Buyer's guide

15 min read

Honda NSX

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1990-2022
US legal
2015
25-yr rule
Market range
$60K–$1200K
median ~$185K
For sale
7
active now
Honda NSX, front three-quarter view
Honda NSX (NA1) — the car that benchmarked daily-usable supercars in 1990.

Background

Overview

The Honda NSX ran two generations: the NA1/NA2 (1990–2005), all-aluminium, naturally aspirated, rear-wheel drive, assembled by hand in Tochigi; and the NC1 (2016–2022), a twin-turbo hybrid AWD car built in Ohio. The NA1 used the C30A 3.0L V6; the NA2 brought the C32B 3.2L and a 6-speed manual. Type R and Type S variants were Japan-only in both eras and were never federalized for the United States. NA2 manual cars lead current pricing; NC1 values are trim-sensitive, with the 2022 Type S the only second-generation car trading above original sticker.

Browse 7 JDM NSX listings for sale

Senna and the chassis-tuning story

In 1989, Honda flew Ayrton Senna to Suzuka and Nurburgring to evaluate a pre-production NA1. His reported assessment was direct: the body lacked rigidity. Honda's chief engineer Shigeru Uehara returned to Tochigi and increased the aluminium monocoque's torsional stiffness by roughly 50 percent before signing off on the production specification.

Senna's role is sometimes inflated in the retelling — he was not a contracted development driver, and Honda's engineers had already resolved most of the suspension geometry before 1989. The chassis revision is nonetheless documented in period Honda press material and covered in contemporary reporting on the development story. What the rigidity increase changed was not outright lap time but the car's behaviour at the limit: the NA1 stopped feeling vague because the structure stopped flexing under load.

Why daily-driving an NSX is the NSX's whole pitch

The NSX's core claim against every other 1990s supercar was usability. A Ferrari 348 leaked, needed a clutch out at 30,000 miles, and idled hot in traffic. A Lamborghini Diablo needed a specialist within 50 miles. The NSX could leave a driveway on a January morning and drive to work without a warmup ritual.

The cabin reflected Honda's engineering priorities. Visibility was supercar-class and the ergonomics were sedan-grade; the seats fit a 6-foot driver and the trunk took an overnight bag. The C30A and C32B hold valve adjustment intervals at 105,000 miles or seven years — long for any high-revving V6 redlining at 8,000 rpm. Long-term ownership reporting tracks how that durability produced an unusually clean survivor pool.

A late-NA2 with 60,000 miles and complete records is not a museum piece. It is a 30-year-old supercar that has been used as designed.

Editorial notes

Quick read

Key takeaways

Constants

Common across all NSX generations

Chassis history

Generation timeline

The NSX has two generations and they're really two different cars. The first generation ran from 1990 until 2005 across NA1 and NA2 chassis, all naturally aspirated V6, all rear wheel drive, all built by hand in Tochigi. The second generation NC1 ran from 2016 until 2022, twin turbo V6 with three electric motors and all wheel drive, built in Ohio. If you want the analog supercar, you want a first generation NSX. If you want modern pace with hybrid traction, you want an NC1.

NA1

NA1 (3.0L C30A; 1990–1997)

NA2

NA2 (3.2L C32B, 6-speed; 1997–2005)

Guide coming soon

Buyer's call

Should you buy a Honda NSX?

The NSX is the supercar you can actually use. Honda built it to start every morning and behave at low speed, and that's still the main reason people buy one today. The trade off is that parts and labor on a 30 year old aluminum exotic aren't cheap, and a few jobs only a handful of shops can do properly.

Why you'll love it

  • Mid-engine balance Neutral handling and confidence at speed; approachable limits vs many exotics.
  • Honda-grade usability Ergonomics, visibility, and drivability make it a true daily-capable supercar.
  • Manual gearbox appeal NA 5MT/6MT are core to collector demand; strong engagement and resale.
  • Strong collector liquidity Global demand, recognizable icon status, and broad buyer pool support values.
  • Build quality & longevity Well-engineered drivetrain; many cars age better than period Italian rivals.
  • Motorsport & halo pedigree Senna-era development lore and supercar benchmark status boost desirability.
  • NC1 performance per dollar Used NC1 can undercut rivals while offering supercar pace and AWD traction.

Why you might not

  • NA parts pricing/availability Some trim, glass, and body parts are costly or scarce; delays can be real.
  • Timing belt service costs C30A/C32B belt/water pump intervals add meaningful ownership expense.
  • Cooling system aging Radiators, hoses, and fans age; overheating risk if maintenance is deferred.
  • Targa rigidity tradeoff NSX-T is heavier and less rigid; typically softer market vs coupes.
  • NC1 complexity Hybrid system and electronics raise long-term repair risk outside warranty.
  • Insurance & theft risk Rising values increase premiums; theft/vandalism risk for desirable NA cars.
  • Modded cars value penalty Heavy mods can limit buyer pool; originality usually wins at top auctions.
Who should not buy this
  • Anyone without $3k-8k/year maintenance buffer
  • Buyers expecting cheap parts or quick dealer support
  • People who can't do a thorough PPI on a lift
  • Drivers over 6'2" wanting helmet clearance
  • Anyone needing rear seats or real cargo capacity
  • Owners without secure garage storage
  • People who hate low ride height and scraping
  • Those who won't keep up with timing belt intervals
  • Buyers in salted climates without rust mitigation
  • Anyone wanting modern crash safety and airbags
  • People expecting quiet cabin and modern NVH
  • Those who need flawless AC in extreme heat
  • Anyone relying on generic shops for aluminum repairs
  • Buyers tempted by cheap heavily-modded examples
  • People who can't tolerate expensive trans rebuild risk
  • Anyone needing easy emissions compliance everywhere
  • Those who won't use correct fluids and bleed methods
  • People who park outside in heavy rain (NSX-T leaks)
  • Drivers wanting modern infotainment and electronics
  • Anyone who can't handle long parts lead times

Reliability

Common issues & solutions

The NSX is a well engineered car, but it's still a 30 year old supercar on most of the cars in the market. Two items decide whether the deal works. The timing belt and water pump service runs every seven years or 105,000 miles and costs $1,800 to $3,500 done right. The cooling system uses original plastic radiator end tanks that crack with age, and a full refresh is another $900 to $2,500. Cars without recent receipts for both of those should be priced as if the work is still owed.

Issue Cause Solution Est. cost
Timing belt overdue Age/miles; owners skip due to cost Timing belt, water pump, tensioners, seals $1800-3500
Cooling system overheating Old radiator, hoses, trapped air, weak fans Radiator/hoses/thermostat; proper bleed $900-2500
Radiator end tank cracks Plastic tanks age-heat cycle and split Replace radiator and cap; inspect hoses $600-1400
Heater core leak Age corrosion; coolant neglected Replace heater core; flush; new hoses/clamps $1200-2500
2nd/3rd gear synchro grind Wear from hard shifts, wrong fluid, age Rebuild trans; synchros/hubs; inspect gears $3500-8000
Clutch slip or chatter Worn disc/pressure plate; heat spots on flywheel Clutch kit; resurface/replace flywheel; bleed $1800-3500
Clutch master/slave failure Seal wear; fluid contamination; heat Replace master/slave; flush fluid; adjust pedal $350-900
Engine mounts collapsed Age; heat; oil contamination softens rubber Replace mounts; inspect brackets; align drivetrain $900-2500
Valve cover oil leaks Gaskets harden; cam plugs seep Gaskets, cam plugs, grommets; clean PCV $250-700
Oil consumption on decel Valve stem seals aging; high vacuum pulls oil Valve seals; inspect guides; refresh top end $1500-4000
Idle hunt/stall Dirty IACV/FAST, vacuum leaks, old TPS Clean/replace IACV; smoke test; set base idle $200-900
VTEC not engaging Low oil, bad VTEC solenoid, clogged screen Fix oil level; clean screen; replace solenoid $150-600
Knock sensor/CEL Aged sensor or harness; heat cycles Replace sensor; inspect wiring; clear codes $250-700
Alternator failure Heat soak; bearing/diode wear Replace alternator; check belt and grounds $600-1400
AC weak or warm at idle Low charge, tired compressor, condenser airflow Leak test; recharge; compressor/condenser as needed $300-2200
AC evaporator leak Age corrosion; hard to access Evaporator replacement; new drier; evacuate/recharge $1800-3500
Power steering rack leak Seal wear; fluid contamination; age Rebuild/replace rack; flush system; new lines if needed $1200-3000
PS pump groan/whine Air in system, worn pump, old fluid Flush; replace pump if noisy; inspect suction hose $250-1200
Suspension bushing wear Age cracks; track use; oil contamination Replace bushings/arms; alignment and corner balance $1200-4500
Ball joint/tie rod play Wear; torn boots; impacts Replace joints/rods; alignment $400-1400
Brake caliper sticking Old seals; heat; moisture in fluid Rebuild/replace calipers; flush; new pads/rotors $600-2200
ABS light / module faults Wheel speed sensors, aged module, wiring Scan; replace sensor/repair wiring; module refurb $300-1800
Pop-up headlight issues Motor wear, linkage bind, dried grease Service linkage; replace motor; adjust height $200-900
Window regulator slow/fails Worn regulator, dry tracks, weak motor Regulator/motor; lube tracks; adjust glass $350-1200
Targa roof leaks (NSX-T) Aged seals, misadjusted latches, clogged drains Replace/adjust seals; clear drains; align windows $300-1800
Trunk water intrusion Tail light seals, trunk gasket, antenna grommet Reseal lights/gaskets; dry and treat corrosion $150-700
Rear subframe rust Salt exposure; trapped moisture; neglected undercoat Derust/treat; replace subframe if severe $800-4000
Aluminum repair complexity Improper crash repair; wrong welding methods Specialist inspection; correct repair or walk away $2000-20000
Aftermarket alarm drain/no-start Bad installs; parasitic draw; hacked ignition wiring Remove/rewire properly; parasitic draw test $200-1500
Fuel injector aging/misfire Old injectors, varnish, ethanol storage issues Clean/flow test or replace injectors; new filters $300-1600
Fuel tank varnish/rust Long storage; stale fuel; moisture Tank clean/replace; pump/filter; flush lines $800-3000
Exhaust manifold cracks Heat cycling; aftermarket thin-wall headers Replace manifold/headers; check mounts and heat shields $600-2500

Market

Differences between JDM & USDM

In Japan, the car is a Honda NSX sold through Honda Verno dealers. In North America, every first-generation car wore Acura badges and was sold through Acura — the Acura brand had launched in 1986 as Honda's premium channel, and the NSX was its halo. Mechanically, JDM and USDM NA1/NA2 cars are nearly identical, but the JDM advantage is variant access: the Type R (1992-1995 and 2002-2005), the Type S, the Type S-Zero, and the homologation NSX-R GT were all Japan-only. None of these were ever federalized for the United States. JDM NA1 cars also retain the period-correct 280 PS rating tied to the Japanese manufacturers' Gentlemen's Agreement of 1988, whereas US-market cars used SAE ratings (270 hp early, 290 hp on NA2). For US importers, the 25-year rule (NHTSA Show or Display is an alternate path) makes 1990-1999 JDM examples currently importable, with later Type R and Type S cars rolling into eligibility year by year. The second-generation NC1 (2016-2022) was sold globally as the Acura NSX with no JDM Honda-badged variant — a reversal of the first-generation arrangement.

5ENNA; Honda NSX | 4K

Specs

Technical specifications

The NA1 uses the C30A 3.0 V6 making around 270 hp with a 5-speed manual or 4-speed automatic. The NA2 swapped in the bigger C32B 3.2 V6 from 1997 with 290 hp and a 6-speed manual. The NC1 is a different animal: 3.5 twin turbo V6 plus three electric motors, 573 hp on the early cars and 600 hp on the 2022 Type S, all running through a 9-speed dual clutch.

Engine options

Chassis Engine Displacement Power Boost Notes
NA1 C30A 3.0L 270PS @ 7100rpm (JDM) N/A DOHC VTEC, aluminum block
NA1 C30A 3.0L 274hp @ 7100rpm (US/Export, rated) N/A SAE-era rating; varies by market
NA1 C30A 3.0L 280PS @ 7300rpm (late JDM, quoted) N/A estimated; market/yr dependent
NA2 C32B 3.2L 280PS @ 7300rpm (JDM) N/A DOHC VTEC, 6MT, larger bore/stroke
NA2 C32B 3.2L 290hp @ 7100rpm (US/Export, rated) N/A SAE-era rating; market dependent
NC1 JNC1 3.5L 500hp @ 6500-7500rpm (ICE) Twin-turbo (psi n/a) Direct inj, dry sump; hybrid adds power
NC1 JNC1 + 3-motor hybrid 3.5L 573hp (system) (2017-2021) Twin-turbo (psi n/a) System output; 9DCT, SH-AWD
NC1 JNC1 + 3-motor hybrid 3.5L 600hp (system) (Type S) Twin-turbo (psi n/a) Type S system output; higher boost/flow

Transmission options

Type Ratios Availability Notes
5-speed Manual 3.071/1.727/1.250/0.970/0.771 NA1 3.0L (most markets) Helical LSD on many trims/markets
6-speed Manual 3.071/2.055/1.481/1.161/0.943/0.771 NA2 3.2L, NA2-R, some late NA1 JDM Close ratio; paired with C32B
4-speed Automatic 2.684/1.521/1.023/0.694 NA1/NA2 (market dependent) Torque converter; sport logic (varies)
9-speed Dual-Clutch (DCT) 4.552/2.611/1.925/1.556/1.285/1.000/0.839/0.667/0.537 NC1 all Hybrid-integrated; launch control

Lineup

Variants & trims

Most of what you'll see is the base coupe or the NSX-T targa. The Type R is the JDM only track car, stripped of air conditioning and sound deadening, and they're the most collectible variants by a wide margin. The Type S and Type S-Zero sit between the base car and the Type R on weight and price, also Japan only. The NC1 Type S from 2022 is a 350 unit run that's already trading above original sticker.

Generation Trim Engine Key features
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX (Japan, early NA1) C30A 3.0L NA V6 Aluminum monocoque, VTEC, pop-up lamps
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX (Export, early NA1) C30A 3.0L NA V6 Aluminum body, VTEC, 5MT/4AT
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX Type R (NA1, 1992-1995) C30A 3.0L NA V6 Weight reduction, Recaro, no A/C, LSD
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX-R (NA2, 2002-2005) C32B 3.2L NA V6 Weight reduction, aero, stiffer chassis, LSD
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX Type S (Japan, NA1/NA2) C30A 3.0L / C32B 3.2L Lighter than base, sport suspension, fewer options
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX Type S-Zero (Japan, NA2) C32B 3.2L NA V6 Track-focused, reduced weight, stiffer suspension
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX-T (Targa, NA1/NA2) C30A 3.0L / C32B 3.2L Removable roof, added bracing, pop-up lamps
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX Zanardi Edition (US, 1999) C30A 3.0L NA V6 Limited run, BBS wheels, lighter, manual only
NA1/NA2 (1st gen, 1990-2005) NSX (2002-2005 facelift, fixed lamps) C32B 3.2L NA V6 Fixed headlamps, revised aero, 6MT/4AT
NC1 (2nd gen, 2016-2022) NSX (Base) JNC1 3.5L TT V6 + 3-motor hybrid SH-AWD, 9DCT, torque vectoring, MagneRide
NC1 (2nd gen, 2016-2022) NSX (with Carbon Ceramic Brakes) JNC1 3.5L TT V6 + 3-motor hybrid CCB, lighter unsprung mass, enhanced fade resistance
NC1 (2nd gen, 2016-2022) NSX Type S (2022) JNC1 3.5L TT V6 + 3-motor hybrid Higher output, aero kit, retuned SH-AWD, CCB std

Pricing

Average prices & original MSRP

A driver quality NA1 starts around $60,000 today. A clean low mile NA2 with documented service sits in the $120,000 to $200,000 range. Type R and Type S cars are the top of the market and clear $400,000 to $1,200,000 when they surface. NC1 base cars trade between $90,000 and $130,000 used. The 2022 Type S is the only NC1 trading above original MSRP.

Original MSRP: $60,000 at launch in 1991. Approximate US launch MSRP for the 1991 Acura NSX (USDM). The 1997 NSX-S (JDM Type S) WP source lists MSRP at roughly $85,000. Japanese launch yen pricing varied by trim and is not cited verbatim in the WP body.

Today's market range: $60,000 to $1,200,000 (median ~$185,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.

NA NSX prices are firm: best cars (manual, low-mile, rare colors, Type R/S) keep appreciating while average drivers plateau. NC1 is trim-sensitive with mild softening outside Type S; long-term outlook favors limited, documented examples.

Inspect

Pre-purchase inspection checklist

Walk this list before you put down a deposit, and pay for a PPI on a lift before you wire money. The Critical items are deal breakers without paperwork. Compression and leakdown matter on any NSX over 20 years old, and so does an honest paint meter pass. Ten minutes won't tell you what an hour on the lift will.

Critical priority

High priority

Medium priority

Low priority

Cross-shop

Comparable alternatives

If the NSX doesn't work out, the closest car is probably a Toyota Supra JZA80 if you want the same era halo with more tuning headroom. A Porsche 996 Turbo gets you supercar pace with a bigger parts network. An R35 GT-R undercuts a clean NA2 on price and beats it on pace, just not on feel.

Compare

How it compares

Among 1990s supercars the NSX is the only one engineered to be daily driven. The 348 leaked and needed a clutch at 30,000 miles. The Diablo needed a specialist within 50 miles. The NSX started every morning and ran the same maintenance schedule as a Civic Type R. That's why the comparison table below leans on usability and reliability, not just horsepower.

Feature Honda NSX Toyota Supra JZA80 Mazda RX-7 FD3S
Layout/Drivetrain Mid-engine RWD (NA) Front-engine RWD Front-engine RWD
Power (stock) 270-290 hp (NA) 276 hp (JDM claim) 276 hp (JDM claim)
Weight/feel Light, analog steering Heavier, GT feel Light, edgy turbo
Reliability High for an exotic Strong but aging electronics Rotary upkeep sensitive
Service complexity Moderate (NA) High (twin-turbo packaging) High (rotary + turbos)
Tuning headroom Moderate NA; costly big gains Very high (2JZ) Very high (RB26)
Steering/feedback Benchmark feel (NA) Good, more GT Sharp, lighter nose feel
Track capability Balanced, consistent Fast, AWD grip Fast, boost-dependent
Cabin ergonomics Excellent visibility More cramped, sporty More compromised
Collector premium High; icon status High; 2JZ halo High; GT-R halo
NC1 powertrain Hybrid AWD, 9DCT Twin-turbo V8 RWD, DCT NA V8 RWD, DCT
NC1 performance Supercar-quick launches Lighter, sharper High-rev drama
NC1 daily usability Very high Good, but lower ground clearance Very high

Gallery

Editorial

The buyer's read

The safest first-generation buy is a documented NA2 from 1997 to 2001 with the 3.2 L C32B and the 6-speed manual. That combination gives you the most refined first-generation car: more mid-range torque than the NA1, better gearbox ratios, and electronics that are modern enough to remain functional. Pass on anything under $60,000. A cheap NSX nearly always means deferred timing belt service, a cooling system on borrowed time, or accident history the seller is not volunteering.

Budget $3,000 to $8,000 annually in maintenance on a clean car — before anything unexpected. Deferred cooling work is the most common way a first-generation NSX becomes expensive quickly; original radiator end tanks crack with age and a full refresh adds meaningful cost.

If you want an earlier car, a documented NA1 from 1995 to 1996 is the entry. The C30A is an understressed engine that regularly runs past 200,000 miles on consistent service. The 5-speed is robust; skip the 4-speed automatic unless the price reflects a real discount, because the manual carries the resale premium.

Type R cars from 1992 to 1995 are a separate market. They trade in the $300,000 to $600,000 range and the buyer pool self-selects. A 1991 or 1992 NA1 without service records is the configuration to avoid: early NA1 cars had documented air conditioning failures requiring full system replacement, and aluminium monocoque accident repair is the largest hidden cost in this market.

The NC1 follows different logic. Trim matters more than mileage on second-generation cars: base cars are softest, Carbon Ceramic Brake-equipped examples hold better, and the 2022 Type S is the only NC1 currently trading above original sticker.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What NSX years are most collectible?
NA2 1997-2005 (3.2/6MT) and 2002-2005 fixed-light cars lead; Type R/S top.
Manual or automatic: which holds value better?
Manual NA cars carry the strongest premium. Automatics can be great drivers but trade at a discount.
What are the biggest NA NSX maintenance items?
Timing belt/water pump, cooling refresh, suspension bushings, and clutch wear. Deferred cooling work is risky.
Are NSX-T targas less desirable than coupes?
Usually yes: coupe is lighter and stiffer. NSX-T can be better value if condition is excellent.
How do Type R and Type S differ from standard cars?
Type R focuses on weight loss and track tuning; Type S/Type S-Zero are sharper, rarer variants with premiums.
Is the NC1 NSX a good buy used?
Often yes: depreciation can help. Prioritize warranty history, hybrid system health, and clean accident records.
What hurts NSX value the most at resale?
Accidents, heavy mods, poor documentation, corrosion, and non-original paint/parts. Provenance and records matter.
What should I check on a pre-purchase inspection?
Verify compression/leakdown, cooling, clutch, suspension play, VIN tags, paint meter, and complete service records.

Citations

Sources & references

Sources (10)
  1. Honda NSX - encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  2. The 1991 Acura NSX revolutionized the supercar segment — HagertyLink dead
  3. Acura NSX maintenance - the long-term ownership view — Road & TrackVerified
  4. When Senna drove the NSX street car — SpeedhuntersAccess blocked
  5. Honda HP-X 1984 - the NSX concept origin — Old Concept CarsVerified
  6. Honda NSX - how the Japanese made a competitor for Ferrari — DylerVerified
  7. NSX Type S model information — NSX PrimeLink dead View archived ↗
  8. 10 mechanical issues you may have with the used Acura NSX — NSX Prime forumVerified
  9. Honda heritage timeline - automobile history — Honda Motor CorporationLink dead
  10. Honda NSX used review - 1990-2005 — What Car?Verified

Sources last verified:

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