Subaru WRX STI GD
Closest AWD turbo rival; strong parts support
Buyer's guide
15 min read
Buyer's guide & specs
Background
The Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution ran ten numbered generations from October 1992 through April 2016 across six chassis families: CD9A (Evo I), CE9A (Evo II-III), CN9A (Evo IV), CP9A (Evo V-VI), CT9A (Evo VII-IX), and CZ4A (Evo X). Evo I through IX used the 4G63T, a cast-iron DOHC 2.0L turbo four that carried Tommi Mäkinen to four consecutive WRC Drivers' Championships from 1996 to 1999; the Evo X switched to the all-aluminum 4B11T in 2007. Drivetrain tech expanded chassis-by-chassis — viscous center diff on CD9A and CE9A, AYC active rear differential on the CN9A, ACD active center differential on the CT9A, and S-AWC yaw integration on the CZ4A. Collector demand concentrates on the Evo VI Tommi Mäkinen Edition, Evo VIII MR, Evo IX MR, and the Evo X Final Edition — 1,000 numbered cars that closed the line.
The Lancer Evolution and the Subaru Impreza WRX STI shared the same brief: a four-door turbo AWD sedan homologated for Group A rally, sold to the public in qualifying numbers. They competed head-to-head in the World Rally Championship through the 1990s — Mitsubishi taking the Drivers' title four years running (1996-1999) with Tommi Mäkinen at the wheel, Subaru taking the Manufacturers' title in 1995, 1996, and 1997.
The road cars mirrored the split. Evo tended toward sharper turn-in, AYC active rear differential, and a more nervous chassis; the STI ran a softer DCCD center diff, a torquier flat-four, and a more forgiving on-limit character. The Evo VIII arrived in the US in 2003 alongside the USDM WRX (2002) and STI (2004), and the two cars defined the entry performance segment for a decade.
The split holds in the used market. Evo buyers tend to weight handling sharpness and JDM trim authenticity; STI buyers lean toward parts availability and daily usability.
When Mitsubishi confirmed the Evo X Final Edition in 2015, no successor was announced — and a decade later, none exists. The WRX STI initially absorbed part of that demand, then itself left the market when Subaru retired the nameplate in 2021. Both exits left the segment without a direct replacement.
The collector market responded. Original low-mileage Evo VI Tommi Mäkinen Editions, Evo VIII MR, Evo IX MR, and Evo X Final Edition cars now trade as appreciating assets; 4G63-powered generations have seen the sharpest gains. Hagerty's valuation data shows a clear inflection in 2020-2021, with top-condition examples doubling across two years.
As Evo IV-VI cars crossed the US 25-year import threshold — Evo IV in 2021, Evo V in 2023, Evo VI in 2024 — demand for clean JDM-spec imports firmed up the floor on the early generations. The GT-R R32/R33/R34 ran the same pattern five to ten years earlier.
Editorial notes
Quick read
Constants
Chassis history
The Evo ran from 1992 until 2016 across ten numbered versions and six chassis codes. CD9A covers Evo I. CE9A covers Evo II and III. CN9A is the redesigned Evo IV. CP9A is Evo V and VI, the peak classic shape. CT9A covers Evo VII through IX. CZ4A is the Evo X with the new 4B11T engine. Each chassis feels like a different car, and the one you buy depends mostly on whether you want the 4G63T or the newer 4B11T underneath.
Evolution I — CD9A (1992–1994)
Evolution II–III — CE9A (1993–1996)
Evolution IV — CN9A (1996–1998)
Evolution VII–IX — CT9A (2001–2007)
Evolution X — CZ4A (2007–2016)
Buyer's call
The Evo was built to win rally championships first and be a usable road car second. That trade comes through on every generation. You get unbeatable traction and a chassis that handles like it's on rails. You give up some refinement, easy parts in some markets, and the WRX-level aftermarket depth.
Reliability
The Evo is a strong car when it's been looked after. Most of the trouble on an unmodified one is age and skipped maintenance, not the engineering. The boost actuator fails early. The throwout bearing whines once you pass 40 mph. The climate evaporator drain blocks up and stinks. The idle control valve gets gummy. None of these are deal breakers. The bigger risk on any Evo from CN9A onward is AYC pump health, because the hard lines rust and the fluid gets ignored.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4G63 timing belt failure | Skipped service; cheap tensioner/idlers | OEM belt kit + water pump; set timing correctly | $900-1800 |
| 4G63 rod bearing knock | Oil starvation, over-rev, dirty oil, detonation | Rebuild bottom end; inspect crank; fix tune/oiling | $4500-9000 |
| 4G63 crankwalk (rare) | Thrust wear; clutch load; poor rebuild tolerances | Measure endplay; rebuild with proper clearances | $5000-10000 |
| 4G63 head gasket failure | Overheat, detonation, high boost on stock gasket | MLS gasket + studs; machine head; correct tune | $1800-3500 |
| 4B11T ringland failure | Detonation, lean AFR, too much boost on stock pistons | Forged pistons rebuild; conservative tune; better fuel | $6000-12000 |
| 4B11T timing chain rattle | Stretched chain/tensioner wear; dirty oil intervals | Chain/tensioner/guides; verify VVT phasers | $1200-2500 |
| Turbocharger wear/smoke | Heat, poor oiling, overspeed, dirty oil, coking | Rebuild/replace turbo; clean oil feed; proper cooldown | $900-2500 |
| Boost leaks/poor boost | Loose couplers, cracked hoses, leaking BOV, IC damage | Pressure test; replace couplers/clamps; fix IC/BOV | $150-800 |
| Misfire under boost | Worn plugs, weak coils, wrong gap, injector issues | Correct plugs/gap; replace coils; flow test injectors | $150-900 |
| Overheating at track | Small radiator, airflow issues, old thermostat, fans | Upgrade radiator/oil cooler; ducting; new t-stat/cap | $600-2500 |
| Oil consumption | Worn rings, turbo seals, PCV issues, high blow-by | PCV/catch can; leakdown; rebuild if rings/turbo bad | $150-9000 |
| Transfer case failure | Low fluid, abuse launches, mismatched tires, wear | Rebuild/replace t-case; strict fluid schedule; match tires | $1500-4000 |
| Rear diff whine/failure | Old fluid, track heat, shock loads, bearing wear | Fluid service; rebuild diff; check backlash/bearings | $400-3500 |
| 2nd/3rd synchro grind | Aggressive shifting, worn synchros, wrong fluid | Rebuild trans; correct fluid; replace clutch if dragging | $2500-6000 |
| Clutch slip/chatter | Worn disc, overheated pressure plate, oil contamination | Replace clutch kit; resurface flywheel; fix leaks | $900-2200 |
| SST mechatronic issues | Overheat, skipped fluid/filter service, worn solenoids | Service fluid/filters; relearn; mechatronic repair/replace | $800-4500 |
| SST clutch pack wear | Launches, tuning torque spikes, heat, wrong fluid | Replace clutch packs; update TCM; add cooling | $2500-7000 |
| AYC pump failure | Moisture/corrosion, old fluid, clogged filter, rusted lines | Rebuild/replace pump; flush; replace lines; relocate/guard | $1200-3500 |
| AYC/ACD warning lights | Wheel speed sensors, pump pressure faults, low fluid | Scan codes; repair sensors/lines; bleed with proper tool | $150-2500 |
| Rusty AYC hard lines | Road salt; poor undercoating; age | Replace lines; rust treat; undercoat; inspect yearly | $400-1800 |
| Brembo caliper sticking | Corrosion, torn boots, old fluid, track heat | Rebuild calipers; new seals; flush fluid; new pads/rotors | $400-1800 |
| Warped/cracked rotors | Track heat, cheap rotors, improper bedding | Quality rotors/pads; proper bedding; add brake cooling | $300-1200 |
| Control arm bushing wear | Age, track use, lowered ride height, cheap parts | Replace arms/bushings; align; avoid ultra-stiff street | $400-1600 |
| Steering rack leaks | Seal wear, torn boots, contaminated fluid | Rebuild/replace rack; flush system; new boots/tie rods | $700-1800 |
| Wheel bearing failure | Track heat, wide wheels, age, impacts/potholes | Replace hub/bearing; torque axle nut correctly | $300-900 |
| Cracked exhaust manifold | Heat cycling, missing supports, high EGT from tune | Replace manifold; fix tune; add bracing/heat management | $400-1500 |
| Catalyst/O2 readiness issues | Aftermarket downpipe, bad O2, tune disables monitors | Restore cat/O2; proper tune; replace sensors | $200-1800 |
| Electrical parasitic drain | Alarm/stereo hacks, bad grounds, failing alternator diode | Parasitic draw test; repair wiring; replace alternator | $150-900 |
| Interior water leaks | Cowl/sunroof drains, door vapor barrier, trunk seals | Clear drains; reseal barriers; replace seals; dry carpets | $100-800 |
Market
Mitsubishi sold the Lancer Evolution officially in the United States only from the Evo VIII (2003 model year) through the Evo X Final Edition (2015 model year). Evo I-VII never received US-market homologation — every Evo I-VII in the US is a gray-market import, almost all under the 25-year FMVSS/EPA exemption (Evo I became eligible in 2017, Evo II in 2019, Evo III in 2020, Evo IV in 2021, Evo V in 2023, Evo VI in 2024, Evo VII in 2026). The JDM-only grades that never crossed officially: Evo IV-IX RS (lightweight homologation spec, manual windows, no AC, no rear seat trim, steel wheels), the Evo VI Tommi Mäkinen Edition (1999-2001, quicker steering, Recaros, unique aero), the Evo VII GT-A (the only automatic Evo, INVECS-II 5AT), the Evo IX Wagon (CT9W, JDM-only, 2005-2007), and the Evo IX MR Final Edition. The USDM Evo VIII MR (2005) and Evo IX MR (2006-2007) shared hardware with JDM MR cars but ran market-specific emissions calibrations. The Evo X arrived globally as GSR (5MT) and MR (TC-SST dual-clutch), with the USDM-specific Final Edition (2015) running a 303 hp tune, BBS wheels, Bilstein dampers, and a numbered plaque. JDM Evo X variants additionally include the RS (lightweight, manual, no DCT) which was never federalized.
Lancer Evolution — Everything You Need to Know (Up To Speed)
Specs
Every Evo from I through IX uses the 4G63T 2.0 liter turbo four. The Evo X switched to the 4B11T, same displacement and similar boost but all aluminum. Power started at 244 hp on the Evo I and climbed to the 276 hp gentlemen's agreement ceiling on Evo IV, where it sat on paper through 2005 even though real output was higher. The UK FQ-400 broke the ceiling officially with 405 hp from the factory on the Evo VIII.
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD9A (Evo I) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 247 PS @ 6000rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | JDM quoted 247PS; torque rpm varies |
| CE9A (Evo II) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 256 PS @ 6000rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | JDM quoted 256PS; torque rpm varies |
| CE9A (Evo III) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 270 PS @ 6250rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | JDM quoted 270PS; torque rpm varies |
| CN9A (Evo IV) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 280 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | JDM 'gentlemen's' 280PS rating |
| CP9A (Evo V) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 280 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | 280PS nominal; Brembo-era hardware |
| CP9A (Evo VI) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 280 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | 280PS nominal; TME had unique tuning |
| CT9A (Evo VII) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 280 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | 280PS nominal; ACD introduced |
| CT9A (Evo VIII) | 4G63T | 2.0L | 280 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | 280PS nominal JDM; US/UK differ |
| CT9A (Evo IX) | 4G63T (MIVEC) | 2.0L | 280 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | MIVEC added; outputs vary by market |
| CZ4A (Evo X) | 4B11T | 2.0L | 280 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated) | N/A (varies by market/spec) | JDM nominal; US 291-303hp variants |
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-speed Manual | N/A (varies by gen/market) | Evo I-X (most trims) | Multiple gearsets across generations |
| 6-speed Manual | N/A (varies by gen/market) | Evo VIII/IX MR, some UK | MR-focused close ratio sets |
| INVECS-II 5-speed Automatic | N/A | Evo VII GT-A | Torque-converter automatic |
| TC-SST 6-speed Dual-clutch | N/A (varies by year) | Evo X MR (and some markets) | Twin-clutch with S-Sport modes |
Lineup
The two trims that matter on every Evo are GSR and RS. GSR is the road car with Recaros, AC, and the comfort items. RS is the homologation stripper with steel wheels, manual windows, no rear seat trim, and a lighter shell. The CT9A added the MR trim with Bilstein dampers, BBS wheels, and an available 6-speed. The Tommi Mäkinen Edition on the Evo VI and the JDM and USDM Final Editions on the Evo X are the variants collectors chase.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lancer Evolution I (CD9A, 1992-1994) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, viscous center diff, 5MT, Recaro, Momo |
| Lancer Evolution I (CD9A, 1992-1994) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels, minimal trim |
| Lancer Evolution II (CE9A, 1994-1995) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 5MT, improved cooling, Recaro, Momo |
| Lancer Evolution II (CE9A, 1994-1995) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels, limited options |
| Lancer Evolution III (CE9A, 1995-1996) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 5MT, larger turbo, Recaro, Momo, aero |
| Lancer Evolution III (CE9A, 1995-1996) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels, minimal trim |
| Lancer Evolution IV (CN9A, 1996-1998) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, AYC rear diff, 5MT, Recaro, Momo |
| Lancer Evolution IV (CN9A, 1996-1998) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, AYC (opt/market), 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels |
| Lancer Evolution V (CP9A, 1998-1999) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, AYC, Brembo, wider track, Recaro, Momo |
| Lancer Evolution V (CP9A, 1998-1999) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, AYC (opt/market), Brembo, lighter spec, steel wheels |
| Lancer Evolution VI (CP9A, 1999-2001) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, AYC, Brembo, Recaro, Momo, revised aero |
| Lancer Evolution VI (CP9A, 1999-2001) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, AYC (opt/market), Brembo, lighter spec, steel wheels |
| Lancer Evolution VI (CP9A, 1999-2001) | RS2 | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | RS base with some comfort, AWD, 5MT, Brembo |
| Lancer Evolution VI (CP9A, 1999-2001) | Tommi Mäkinen Edition (GSR) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, quicker steering, unique turbo/tune, special aero |
| Lancer Evolution VII (CT9A, 2001-2003) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, ACD, AYC, 5MT, Brembo, Recaro |
| Lancer Evolution VII (CT9A, 2001-2003) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, ACD, 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels, minimal trim |
| Lancer Evolution VII (CT9A, 2001-2003) | GT-A | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, INVECS-II 5AT, ACD/AYC, Brembo, comfort |
| Lancer Evolution VIII (CT9A, 2003-2005) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, ACD/AYC, 5MT, Brembo, Recaro, HID |
| Lancer Evolution VIII (CT9A, 2003-2005) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, ACD, 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels, minimal trim |
| Lancer Evolution VIII (CT9A, 2003-2005) | MR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 6MT, Bilstein, BBS, ACD/AYC, Recaro |
| Lancer Evolution VIII (CT9A, 2003-2005) | FQ-300 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, higher output tune, 5/6MT, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution VIII (CT9A, 2003-2005) | FQ-320 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, higher output tune, 5/6MT, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution VIII (CT9A, 2003-2005) | FQ-340 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, higher output tune, 5/6MT, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution VIII (CT9A, 2003-2005) | FQ-400 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 400PS tune, 6MT, uprated turbo/fuel, limited |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | GSR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, ACD/AYC, 5MT, Brembo, Recaro, MIVEC |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | RS | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, ACD, 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels, MIVEC |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | MR | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, 6MT, Bilstein, BBS, ACD/AYC, Recaro |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | Wagon GT (JDM) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, wagon body, ACD/AYC, 5MT, Brembo |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | Wagon MR (JDM) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, wagon body, 6MT, Bilstein, BBS, ACD/AYC |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | FQ-300 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, higher output tune, 5/6MT, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | FQ-320 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, higher output tune, 5/6MT, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | FQ-340 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, higher output tune, 5/6MT, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A, 2005-2007) | FQ-360 (UK) | 4G63T 2.0L I4 Turbo (MIVEC) | AWD, higher output tune, 6MT, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | GSR | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, S-AWC, ACD/AYC, 5MT, Brembo, Recaro |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | MR | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, S-AWC, TC-SST, Bilstein/Eibach, BBS, Recaro |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | RS (JDM/limited markets) | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, S-AWC, 5MT, lighter spec, steel wheels, minimal |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | Final Edition (US) | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 5MT, 303hp tune, Bilstein, BBS, numbered |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | FQ-300 (UK) | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, higher output tune, 5MT/TC-SST, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | FQ-330 (UK) | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, higher output tune, 5MT/TC-SST, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | FQ-360 (UK) | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, higher output tune, 5MT/TC-SST, market-specific |
| Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A, 2007-2016) | FQ-400 (UK) | 4B11T 2.0L I4 Turbo | AWD, 400PS tune, uprated turbo/fuel, limited |
Pricing
The Evo market spans from $18,000 rough imports up to $160,000 for documented Evo VI Tommi Mäkinen Editions and final-year Evo X cars. The average price right now is around $52,000, which lands you a clean Evo VIII or IX with paperwork. Cheap Evos almost always mean a tuned engine that's been heat-cycled hard, so buy the documentation before you buy the car.
Original MSRP: $29,990 at launch in 2003. USDM Evo VIII GSR launch MSRP in the United States (model year 2003). JDM Evo I launch in October 1992 was set in yen and varied by trim (RS vs GSR); a confirmed JDM Evo I figure is not in the WP source and is not asserted here. The Evo VIII US launch is the most-cited launch benchmark in English-language press.
Today's market range: $18,000 to $160,000 (median ~$52,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.
Post-2021 peak, Evo prices cooled then stabilized; best-stock VIII/IX and rare VI/TME keep rising. Modded/high-mile cars soften. As IV–VI become 25-year legal, import demand lifts clean examples; originality and records drive premiums.
Inspect
Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items mean you walk if the paperwork isn't there. Pay extra attention to AYC and ACD function on anything CN9A or newer, and to TC-SST service history on the Evo X. A 30 minute drive will surface most of what you need to know.
Cross-shop
If the Evo doesn't end up being the right car, the natural alternative is the Subaru WRX STI, which is the rival the Evo was built against in the first place. The Nissan Skyline GT-R is the heavier and pricier option if you want all-wheel drive with more power on tap. The Toyota Altezza or a BMW 3-Series gets you a sport sedan without the rally pedigree or the running costs.
Closest AWD turbo rival; strong parts support
Roomier hatch/sedan; DCCD; daily-friendly
AWD turbo icon; older-school feel; rising values
Modern RWD performance; simpler ownership; cheaper
Compare
Among the AWD rally sedans of the era, the Evo is the sharpest handler and the most race-bred. The WRX STI is the more available car with the deeper US aftermarket. The Skyline GT-R is the heavyweight that costs three times as much. The table below leans toward where the Evo actually wins, which is chassis response, AYC traction, and WRC pedigree.
| Feature | Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution | Nissan Skyline GT-R R34 | Mazda RX-7 FD3S |
|---|---|---|---|
| Layout/traction | AWD, active diffs (many) | RWD, LSD | RWD, LSD |
| Engine family | 4G63T (I-IX) / 4B11T (X) | RB26DETT 2.6 I6TT | 13B-REW 1.3 RTT |
| Stock power (JDM) | 276 hp (gentlemen's agr.) | 276 hp (rated) | 255-280 hp (market) |
| Tuning headroom | High; 350-450whp common | High; costly but strong | High; heat/rotary limits |
| Handling character | Pointy, adjustable, AWD rotate | Stable, heavy, high grip | Light, oversteer-prone |
| Reliability baseline | Good if stock & maintained | Good but parts pricey | Sensitive; vacuum/heat issues |
| Maintenance pain points | AYC/ACD, belts, boost leaks | ATTESA, turbos, rust | Cooling, apex seals, twins |
| Practicality | 4-door sedan; usable rear seat | 2-door; small rear seat | 2-seat/2+2 tight; low cargo |
| Collector premium drivers | Evo VI TME, IX MR, X FE | V-Spec II Nür, M-Spec Nür | Spirit R, Type RZ |
| US availability | USDM VIII/IX/X; earlier import | R34 legal by year; costly | USDM available 1993-1995 |
| Direct USDM rival | Evo VIII/IX/X | AWD turbo; 2.5 EJ | AWD turbo; 2.5 EJ |
| Steering feel | Sharper, more immediate | Good but less razor-edged | Heavier; more insulated |
| Drivetrain tech | AYC/ACD; SST on X | DCCD center diff | DCCD; SI-Drive |
Gallery
Drivetrain
Editorial
In the US, the cleanest entry is a documented Evo VIII or IX from 2003 to 2007 — factory LHD, no import paperwork, and a parts ecosystem that's had twenty years to mature. Outside the US, a 1999 to 2001 Evo VI in GSR trim offers the titanium-aluminide turbine, the durability upgrades from the Evo V to VI program, and a price floor that has mostly settled. Skip anything under $25,000 without service receipts — a cheap Evo almost always means a tired AYC pump or a ringland that's already been heat-cycled past its limit.
If the collector tier is the goal, the Evo VI Tommi Mäkinen Edition is the reference car. Mitsubishi built it around Mäkinen's four straight WRC Drivers' titles from 1996 to 1999, and documented original-paint TMEs cleared six figures at auction during the 2020 to 2022 peak. The Evo X Final Edition is the modern parallel — 1,000 numbered JDM units with BBS wheels, Bilstein dampers, and the distinction of being the last factory Evo produced.
The car to avoid is a heavily tuned CT9A or CZ4A with no shop records. The 4G63T can support over 400 hp with the right build, but AYC hard lines rust through, the boost actuator fails early, and a 500 hp Evo VIII with no paperwork is a parts exercise. A clean example with timing belt history, AYC service records, and the original ECU intact is a materially different purchase.
FAQ
Citations
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