |
| C34 (7th gen, 1993-1997) | Laurel 2000 Medalist | RB20E I6 | SOHC, Medalist, comfort-focused |
| C34 (7th gen, 1993-1997) | Laurel 2000 Medalist Twin Cam | RB20DE I6 | DOHC, Medalist, improved response |
| C34 (7th gen, 1993-1997) | Laurel 2500 Medalist | RB25DE I6 | 2.5L DOHC, Medalist, higher torque |
| C34 (7th gen, 1993-1997) | Laurel 2500 Medalist Turbo | RB25DET I6 Turbo | turbo, Medalist, performance |
| C34 (7th gen, 1993-1997) | Laurel 2500 Club S | RB25DE I6 | sport grade, firmer suspension, aero (opt) |
| C34 (7th gen, 1993-1997) | Laurel 2500 Club S Turbo | RB25DET I6 Turbo | sport grade, turbo, available 5MT |
| C34 (7th gen, 1993-1997) | Laurel 2800D | RD28 I6 Diesel | diesel, economy, fleet use |
| C35 (8th gen, 1997-2002) | Laurel 2000 Medalist | RB20DE I6 | DOHC, Medalist, luxury equipment |
| C35 (8th gen, 1997-2002) | Laurel 2500 Medalist | RB25DE I6 | 2.5L, Medalist, higher torque |
| C35 (8th gen, 1997-2002) | Laurel 2500 Medalist Turbo | RB25DET I6 Turbo | turbo, Medalist, strong performance |
| C35 (8th gen, 1997-2002) | Laurel 2500 Club S | RB25DE I6 | sport grade, aero (opt), firmer suspension |
| C35 (8th gen, 1997-2002) | Laurel 2500 Club S Turbo | RB25DET I6 Turbo | sport grade, turbo, available 5MT |
| C35 (8th gen, 1997-2002) | Laurel 2500 Club S Type X | RB25DET I6 Turbo | Type X aero, sport interior, performance tune |
Pricing
The Laurel was never sold new outside Japan, so there's no familiar export MSRP to anchor the long view. The numbers below are what one costs today. Clean C33 turbo Medalists sit in the middle of the market. Documented C35 Club S Turbo and Type X cars are the ones climbing fastest as US legality phases in through 2027.
Today's market range: $8,000 to $45,000 (median ~$22,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.
Prices are firming for C33-C35 turbo cars as US legality expands and JZX/Skyline prices stay high. Clean, unmodified examples outperform; drift-worn cars lag. Expect steady gains, with the best C35s leading the upside.
Inspect
Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items are the ones that mean walking away if there's no paperwork. The High items can usually be priced into the deal. Pay extra attention to the rear arches and the subframe mount points on any Laurel that lived through Japanese winters or sat outdoors.
Cross-shop
If the Laurel doesn't end up being the right car, the natural alternatives are the Nissan Skyline sedan, which is the same platform with the sportier badge, or the Nissan Cefiro, which is the cheaper Laurel cousin with most of the same RB drivetrain. The Toyota Cresta and Chaser are the JZX side of the same JDM executive-sport segment.
1JZ-GTE sedan benchmark; stronger resale ceiling
JZ turbo comfort sedan; huge parts and VIP scene
RB25DET sedan with Skyline cachet; more global support
Comfort/VIP focus; 1JZ options; strong Japan supply
Compare
Among the JDM executive sport sedans, the Laurel is the understated one, the Skyline is the famous one, and the Cresta and Chaser are the Toyota answer with the 1JZ. The table below leans toward the Laurel because that's where it actually wins, on Skyline parts crossover and lower entry pricing for the same RB drivetrain.
| Feature | Nissan Laurel | Toyota Chaser JZX90 | Nissan Skyline R33 sedan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Layout/mission | RWD exec-sport sedan | RWD sport sedan | RWD sport sedan |
| Top turbo engines | RB20DET/RB25DET | 1JZ-GTE | RB25DET |
| Stock power (typical) | RB25DET ~245-250hp | 1JZ-GTE ~280PS | RB25DET ~250hp |
| Transmission availability | AT common; MT rare | MT more common in Tourer V | MT available; more supply |
| Aftermarket depth | Strong RB + chassis support | Very strong JZ support | Huge SR/RB chassis support |
| Drift suitability | Stable; longer wheelbase | Benchmark drift sedan | Lighter; more agile |
| VIP/stance appeal | High; Laurel identity | High; big scene support | High; factory luxury base |
| Interior refinement | Comfort-first, plush trims | Sporty-lux balance | More driver-focused |
| Parts availability | Good mechanical, mixed trim | Strong overall support | Strong overall support |
| Typical rust risk | Moderate-high (age/usage) | Moderate (varies by region) | Moderate (often cleaner shells) |
| Value ceiling (US import) | Lower than JZX halo cars | Higher; Tourer V premium | Higher; Skyline tax |
| Best buy trims | C34/C35 turbo Touring | Tourer V | GTS25t sedan |
| Daily usability | Good ride; quiet cabin | Good; sportier ride | Fair; more NVH |
Gallery
Editorial
Start with a C33 turbo Medalist with documented service history. Every C33 is past the US 25-year rule, and the R32 Skyline platform and S13 Silvia suspension crossover means parts are available and repair costs stay manageable. Skip anything under $8,000 — a cheap Laurel almost always means a tired RB and rust at the rear arches and subframe mounts.
The C35 Club S Type X is the trim VIP and drift builders most often target: RB25DET, the Type X aero package, sport-tuned suspension, and the most complete factory specification the Laurel ever got. Most C35s shipped as automatics, so a factory 5-speed Club S Turbo carries a real premium. A documented manual conversion is the practical alternative; avoid undocumented swaps, which often come with a modified harness and fitment problems.
The C34 is under-represented for US buyers — the earliest C34s only cleared 25-year eligibility in 2022, and the youngest don't get there until later this decade. For buyers in Canada, the UK, or Australia where the import threshold is shorter or absent, the C34 Club S Turbo is the value position: RB25DET hardware at a lower entry price than a comparable Skyline sedan, with fewer heavily modified examples in the pool.
Anything pre-C33 is collector territory, not a driver pick. Parts are scarce outside Japan, the body architecture doesn't share with the Skyline, and demand outside Japan stays thin. Start with a C33 or newer unless vintage Datsun ownership is already the plan.
FAQ
Citations
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